Dixie Electric Membership Corp. v. Whitehead
This text of 280 So. 2d 315 (Dixie Electric Membership Corp. v. Whitehead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
DIXIE ELECTRIC MEMBERSHIP CORPORATION
v.
Henry WHITEHEAD.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*316 Paul H. Dué, Mellon, Cavanaugh & Dué, Denham Springs, for appellant.
James H. Morrison and Timothy R. Higgins, Hammond, for appellee Whitehead.
Before LANDRY, TUCKER and PICKETT, JJ.
TUCKER, Judge.
This is a suit by Dixie Electric Membership Corporation, a Louisiana non-profit membership corporation, organized under Louisiana Revised Statutes 12:401-430, and engaged in the business of transmitting and distributing electricity for power, lighting, heating, or other such uses, in a number of parishes in the State of Louisiana. Plaintiff Dixie Electric sought to expropriate a hundred foot right-of-way in the northern portion of Livingston Parish for the purpose of a 69KV transmission and distribution servitude to give better service in the Watson to Holden, Louisiana, area.
A description of the proposed installation taken from the testimony of Mr. Floyd Barbay, the consulting electrical engineer who designed the transmission line in question, is given below:
The section of the 69KV transmission line running across the property to be expropriated consists of a single pole type of construction with two crossarms at the top. The basic pole is sixty feet tall. It is southern yellow pine, creosoted. The typical pole has a crossarm at the top which is eight feet long, and which is placed 3.5 feet from the top of the pole. There is a six foot space beneath it, between it and the next crossarm which is ten feet long. There is a string of four bells which extends along the crossarms to hold three conductors. The wire is about forty feet above the ground, and the poles are about three hundred feet apart. The pole being sixty feet tall and about sixteen inches in diameter at ground level, is buried eight feet in the ground, with the result that it extends about fifty-two feet into the air. There is one conductor on the tip-top of the pole, which is known as the static. The construction of the wire at this point is three-eights of an inch in diameter, made of high strength steel. Its primary purpose is to drain off any static charges or lightening charges which might hit the line. This line protects the three conductors which are located beneath it, one conductor on the top crossarm, and two conductors on the bottom crossarm. The wires that carry the "hot electricity," the phase conductors, are *317 336-400 MCM aluminum, known as 86SR. They have twenty-six strands of aluminum and seven strands of steel.
The minimum clearance of this line is twenty-seven feet, although the code calls for only twenty-one feet in an area accessible to pedestrians.
The suits brought by Dixie Electric to expropriate the surface needed for its servitude were consolidated for trial, and judgment was given for Dixie Electric granting the right of servitude and awarding judgments in favor of the several defendants, in varying amounts, for the surface rights expropriated and for severance damage caused to the remainder. Ten of these defendants have appealed or answered the appeal taken against them by Dixie Electric. The right to expropriate by Dixie Electric was not questioned on appeal. The sole question in each appeal centers around the amount of the award made for the surface rights taken and for various and sundry items of damage.
In the instant suit judgment was given in the trial court in favor of plaintiff granting it a servitude over lands of defendant more properly described as follows:
"A certain tract or parcel of land situated in the north one-half of Section 16, T-6-S, R-5-E, Livingston Parish, Louisiana, and being more particularly described as follows: Commence at the southeast corner of the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of said Section 16, said point being the southeast corner of the property of Henry Whitehead and the Point of Beginning; thence north 5.08 feet along the east property line of Henry Whitehead to a point; thence N 68° 24' W, 876.80 feet to a point; thence N 73° 25' W, 710.18 feet to a point on the west property line of Henry Whitehead, said point being in the centerline of Hog Branch; thence S 16° 32' W along the west property line of Hog Branch a distance of 100.00 feet to a point; thence S 73° 25' E, 705.82 feet to a point; thence S 68° 24' E, 633.54 feet to a point on the south property line of same to a point and the Point of Beginning, containing 3.37 acres more or less."
Judgment was given in the trial court awarding defendant $2,527.50 for the servitude expropriated; $710.91 for timber damages; and $1,000.00 for severance damages; or a total of $4,237.40. Expert witness fees of $125.00 for Gerald Whitehead and $250.00 for Earl Graham were taxed as costs and ordered to be paid by the plaintiff.
Plaintiff Dixie Electric has appealed alleging error by the trial court in valuing the land taken at $750.00 per acre; in awarding the full value of the land expropriated when only a servitude has been granted; in making a separate award for the timber located on the servitude; and in awarding severance damages.
No oral or written reasons for judgment were given by the trial judge. Simple arithmetic indicates, however, that $750.00 per acre was the basis for the award made in this suit as in all of the Dixie Electric suits consolidated for trial. We do not understand how the trial judge arrived at this basis for valuation in view of the fact that Earl R. Graham, expert witness for nine of the defendants in these consolidated cases, appraised the land at the trial at the sum of $1,000.00 per acre, while Dixie Electric's appraiser, James C. Carpenter, appraised it at $333.33 per acre. Averaging estimates of expert witnesses, or drawing a mean between or among them has never been considered a sound basis for judgment in the expropriation suits of this state. We can find no reasonable basis in the record for the trial judge's evaluation per acre of the land expropriated for the servitude.
We remain unconvinced by the defendant's expert witness, Earl R. Graham, who was employed by the defendant on the Saturday before the trial began on Monday *318 and rode by defendant's property on Sunday. Mr. Graham listed three comparable sales in his letter of appraisal directed to defendant's attorney, but he relied upon only two when testifying in court. In may be noted that in court Mr. Graham admitted to having had only one real estate transaction in Livingston Parish within the past year, and in fact that he had done very little real estate work in Livingston Parish within the past ten years. Despite his lack of experience with Livingston Parish property Mr. Graham testified glibly in court that the best use of any land is residential, and that almost all of the land in Livingston Parish is worth $1,000.00 per acre. Certainly the various comparable sales listed by James C. Carpenter in the ten Dixie Electric cases consolidated for trial are ample proof that there are many sales in Livingston Parish ranging from $300.00 to $500.00 per acre, including the timber thereon, which timber seems to give much of the land in Livingston Parish its highest and best use.
The two sales he relied upon as comparables are as follows: (1) a sale from Leonard Kinchen to his nephew Damien Kinchen at $2,200.00 per acre, and (2) a sale of industrial property valued at $666.00 per acre.
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280 So. 2d 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixie-electric-membership-corp-v-whitehead-lactapp-1973.