Dixie Electric Membership Corporation v. McDowell
This text of 280 So. 2d 306 (Dixie Electric Membership Corporation v. McDowell) 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.
Floyd McDOWELL.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*307 Paul H. Dué, Mellon, Cavanaugh & Dué, Denham Springs, for appellant.
Aubrey L. Moore, Baton Rouge, for appellee McDowell.
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 *308 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 cross arms at the top. The basic pole is sixty feet tall. It is southern yellow pine, creosoted. The typical pole has a cross arm 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 feet space beneath it, between it and the next cross arm 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-eighths 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 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 against Floyd McDowell judgment was given against him expropriating a right of way across property owned by him, more particularly described as follows:
"A certain tract or parcel of land situated in Section 26, T-5-S, R-3-E, Livingston Parish, Louisiana, and being more particularly described as follows: From the southwest corner of the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter of said Section 26, run N 0° 03' W 663.01 feet; thence S 89° 33' E, 423.80 feet to a point, said point being the most southerly southeast corner of the property of Floyd McDowell; thence N 0° 03' W, 8.66 feet along the east property line of Floyd McDowell to a point and the Point of Beginning; thence continue N 0° 03' W, 113.88 feet along same to a point; thence N 61° 28' W, 272.35 feet to a point on the most southerly north property line of Floyd McDowell; thence N 89° 37' 30" W. 187.35 feet along same to a point, said point being the most southerly northwest corner of the property of Floyd McDowell; thence S 0° 03' E, 14.62 feet along the most *309 westerly property line of said Floyd McDowell to a point; thence S 61° 28' E, 492.00 feet to a point, and the Point of Beginning, containing 090 acres more or less."
The trial judge awarded Floyd McDowell Six Hundred Seventy-Five and No/100 ($675.00) Dollars as compensation for the property expropriated, Eight Hundred Seventy-Three and 60/100 ($873.60) Dollars as the value of the timber located on the servitude expropriated, and One Thousand and No/100 ($1,000.00) Dollars for severance damages.
Dixie Electric appealed citing as error the awards of the trial judge for severance damage and for the value of the timber in addition to the value of the property expropriated. Floyd McDowell answered the appeal, asking for an increase in judgment as follows:
Value of land taken $ 920.00
Value of improvements 2,000.00
Severance Damages 2,000.00
_________
$4,920.00
The jurisprudence of this state is well-settled that no extra award will be made for timber destroyed on a right-of-way expropriated, unless it has value separate and apart from the land on which it stood and can be harvested as a growing crop. This position has been expressed well in State, Dept. of Highways v. Hart, 249 So.2d 310, 316 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1971), as follows:
"We find that the record does not support the lower court's award of $1,000.00 for timber destroyed on the land taken. The income producing value of growing trees, their usefulness or worth as shade trees, or their aesthetic or ornamental value may be considered in determining the value of the land on which they are situated. If, however, trees are not nursery stock which can be dug and sold in the nature of a crop, they cannot be considered a growing crop, and no award can be made for their value separate and apart from the value of the land itself. State Through Department of Highways v. Black, et al., La.App., 207 So.2d 583; State Through Department of Highways v. Matise, et al., La.App., 170 So.2d 709. The timber in question had no value as a `special crop' or `growing crop'. Its value, therefore, may be considered only in determining the value of the land according to its best and highest use. The appraisals of both Drigers and Derbes included the value of the timber taken. The allowance of an extra $1,000.00 for this item of damages must be reversed."
A market value appraisal by Mr. Raymond J. Gascon, Jr., a forester who qualified as an expert, was submitted in evidence which estimated the value of the timber destroyed by Dixie Electric at $326.12. When Mr. Gascon was requested to make the appraisal, the timber on the defendant's property had already been destroyed, but he made an estimate using the best 0.30 acre of timbered land owned by defendant and immediately adjacent to the right of way. The trial judge should have taken this estimate into consideration when setting the value of the surface rights expropriated.
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280 So. 2d 306, 1973 La. App. LEXIS 6578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixie-electric-membership-corporation-v-mcdowell-lactapp-1973.