Dixie Pipeline Company v. Barry

227 So. 2d 1
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 9, 1970
Docket2764
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 227 So. 2d 1 (Dixie Pipeline Company v. Barry) 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.

Bluebook
Dixie Pipeline Company v. Barry, 227 So. 2d 1 (La. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

227 So.2d 1 (1969)

DIXIE PIPELINE COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Marguerite Kidder BARRY, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 2764.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

September 16, 1969.
Dissenting Opinion September 19, 1969.
Rehearings Denied October 17, 1969.
Writ Refused January 9, 1970.

*3 J. Barry Mouton, Lafayette, for defendant-appellant.

John V. Parker, Baton Rouge, Andrew J. S. Jumonville, of Davidson, Meaux, Onebane & Donohoe, Lafayette, for plaintiff-appellee.

Before FRUGÉ, HOOD and MILLER, JJ.

MILLER, Judge.

Dixie Pipeline Company seeks to obtain a servitude for the construction and operation of a gas pipeline across Mrs. Marguerite Kidder Barry's property in St. Martin Parish. Defendant filed exceptions of prematurity and no right or cause of action, and an answer. The trial judge overruled the exceptions and rendered judgment on the merits in favor of plaintiff. Defendant has appealed.

This suit was consolidated for trial and appeal with two other expropriation suits filed by plaintiff involving tracts of land located near the Barry property. One of these suits was instituted against Amilcar J. Trosclair and the other against John A. Broussard. Substantially the same pleadings were filed and the same defenses were urged in all of these suits. Judgment was rendered by the trial court in favor of the plaintiff in each of those cases, and in each instance the defendant appealed. We are deciding all three of these companion cases on this date.[1]

Dixie Pipeline Company operates a system of pipe lines about 1300 miles long, extending from Texas into southeast Georgia and to North Carolina, and these pipelines are used exclusively to carry propane gas. Propane is used primarily for heating purposes and for fuel. The market or demand for that type gas varies with the weather or seasons. In cold weather, for instance, the demand is approximately six times as great as in the warmer summer months.

The company does not purchase or own the propane gas which it carries in its pipeline system. It accepts all propane gas tendered to it for transportation through its pipelines, provided that it will not accept a tender of gas for transportation unless the shipment consists of at least 7000 barrels per month. The tariff which it receives for transporting this gas is regulated *4 by schedules which are on file with the Interstate Commerce Commission.

The main pipeline operated by Dixie runs through St. Martin Parish, and a loading facility is maintained on that line near Breaux Bridge, Louisiana. Plaintiff proposes to construct an eight-inch pipeline from that loading facility near Breaux Bridge to a fractionation plant, sometimes referred to as a "promix plant," at Anse La Butte in St. Martin Parish. This plant is owned by Wanda Petroleum Company, Getty Oil Company and Placid Oil Company, and is operated by Wanda. The length of the proposed pipeline from the loading facility to the promix plant is 3.25 miles. These consolidated expropriation suits were filed to obtain a part of the servitude needed for this line. Servitudes have been obtained from all landowners along the proposed route, except the three landowners who are defendants in these suits.

The promix plant receives a "raw stream" gas from oil and gas fields in south Louisiana, and it separates the components of this mixture at the plant. The propane which is extracted is transported from the plant or from storage in a nearby salt dome cavern to the Dixie pipeline at its Breaux Bridge loading facility, and from that point is carried in Dixie's pipeline system to consumers in the southeast part of the United States. The present capacity of the promix plant is 25,000 barrels per day, but it is now being enlarged to increase its capacity to 50,000 barrels per day. The plant is connected to Dixie's main line by a four-inch pipeline owned by Wanda Petroleum Company. This existing four-inch line, however, will be inadequate to handle the increased flow of gas from the enlarged plant.

The eight-inch pipeline which Dixie proposes to lay, and for which the servitude here sought is needed, will run almost parallel to Wanda's existing four-inch line, along this entire distance of 3.25 miles.

Plaintiff seeks a permanent right of way, thirty feet wide, for the laying of this new pipeline, and a temporary servitude during construction of an additional 20 feet. The permanent and temporary servitudes which they seek herein overlap, or are superimposed over, two other existing servitudes on the three tracts of land which are involved in these suits. One of these existing servitudes is for the four-inch pipeline owned by Wanda Petroleum Company, and the other is for an electric transmission line owned and operated by SLEMCO. The Wanda Petroleum pipeline and the SLEMCO electric transmission line run generally parallel to each other, and they are about 20 feet apart. The pipeline which Dixie proposes to build runs between the Wanda pipeline and the SLEMCO electric transmission line for a part of the distance it traverses, and it runs very close to these lines for the rest of the distance across defendants' tracts.

Plea of Prematurity

Defendants contend, first, that plaintiff did not conduct bona fide negotiations with them in an effort to obtain the servitudes prior to filing these suits, and that all three suits should be dismissed as having been filed prematurely.

The evidence shows that prior to the institution of these expropriation proceedings, Mr. Lafolia Watts, an authorized representative of Dixie Pipeline Company, contacted each of the defendants and offered them the sum of $10.00 per rod for the servitudes. That is the amount which had been paid to and accepted by all other landowners along that route for similar servitudes. He also offered to at least two of the defendants the additional sum of $2.00 per rod for construction damages. Mr. Watts personally contacted each defendant, or at defendant's request, his attorney, and made several attempts to acquire these rights-of-way. The parties were unable to agree on a price, however, so these suits were filed.

*5 Defendants argue that the contacts made by Mr. Watts prior to institution of these suits, and the offer made by him to the defendant in each case, does not constitute a bona fide negotiation for the servitude because: (1) The amount offered was arbitrarily set by the expropriating authority for all of the defendants, without considering the market value and without a prior appraisal of each individual tract of land affected by the servitude; (2) comparable prior sales were not considered in determining the value of the servitude being expropriated; (3) no severance damages were considered or allowed; and (4) the initial offer made by plaintiff was not increased during the course of the negotiations.

An expropriation suit may be dismissed as being premature if the condemnor has not first negotiated with and been refused by the landowner. LSA-R.S. 19:2; Texas Gas Transmission Corporation v. Pierce, 192 So.2d 561 (La.App. 3d Cir. 1966). The requirement of negotiation before suit is met, however, when the expropriating authority makes a "good faith" attempt to acquire the property by conventional agreement prior to filing an expropriation suit. Evidence as to the amount which may have been offered to the landowner is material only insofar as it may have some bearing on the question of whether the condemnor was in good faith.

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Bluebook (online)
227 So. 2d 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixie-pipeline-company-v-barry-lactapp-1970.