Farrell v. Hodges Stock Yards, Inc.

343 So. 2d 1364, 1977 La. LEXIS 4884
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 3, 1977
Docket58383, 58387
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 343 So. 2d 1364 (Farrell v. Hodges Stock Yards, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farrell v. Hodges Stock Yards, Inc., 343 So. 2d 1364, 1977 La. LEXIS 4884 (La. 1977).

Opinion

343 So.2d 1364 (1977)

Thomas C. FARRELL, Jr., et al.
v.
HODGES STOCK YARDS, INC., et al.

Nos. 58383, 58387.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

January 24, 1977.
On Rehearing March 3, 1977.
Rehearing Denied April 7, 1977.

*1365 Francis J. Mooney, Jr., Curtis, Foster, Hyde & Mooney, New Orleans, for Louisiana Southern Railway Co.

Sidney W. Provensal, Jr., Provensal & Fitzmaurice, New Orleans, for Thomas C. Farrell, Jr.

Henican, James & Cleveland, for Hodges Stockyards, Inc.

Per Curiam on Rehearing March 3, 1977.

CALOGERO, Justice.

Plaintiffs own certain industrial property in Arabi, Louisiana in the Parish of St. Bernard. Displeased with the presence of certain railroad tracks, switches, and spurs traversing their property, they brought this law suit against two railway companies, Louisiana Southern Railway Company and the New Orleans Terminal Company, as well as Hodges Stock Yards, Inc., a successor in title to an earlier company which had granted in 1891 and 1908, respectively, the rights of way which facilitated placing of the tracks. Plaintiffs' suit seeks the removal of the tracks, and, alternatively, a judgment extinguishing the recorded railway right of way agreements, and, again alternatively, the relocation of the tracks.[1]

Various exceptions were overruled by the trial judge and after trial on the merits, the trial court rendered a judgment cancelling and extinguishing the railway companies' servitudes and rights of way, and further ordering relocation of the servitudes, should plaintiffs elect to relocate them, according to a plan presented in plaintiffs' pleadings.

*1366 All three defendants appealed and the court of appeal affirmed the trial court judgment. 333 So.2d 745 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1976). We granted writs upon application of defendants Louisiana Southern Railway Company and Hodges Stock Yards, Inc., 337 So.2d 878 (La.1976).[2]

The following title history of the property in question is important for an understanding of the case. On March 12, 1891 Crescent City Live Stock Landing and Slaughter House Company, [hereinafter Crescent City Live Stock], owners of a large tract of ground on which was operated at the time a slaughter house and related businesses, granted to a predecessor of Louisiana Southern Railway Company, i.e., New Orleans and Gulf Railroad Company, a right of way over and across the land of the said grantor. In 1893 that original grantor, Crescent City Live Stock, sold the entire tract burdened by the railroad servitude (less certain lots previously sold) to Crescent City Stockyard and Slaughter House Company, Ltd. [hereinafter Crescent City Stockyard]. In April of 1921 that company sold a portion of the tract to Arabi Packing Co., Inc. [hereinafter Arabi] and in June of 1921 sold another portion of the tract to New Orleans Stock Yards, Inc. Thereafter, in 1960, New Orleans Stock Yards, Inc. sold a portion of its land to plaintiffs. Sometime after 1960, the corporate name was changed from New Orleans Stock Yards, Inc. to Hodges Stock Yards, Inc. [hereinafter Hodges]. Hodges today owns not only that portion of the original tract which in their earlier name, New Orleans Stock Yards, Inc., they had acquired in 1921, but also a portion of the property acquired by Arabi in 1921, which Arabi later sold to International Cold Storage, Inc., a corporation which subsequently merged with Hodges.

At least one part of the Arabi tract is today owned by Earl Doescher Company whose property is burdened by the railroad servitude and which enjoys rail service. Rail service is additionally being furnished several tenants of defendant Hodges, including Modern Woodcrafts and Ace Box Company. Additionally, Hodges has agreements with certain meat handlers who, it is asserted, also have the right to rail service.

In the 1891 servitude agreement, Crescent City Live Stock granted to the railroad a right of way running fully across its property. The entire instrument follows:

"The Crescent City Live Stock Landing & Slaughter-House Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Louisiana and domiciled in the Parish of St. Bernard, in said State, through its President, Louis Ruch, duly authorized by Resolution of the Board of Directors of said Company, hereto attached, declares:
That in view of the advantages and conveniences accruing to the shippers of cattle, and in consideration of the improvement and increased facilities thus offered to those engaged in the cattle trade on this market; and of the desire of the said Company to promote the interests of said trade, by the construction, operation and maintenance of a switch from the main line of the New Orleans & Gulf Railroad to a point at or near the Slaughter-House and cattle pens of the said Crescent City Live Stock Landing and Slaughter-House Company, as now located upon or near the River Bank, below the City of New Orleans, in the Parish of St. Bernard, it does hereby grant, bargain, convey and deliver the *1367 right of way over and across the land of said Company, as follows:
A strip of land thirty feet in width, beginning at such a point on the line of said New Orleans & Gulf Railroad as may be selected by the General Manager of the said Crescent City Live Stock Landing and Slaughter House Company and continuing through the lands of the said Crescent City Live Stock Landing and Slaughter House Company to a point to be selected by said Slaughter House Company, at or or [sic] near their present buildings, to the New Orleans and Gulf Railroad Company, a corporation under the laws of the State of Louisiana, domiciled in the City of New Orleans, its successors and assigns, for the purpose of constructing and operating aforesaid switch.
The right of way which is hereby granted is thirty feet in width or fifteen feet on either side of the centre line of said switch, from the point at which the said switch shall enter the land of the Slaughter House Company to Royal Street, fifty feet in width at this point, thence decreasing gradually to thirty feet at the terminus of the switch, in line with the receiving pens of the said Slaughter House Company, the whole as may be finally located and constructed by the said New Orleans & Gulf Railroad Company, its successors and assigns, through the said before described strip of land; provided such line and location be agreed to by said Crescent City Live Stock Landing and Slaughter House Company, and this grant of way shall be exclusively used for operating cattle-cars and such other rolling stock as may be required for the purposes of cattle yards and slaughter houses and attendant factories, and shall continue in full force as long as the said property of the said Crescent City Live Stock Landing & Slaughter House Company shall be used for the business for which it is now used or any other of like nature and no longer. The said Slaughter house Company reserving to itself the right to cancel and annul the right of way herein granted, whenever it shall select itself or be compelled to change the nature of the business now conducted on said property or that it shall cease to operate at that point cattle-yards or slaughterhouses; or desire to make a conveyance of said property; provided that the expenses incurred by the said New Orleans & Gulf Railroad in constructing and maintaining the said switch be refunded by said slaughterhouse Company, in the event of the right of way being thus cancelled and annulled prior to ten years from this date.

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Bluebook (online)
343 So. 2d 1364, 1977 La. LEXIS 4884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farrell-v-hodges-stock-yards-inc-la-1977.