Florida Gas Transmission v. Woodside

198 So. 2d 716, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5440
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 17, 1967
DocketNo. 7117
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 198 So. 2d 716 (Florida Gas Transmission v. Woodside) 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
Florida Gas Transmission v. Woodside, 198 So. 2d 716, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5440 (La. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

REID, Judge.

This is an expropriation suit by Florida Gas Transmission against William T. Woodside and others. The plaintiff-appellant is a natural gas company certified within the meaning of the Natural Gas Act and is operating under certificates of public convenience and necessity from the Federal Power Commission. Plaintiff has a 30 foot right-of-way on which is located its 24 inch transmission line across the defendants’ property, which right-of-way was acquired in 1958. It is now seeking a construction right-of-way 60 feet in width directly south of the existing right-of-way which is adjacent and parallel to it, and at the conclusion of the construction the south 30 feet of the 60 foot construction right-of-way will revert to the defendants and plaintiff would retain a permanent easement 30 feet in width upon which to maintain and operate the proposed pipeline.

Although various issues were raised in the answer filed by defendants, by the time of the trial the sole issue was the question of just compensation to be paid the defendants.

The defendants’ property is a 700 acre tract, being all of. Sections 51 and 52, Town[717]*717ship S South, Range 2 West, in the Parish of East Baton Rouge, below or West of the Mobile Ridge. This is a large tract fronting on Steamboat (Profits Island) Chute of the Mississippi River and on its upper end opens onto the main channel of the Mississippi River.

The Mobile Ridge separates the property from the bluff land and a great deal of the property consists of lakes and swamps and is subject to overflow when the Mississippi River reaches a stage above the 35 foot level.

The tract consists of 700 acres, of which 3.34 acres would be taken as a permanent servitude and timber on 8.6 acres for the temporary servitude would be destroyed during the construction period.

After trial on the merits, the District Judge awarded the plaintiff the sum of $1,002.00 for the 3.34 acres for the servitude, basing this figure on the price of $300.00 an acre, and awarded $998.11 for the destruction of timber on the 8.6 acres, and $10,500.00 severance damages, based on a 5% diminution in the property, making a total award of $12,500.11.

The main issue on this appeal concerns the severance damages, it being admitted that the value of the timber destroyed is $998.11 and there being no real issue concerning the $300.00 an acre for the servitude. This Court, will accept those figures and feels no need to discuss that phase of the case in this opinion.

The real point at issue between the position of the plaintiff and that of the defendants arises out of the classification of the property involved in the litigation and the resulting award in severance damages based on that classification. It is upon this issue that this appeal is lodged. The plaintiff contends that the highest and best use of the property in its present condition is for timber growing purposes and that this is the purpose for which it is now being used and will be used in the forseeable future. The defendants contend that the property has a present day value as industrial site property, and in this position were supported by the District Judge.

The bulk of the testimony in this case is from four expert witnesses, two of whom, Mr. Chester A. Driggers and Mr. Julius A. Bahlinger, III, were called by the plaintiff, and the other two, Mr. George Comeaux, Jr. and Mr. William Warren Munson, were called on behalf of the defendants. In his reasons for judgment the Trial Judge commented on the witnesses as follows:

“Four expert witnesses were heard in this trial, two presented by the plaintiff and two by the defendants. Those called by plaintiff were Mr. Chester A. Driggers and Mr. Julius A. Bahlinger III, and those called by the defendant landowners were Mr. George Comeaux, Jr. and Mr. William Warren Munson. This court has never had the privilege of hearing Mr. Comeaux prior to this trial. The court has heard testimony from both Mr. Driggers and Mr. Bahlinger in other similar suits, and has a very high regard for these three gentlemen and has no intention of reflecting on their qualifications as appraisers; however, each of the three testified very frankly that he had had little, if any, experience in dealing with industrial properties. It is for this reason that the court feels it must be guided in its decision here by the testimony of Mr. Munson, who has had wide experience in the field of industrial appraisals and industrial sales, and been heard on numerous occasions in this court on those questions.
“ * * * I repeat that my decision here is based entirely on the testimony of Mr. Munson, the court believing that his testimony is the only testimony that bears directly, and bears with authority, on the questions before the court.
“His testimony is that this property has a present market value of $300 per acre. In that connection the court calls attention to the fact that Mr. Driggers placed [718]*718a «value of $200 per acre on this property and that Mr. Bahlinger placed a value of $300 per acre, as did Mr. Comeaux. Those three witnesses, however, based the value of the servitude taken on a percentage basis of their evaluation per acre of the property. Mr. Driggers testified that the permanent servitude in his opinion represented 80 per cent of the value placed by him on the property, that is, $160 per acre, and that the temporary servitude represented 50 per cent of the value per acre. He found that the fair market value of the property taken would be $1395. Mr. Bahlinger used for the permanent servitude 60 per cent, and based the value of the permanent servitude in round figures at $600. ' I might state, if I haven’t already so stated, that the permanent servitude covers an area of 3.34 acres, and the temporary servitude 8.6 acres. Mr. Bahlinger placed 15 per cent as the value of the temporary servitude rounded out, I believe, to exactly $400, making a total of $1000. Mr. Comeaux used 75 per cent for the permanent servitude and 50 per cent for the temporary servitude, making a total of $2041.50, and he estimated the severance damages to the property at $12,000. I will not discuss the manner in which he arrived at that figure, but it is stated mathematically as part of his testimony. Mr. Munson placed a value- of $300 per acre on this property. - It is his opinion that the permanent servitude is equivalent to the taking of fee title to the property, and that figure is $1002. He further was of the opinion that nothing was due for the temporary servitude, and came up with a total, of $1002 as the value of the property taken. That is somewhat less than Mr. Driggers found, it is two dollars more than Mr. Bahlinger found, and slightly less than half of what Mr. Comeaux found.
“Then Mr. Munson testified that in his expert opinion the laying of this additional pipeline across the property would depreciate the present market value of the property a minimum of five per cent, and the court is going to follow his findings on this point. If I mistake not, he is saying that the severance damage to this property is $10,500. He gave his reasons and I am not going to elaborate on his reasons; they are in the record. I repeat that that is his expert opinion which the court feels that it should follow.
“It is not disputed that the taking of these servitudes will take from this property merchantable timber of the value of $998.11.

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Related

Michigan Wis. Pipe Line Co. v. Sugarland Develop. Corp.
221 So. 2d 593 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1969)
State v. Jenkins
207 So. 2d 380 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1968)
Florida Gas Transmission Co. v. Woodside
200 So. 2d 666 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
198 So. 2d 716, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florida-gas-transmission-v-woodside-lactapp-1967.