Friscoville Realty Co. v. Police Jury

53 So. 578, 127 La. 318, 1910 La. LEXIS 814
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 31, 1910
DocketNo. 18,088
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 53 So. 578 (Friscoville Realty Co. v. Police Jury) 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
Friscoville Realty Co. v. Police Jury, 53 So. 578, 127 La. 318, 1910 La. LEXIS 814 (La. 1910).

Opinion

Statement of Pleadings.

BREAUX, C. J.

Plaintiffs brought this suit to enjoin the police jury of the parish of St. Bernard from selling a franchise for running an electric ear over the road along the levee in front of their property.

The defendants furnished bond, setting aside the injunction, and thereafter the franchise was sold to the New Orleans Railway Company for $100. The distance of the franchise from a station known as “Uncle Alf’s Station” is about 2,000 feet. Plaintiffs along the road covered by the franchise own property abutting on the road, measuring about 950 feet front.

The purchaser of the franchise has not taken actual possession.

The plaintiffs objected and protested at the time the property was offered for sale and sold.

After the adjudication, plaintiffs, by sui>plemental petition, made the adjudicatee, the New Orleans Railway Company, a party.

Defendants admitted the bonding of the injunction and the fact that the New Orleans Railway Company was the adjudicatee, but denied that it held the franchise by other than a legal and binding title.

Plaintiffs have introduced their respective titles in evidence.

They consist of title to three tracts, fronting on the Mississippi river. The upper lino of the first of said tracts in the southernly direction is about 1,300 feet from the Orleans parish lines.

The Crescent City Stockyards & Slaughterhouse Company owns about 550 feet.

Sirs. Daumbre, 61 feet; Mrs. Traux, 61 feet; Mr. Ellis, 306 feet about.

The contention of plaintiffs is that this road never was dedicated to public use.

Furthermore, the contention is that, in case of nonuse in the future by the public as a road, it will revert to. the owner of the land, as the condition of the servitude is that, in case the use is abandoned, the road will return to the actual ownership of the owners of adjacent lands, free from the right of servitude.

[322]*322According to plaintiffs, under an ordinance of the police jury, another public road was opened in 1906, running back from the river at some distance and then across their property in order to connect communication with the main public road of the parish, and that this is the only public road of the parish on which traveling and traffic communication, between the upper and lower parts of the parish, exist.

That they cannot be made to furnish two public roads over their property.

Plaintiffs’ charge is: That the object in selling the franchise and an extension already in use of the railway company was to obtain favorable votes of a majority of property holders, whose properties front on the extension, although they have no interest in the proposed extension, as the ears pass and have passed in front of their doors there the last 30 years. That their signatures should not have been considered in ascertaining the number of petitioners.

Plaintiffs’ averment further is that the franchise was offered for sale in opposition to their protest.

Among the objections is that those passengers over the proposed railway are to be carried free of charge who had paid the usual fare; that is, the fare is not to be increased for riding over this new addition to the road.

Plaintiffs urge further illegalities on the grounds: That a public franchise cannot be sold over a road, although it is situated on the banks of a navigable stream. That such a sale is not covered by Act No. 48 of 1906, p. 63, under which defendant bought its franchise

That the adjudication was null and void because it is in conflict with article 167 of the state Constitution, which ordains that private property shall not be appropriated nor damaged without compensation.

That the franchise providing for one fare from Canal street to the refinery is a special, personal provision in 'the interest of the railway company — it was, thereby, made the only possible bidder.

That the short distance over which this road is to run adds to the exclusive interest of the railway as the sole bidder. That there are no residents, save five or six, in the right of way, the only other passengers who might avail themselves of the advantages of the road — the number was virtually limited to the employés of the refinery.

Plaintiffs in injunction further allege that the American Sugar Refinery was not the owner of abutting property.

That the police jury was exclusively without power.

Plaintiffs claim as damages $10,000, as it cuts off their river front and' permanently expropriates their property for a term of 99 years.

Statement of the Case.

The facts are: That at first the public road began at Aycoek street, which was the upper boundary of the parish.

In 1875 boundaries between Orleans and St. Bernard parish were in part changed.

The line of the latter was the Jackson Barracks, lower line. Aycock street from 1873 was not the lower line of Orleans parish.

A jury of freeholders was appointed to lay off another road back of the Louisiana Southern Railroad’s right of way, being a continuation of St. Claude street of the parish of Orleans, rendered necessary in part because of the change in boundaries.

The jury of freeholders made their report and recommended the acceptance of the new road.

This was opened.

Afterward, another road was opened leading from the river and connecting the river road with the roadway last opened.

The Friseoville Company was grantor of the roadway from front to rear, and it is [324]*324now contended that' by this concession or grant plaintiffs acquired a further right of restraining the use of the short road over Which defendants claim a franchise by purchase, as before stated.

That plaintiffs had reason to believe, when the Priscoville Company gave a right of way for a new road and street car, that, if a franchise were sold, it would he a right of way or franchise over the last road mentioned above; that is, the road offered to and accepted by the police jury, as last above mentioned, the road running to the road connecting with St. Claude street.

Discussion and Judgment.

In deciding the issues, we will state that the road along the levee in front is public. The changes before mentioned have not resulted in diminishing the right of the public over this road.

If it were not public, it would come within the prohibition laid down in Bradley v. Pharr, 45 La. Ann. 426, 12 South. 618, 19 L. R. A. 647, confidently cited.

The fact that it is public puts an end to all claims based on the cited decision.

We will state further, in this connection, the contemplated railway is for public use; it is not' a private enterprise in the interest of a few, but a railway for the accommodation of the few persons whose residences are on the line of the road and of the many employés who repair from their homes to the refinery and return after the day’s work, so that plaintiffs have no right to have it considered as an exclusively private enterprise.

The line is short. The employés walk the distance. It would, doubtless, be quite convenient to continue in cars to the refinery.

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Bluebook (online)
53 So. 578, 127 La. 318, 1910 La. LEXIS 814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friscoville-realty-co-v-police-jury-la-1910.