Gumbel v. New Orleans Terminal Co.

1 So. 2d 686, 197 La. 439, 1941 La. LEXIS 1055
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 31, 1941
DocketNo. 35541.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 1 So. 2d 686 (Gumbel v. New Orleans Terminal Co.) 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
Gumbel v. New Orleans Terminal Co., 1 So. 2d 686, 197 La. 439, 1941 La. LEXIS 1055 (La. 1941).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice.

This is a suit by a landowner against the defendant railroad company to recover $24,-000, as compensation or the value of a part of the square of ground appropriated by *441 the company in 1905 and on which it laid two switch tracks; and, in the alternative, for alleged damages to plaintiff’s property in the sum of $15,000, as a result of practically dividing the ground in two parts by laying the two switch tracks diagonally across it.

The defendant filed exceptions of no right and no cause of action and pleas of prescription of two years under Revised Statute, § 1479, as amended by Act 176 of 1928, and of ten years under Article 3544 of the Revised Civil Code. The exceptions and pleas were tried and submittéd together and judgment was rendered by the trial judge, maintaining the exceptions and dismissing the suit. The plaintiff appealed and the defendant-answered the appeal and renewed the other exceptions and the pleas of prescription, which were not passed upon by the district court.

The present suit is a continuation of the litigation which has been considered by this court on two other occasions. Gumbel v. New Orleans Terminal Co., 186 La. 882, 173 So. 518 and Gumbel v. New Orleans Terminal Co., 190 La. 904, 183 So. 212, certiorari denied by the Supreme Court of the United States 305 U.S. 654, 59 S.Ct. 249, 83 L.Ed. 423. The records in the previous cases were made a part of the plaintiff’s petition to which the defendant filed the exceptions.

It appears that in 1905 the defendant laid two switch tracks diagonally across Square 483 in the Second District of New Orleans without resorting to expropriation proceedings. At that time the property was owned by Louis S. Berg, who sold the square of ground to Thomas Capo on July 14, 1913. On November 10, 1913, the plaintiff purchased the property from Capo. These switch tracks were laid and used without any objection by the former owners, the first protest having been made by the plaintiff in the early part of 1936, or shortly before the first suit was filed. Prior to purchasing the square the plaintiff knew that the railroad tracks extended across it. Neither Louis S. Berg (who was the owner of the square at the time the railroad appropriated- the property by laying the switch tracks thereon) nor Thomas Capo (his vendee) ever assigned or subrogated the plaintiff to any rights of action against the defendant to recover compensation for the value of the land taken, occupied and used, or for damages which might have been sustained as a result of the tracks occupying a part of the square. The exceptions were based on the ground that the right of action for compensation and damages was personal to the owner of the land at the time the property was appropriated by the railroad and, in the absence of an assignment or subrogation of this personal right or claim to the plaintiff by the former owner, that the right of action for compensation and damages did not pass to the plaintiff merely by the acquisition of the title to the land.

In the case of McCutchen v. Texas & P. Ry. Co., 118 La. 436, 438, 43 So. 42, 43, the court said:

“Having allowed the defendant, or its predecessor, to enter and build its road upon the land in question, and to operate such road for more than 20 years, it is now too *443 late for plaintiff, or his authors, to reclaim the property free of the servitude, or to interfere with the further operation of the road. * * * The right of the plaintiff, if any he had, would resolve itself into an .action for the value of the land used and for damages to his adjacent land, in either case a personal action, barred by the prescription of ten years. Civ.Code; art. 3544.
“We are, however, of opinion that the right referred to did not pass to plaintiff with his purchase from the Winstons, since it was personal to his vendors, and the deed "by which he acquired contains no subrogation thereto. Matthews v. Alsworth, 45 La. Ann. 465, 12 So. 518; Bradford v. Demare, 46 La.Ann. [1530] 1533, 16 So. 487; Pokorny v. Pratt, 110 La. 603, 34 So. 703.”

In Taylor v. New Orleans Terminal Co., 126 La. 420, 422-424, 52 So. 562, 563, 139 Am.St.Rep. 537, it was said:

“By defendant’s appropriation with the tacit consent of the owner at the time, the right to the strip of land passed from the •owner to the appropriator — the right be•came segregated from the property, and the •owner became a creditor for the value of the property taken.
“The right was personal. The owner at the time had a claim personally for the .amount.
“The purchaser by the act of purchase ■does not become invested with a right to the value of the property taken unless the right is transferred with the property.
“In a leading case (St. Julien v. Morgan’s R. R. Co., 35 La.Ann. 924) it was decided that the owner is concluded from reclaiming his property free of servitude imposed thereon if he failed to object to the appropriation in due time.
“He is allowed compensation for value instead of the property taken.
“The right inures to him personally and not to successive owners.
“This right to recover compensation is not connected with the title.
“This brings us to a consideration of the question whether the plaintiff owns the right and has the authority to sue the defendant for the value.
“Under prior decisions, he does not have the right to sue for value or dartiages, as it was not sold to his vendor, and his vendor did not sell it to him.
“The taking of the right of way was done many years prior to plaintiff’s becoming the owner of the land.
“In order that a vendee may have the right of his vendor in this respect, as it is a personal right, there must be a special subrogation to him by his vendor.
“That point was conclusively decided in the following cases: Matthews v. Alsworth, 45 La.Ann. 465, 12 So. 518; Bradford v. Demare, 46 La.Ann. [1530] 1533, 16 So. 487; and in the case recently decided of McCutchen v. Railroad Co., 118 La. [436] 438, 43 So. 42.”

Under the facts of this case and in view of the foregoing authorities, it is clear that whatever right of action Louis S. Berg had against the defendant .for compensation and damages for appropriating *445 his property did not pass to the plaintiff when he purchased the title to the square of ground, because there was neither an assignment nor a subrogation' of that right by Berg to Capo and by Capo to him.

Counsel for the plaintiff contends that under Article 12 of his petition his client had a right to claim monthly compensation or rent for the exercise of the servitude and that this monthly compensation or rent should be fixed at $200 per month and be allowed for a period of ten years preceding the institution' of this action. There is neither proof in the records of the former cases nor.

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Bluebook (online)
1 So. 2d 686, 197 La. 439, 1941 La. LEXIS 1055, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gumbel-v-new-orleans-terminal-co-la-1941.