Hulin v. Road Dist. No. 4

115 So. 650, 165 La. 443, 1927 La. LEXIS 1901
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 28, 1927
DocketNo. 28589.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 115 So. 650 (Hulin v. Road Dist. No. 4) 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
Hulin v. Road Dist. No. 4, 115 So. 650, 165 La. 443, 1927 La. LEXIS 1901 (La. 1927).

Opinion

*445 THOMPSON, J.

This case comes up on an agreed statement of facts, and the legal question to be decided, as stated in the beginning of the brief of counsel for plaintiffs, is whether the imposition of an ad valorem tax for road purposes on the lands of plaintiffs situated within the road district created by the police jury constitutes a taking of plaintiffs’ property without due process of law, in violation of the state and Federal Constitutions. Const. La. art. 1, § 2, and Const. U. -S. Amend. 14.

The police jury of the parish of Vermilion, about 1918, subdivided the parish into nine road districts, corresponding in territory and boundaries with the nine wards of the parish, the second ward of the parish being designated as road district No. 2.

There was no indebtedness incurred by or in behalf of the district No. 2, and the ordinance creating it was repealed.

In January, 1926, the police jury created road district No. 4, including therein the whole of the territory of the second ward of the parish, but the district took no action towards road building and incurred no debt for that purpose, and the road district, as thus defined, was abolished on May 5, 1926.

Thereafter, road district No. 4 was re-created or reorganized, composed of the territory of ward 2, except about 5,000 acres located in the northeastern portion of said ward.

Some time in July, 1926, an election was held in said district on the proposition of issuing bonds for the purpose of acquiring, building, improving, hardsurfacing, and maintaining the public roads and bridges in said district No. 4 and on the question of whether a special tax of three mills should be levied for a period of three years, beginning with 1926, the avails of which tax to be used for maintaining and improving the roads of said district.

■ Both propositions were carried by a majority vote in numbers and amount of assessed property, and the result was duly promulgated.

No opposition appears to have been made to the creation of the district, nor to the election on the bond issue and the tax levy, and the regularity and legality thereof are not now questioned, except in so far as immunity or exemption from the tax levy is claimed in the present suit.

It appears that ward No. 2 embraces 25,90T acres of high lands and 36,451 acres of marsh land.

In re-establishing road district No. 4, there were excluded from the district 4,262 acres .of high land of ward 2 and 800 acres of marsh.

The assessment of high lands, with improvements included in road district No.- 4, is $449,945.

The assessment of marsh lands in said district is $141,155. The assessment of all other property in said district-is $80,416.

The high lands are situated in the northern part of the district, and the marsh lands in the southern part. There are no streams or natural monuments which separate the high lands from the marsh, but there is a natural and gradual slope of the high lands into the marsh territory.

. There are, at present, no roads reaching to the marsh lands, but there are several public (dirt) roads crossing the high lands of said road district from east to west, all connecting with a proposed gravel road of the district which connects with a gravel road leading to Abbeville, the parish seat of Vermilion.

There are also several public roads in the high lands of the road district which run north and south, commencing from within one mile of the marsh lands and running north and connecting with proposed gravel road or district which connects with first ward graveled road at the limits of the corporation of Erath, which is on a state highway.

The fifteen plaintiffs own some 6,338 acres of marsh land situated in said road district, *447 having an assessed value of $21,815,- on which the tax for 1926 on the bond issue would amount to .$174.52, and for the three-mill maintenance tax, $65.44.

The tax on the high lands of the district for the bond issue will amount to $3,599.56, and for the maintenance of roads, $1,349.83 per year.

The assessed value of the high land of ward '2 (4,266 acres), not including said road district, is $117,600, which would 'yield for the year for the bond issue, $940.80, and for the maintenance of the roads, $352.80.

There are no residences or buildings on the marsh lands of the road district, but there are some twelve or more pleasure camps located .at or near the end of a drainage canal which runs into Vermilion Bay, and there are camps used by trappers during the trapping season 'Scattered over the marsh area.

It is admitted that the camps at the end of the canal are occupied the year round, being used during the summer for pleasure and recxeation, and during the winter months by people trapping, hunting, and fishing.

Two of the camps are worth $1,500 each; and the others, about $125 each.

The only revenues derived from the marsh land are trapping and grazing of live stock.

The revenue from trapping on the best marsh lands in the best year does not exceed $2 per acre per year, and the average revenue from trapping on the marsh land of the district, since trapping began five years ago, has been 80 cents per acre per year.

The stock grazing is not on a rental basis, but the owners of the marsh lands graze their own cattle thereon. On an average, year after year, about one-half or two-thirds of the marsh is subject to grazing during five or six months out of the year, including the winter months.

During the shrimp season, five or six men engage in seining and drying shrimp for sale at their camp located at the mouth of the drainage canal on Vermilion Bay, and this is about the only commercial fishing which passes over the marsh lands or through the canal.

The owner of a camp at the end of the drainage canal on Vermilion Bay, during the summer months, runs a boat up and down the canal, carrying passengers from -the high lands to the camp, there being on an average of 70 or 80 passengers per week. The operator of the transfer boat pays the landowner rent for the camp at the rate of $75 per year.

Two of the plaintiffs own land adjoining the proposed gravel road to be constructed in said road district with the funds derived from the bond issue and to be maintained by the three-mill tax, and all of the other plaintiffs own land situated from a quarter to one mile distant from the proposed gravel road.

It is alleged in plaintiffs’ petition that the reorganization of the road district No. 4, and the exclusion therefrom of the 4,266 acres of high land in ward 2, was brought about by reason of the opposition of the owners of said high lands and the threatened defeat of any bond issue or tax levy in the district as originally created.

It is because of this exclusion of high land acreage that the plaintiffs argue in their brief that the action of the police jury “becomes unconscionable, and takes on the air and substance of fraud.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Opinion Number
Louisiana Attorney General Reports, 1992
Thompson v. Police Jury of Parish of Tangipahoa
122 So. 713 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1929)
Judice v. Village of Scott
121 So. 592 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 So. 650, 165 La. 443, 1927 La. LEXIS 1901, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hulin-v-road-dist-no-4-la-1927.