Humble Pipe Line Co. v. Roy Aucoin, Inc.

230 So. 2d 365, 1969 La. App. LEXIS 5713
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 22, 1969
DocketNo. 7801
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 230 So. 2d 365 (Humble Pipe Line Co. v. Roy Aucoin, Inc.) 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
Humble Pipe Line Co. v. Roy Aucoin, Inc., 230 So. 2d 365, 1969 La. App. LEXIS 5713 (La. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

REID, Judge.

Humble Pipe Line Company instituted this expropriation suit under the provisions of LSA-R.S. 19:1 et seq., in order to secure a right-of-way or servitude across certain property situated in Section 56, Township 18 South, Range 19 East, Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana.

Plaintiff’s petition alleges that the defendants, Roy Aucoin, Inc., Roy A. Aucoin, Sr., Jasper Aucoin, Irvin Aucoin, Albon Aucoin, Lloyd Aucoin, Mrs. Lorena Guidry Aucoin, Mrs. Katherine (Kay) Aucoin Le-Blanc, individually and as testamentary executrix of the Succession of Octave Aucoin, and Mrs. Thelma Aucoin Boudreaux, were the owners of the property in question, and defendants Norris P. Dupre and Ernest Stoufflet, Jr. were lessees of said property, and the Bank of Terrebonne and Trust Company was the holder of certain mortgages affecting said property. The petition was filed April 2, 1968.

Plaintiff alleges that it is a common carrier pipeline and seeks to construct a six inch pipe line which will be coated and/or wrapped with protective treatment and will be laid and constructed at a depth where the top of the pipe line is 30 inches below the top of the original surface of the ground, or deeper. Plaintiff’s petition further alleges there are no graveyards, cemeteries, houses or improvements of any kind on the right-of-way desired, and that plaintiff and defendants were unable to agree upon the price to be paid for the right-of-way sought by plaintiff.

The landowners filed a declinatory exception to plaintiff’s petition, excepting to the jurisdiction of the Court over the subject matter of the cause for the following reasons: (1) LSA-R.S. 19:2(1), insofar as it purports to authorize the expropriation of property in the manner sought by plaintiff is unconstitutional and in violation of Article 1, Sections 2 and 6, and Article 4, Section 15, of the Constitution of the State of Louisiana, as well as in violation of the Constitution of the United States; (2) in the alternative, the property sought to be expropriated is not needed for public purposes; and (3) further in the alternative, that plaintiff failed to satisfy the necessary conditions precedent to filing expropriation proceedings as it did not attempt to conduct negotiations for the servitude purportedly required by law.

The landowners also filed a dilatory exception of prematurity on the grounds that plaintiff failed to comply with the necessary conditions precedent to filing, and as required by law, in expropriation cases of this nature, and particularly that plaintiff did not make a good faith effort to negotiate with exceptors with regard to the location of the right-of-way sought by plaintiff.

Exceptions of vagueness and of no cause of action were also filed by the landowners, the latter on the grounds that the petition does not state the point of origin of the proposed pipe line, nor its terminal point, nor any other facts which show the necessity for crossing exceptors’ property.

The landowners filed an answer to plaintiff’s petition on April 15, 1968, the same day on which the above mentioned exceptions were filed. Said answer alleged they had not refused to grant a right-of-way to the plaintiff, but averred that no pipe line as proposed by plaintiff is needed. They further alleged that the location of the proposed pipe line across their property is unduly burdensome for the reason that they had for some time been engaged in subdividing the property over which the right-of-way is sought, and because the pipe line as proposed practically bisects the subdivision, it would cause great hazard to those living nearby and would to a large extent destroy the values which defendants could receive for their property when subdivided or otherwise. They further alleged that the quantity of land sought by plaintiff [367]*367exceeds what is reasonably necessary for the purposes intended, and that should the pipe line he constructed as sought it would cause defendants damages in excess of $40,-000.00.

The Bank of Terrebonne and Trust Company alleged in its answer that the mortgages described in plaintiff’s petition were no longer in effect but averred that it was, at the time of the filing of its answer, the holder of another mortgage affecting an undivided 1/2 interest in the property in question and prayed that one-half of whatever amount was fixed by the Court be paid to the Bank of Terrebonne and Trust Company to apply against its mortgage. The Bank’s answer was filed April 25, 1968.

On April 26, 1968, plaintiff filed a motion for summary judgment on the grounds that the defendants failed to timely file and serve the dilatory exceptions, the declina-tory exception, the peremptory exception and the answer, and therefore plaintiff was entitled to summary judgment nullifying all defenses except that for compensation and damages, and overruling all exceptions. An affidavit by counsel for plaintiff was attached to the motion for summary judgment in which he averred that neither petitioner, Humble Pipe Line Company, nor its attorneys had received pleadings on behalf of any of the defendants until Tuesday, April 23, 1968, when the pleadings were handed to the affiant by counsel for defendants. Counsel for the defendants filed an answer to the motion for summary judgment and attached his affidavit averring that pleadings had been mailed to counsel for plaintiff on April 15, 1968.

At the time of the filing of plaintiff’s petition, that is, on April 2, 1968, an order was signed fixing the expropriation suit for trial on April 29, 1968. The above mentioned answer to the motion for summary judgment was presented to the Court on that day, April 29, 1968, and after discussion, the motion for summary judgment was denied.

The Court referred the exceptions filed by the defendants to the merits, with the provision that if at the completion of the trial counsel for the defendants was not satisfied that the merits of his peremptory exception of no cause of action had been fully ventilated by the testimony on the trial on the merits, he would be afforded an opportunity to adduce additional testimony only with reference to his peremptory exception and that in such case counsel for plaintiff would be afforded an opportunity to rebut such additional evidence.

The trial on the merits was commenced the same day, April 29, 1968, and continued on May 15, 1968, and on May 21 and 22, 1968.

On October 25, 1968, for written reasons assigned, judgment was rendered and signed, ordering payment to Roy Aucoin, Inc., Roy A. Aucoin, Sr., Jasper Aucoin, Irvin Aucoin, Albon Aucoin, Lloyd Aucoin, Mrs. Lorena Guidry Aucoin, Mrs. Katherine (Kay) Aucoin LeBlanc, individually and as testamentary executrix of the Succession of Octave Aucoin, and Mrs. Thelma Aucoin Boudreaux, by means of deposit in the registry of the Court, of the sum of $4,994.00 as full and final payment for the right-of-way, servitude and easement, and granting the Humble Pipe Line Company for its uses and purposes a right-of-way, servitude and easement to lay, construct, maintain, repair, replace, change the size of, and remove in whole or in part a six inch pipe for the transportation of petroleum products and by-products thereof over and across the following described property of defendants:

A certain tract of land located in the Parish of Terrebonne, Louisiana, more particularly described as follows:
1. The South half of the Southeast Quarter and the Southeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter (S/£ of the SEJ4 and the SEi/j. and the SWJ4 of Section 56, in T 18 S, R 19 E;

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Bluebook (online)
230 So. 2d 365, 1969 La. App. LEXIS 5713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humble-pipe-line-co-v-roy-aucoin-inc-lactapp-1969.