Jeanerette Lumber & Shingle Co. v. Board of Commissioners for the Atchafalaya Basin Levee District

187 So. 2d 715, 249 La. 508, 1966 La. LEXIS 2219
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 6, 1966
Docket48058
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 187 So. 2d 715 (Jeanerette Lumber & Shingle Co. v. Board of Commissioners for the Atchafalaya Basin Levee District) 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
Jeanerette Lumber & Shingle Co. v. Board of Commissioners for the Atchafalaya Basin Levee District, 187 So. 2d 715, 249 La. 508, 1966 La. LEXIS 2219 (La. 1966).

Opinion

*511 HAMITER, Justice.

The Jeanerette Lumber and Shingle Company, Ltd. brought this suit to obtain a permanent injunction in order to prevent the Board of Commissioners for the Atchafalaya Basin Levee District from appropriating certain property owned by plaintiff and located in St. Martin Parish.

The district court, after a trial of the merits, dismissed the suit.

The judgment was affirmed on appeal. 181 So.2d 415.

We granted certiorari. 182 So.2d 662.

The record discloses that on February 3, 1965 the defendant notified the plaintiff that it had adopted a resolution appropriating the property involved herein. The taking was to obtain soil for enlarging and strengthening an already existing levee located nearby on plaintiff’s land. The proposed project was an absolute necessity, the original levee having deteriorated to a dangerous level, and its purpose was to furnish relief from the hazards of flood waters that came annually from the Atchafalaya River located three and one-half to four miles away. The land appropriated does not front on or adjoin a navigable river or stream. Nor was it a part of a riparian tract at the time title thereto left the sovereign.

The plaintiff urges that since the property is not now and never has been riparian, it does not owe a servitude for levee purposes and, consequently, the appropriation is illegal.

The board bases its right to appropriate on Article 665 of the Revised Civil Code which provides: “Servitudes imposed for the public or common utility, relate to the space which is to be left for the public use by the adjacent proprietors on the shores of navigable rivers, and for the making and repairing of levees, roads and other public or common works.

“All that relates to this kind of servitude is determined by laws or particular regulations.”

It is the board’s position (and the Court of Appeal held) that the word “adjacent” in the codal article does not necessarily connote “adjoining” or “bordering upon” a navigable river, but that it means “near” or “close by”; and that when property is near or close by a navigable river, and its taking comes within the exigencies and necessities of a flood control or levee project, it owes the mentioned servitude, without regard to whether it abuts or adjoins a navigable river or has ever been a part of a riparian tract. In support of this position defendant cites and relies on Wolfe et al. v. Hurley et al., 46 F.2d 515 and Board of Commissioners of Tensas Basin Levee District v. Franklin et al., 219 La. 859, 54 So.2d 125.

The interpretation sought herein by defendant, we concede, does appear to be supported by the opinion of the Federal Dis *513 trict Court in Wolfe v. Hurley, supra, the language of which was approved hy us in the Franklin case. In the Wolfe matter the court permitted the appropriation of land for the construction of a levee even though it was not then situated on the shores of a navigable stream. While the opinion does not make clear whether the property was or was not originally a part of a riparian tract, the court apparently considered such question unimportant since the decision was that Article 665 governed, this because the land was “within range of the reasonable necessities of the situation, as produced by the forces of nature, unaided by artificial causes.” The rationale of this holding is that under certain circumstances land wherever located may be subject to appropriation, as owing a servitude for levee purposes, even though it does not front on a navigable stream and was not of riparian origin.

This court’s language of approval of such doctrine in the Franklin case, supra, appears to be dicta inasmuch as our decision therein was based primarily on the assumption that the provisions of Article 16, Section 6 of the Louisiana Constitution (which permits payment for land taken for levee purposes at a price not to exceed the assessed value for the preceding year) extended the provisions of Article 665. However, this assumption was shown to be unwarranted in Delaune et ux. v. Board of Commissioners for the Pontchartrain Levee District, 230 La. 117, 87 So.2d 749.

Too, approval of the rationale of Wolfe v. Hurley, supra, seemingly has been negatived by the Delaune decision, and by our holding in Board of Commissioners for the Pontchartrain Levee District v. Baron, 236 La. 846, 109 So.2d 441. For in these last mentioned cases, the court apparently treated the Wolfe decision, as well as the holding in the Franklin case, as standing only for the proposition that if the property is shown to have been riparian when separated from the state, then it can be appropriated if it is within range of the reasonable necessities of the situation. Thus, in the Delaune case we said: “ * * * It is manifest from a consideration of Article 665 of the Civil Code and the numerous authorities construing it that, where lands are not shown to be riparian lands, they are not subjected to a public servitude. This servitude, as explained in Dickson v. Board of Com’rs [210 La. 121, 26 So.2d 474], comes into existence at the time the property bordering on the navigable stream is separated from the public domain. Accordingly, in order to ascertain whether a particular property appropriated for levee purposes is subject to a servitude, it is essential to trace the title to the original grant when the land itself does not actually front on the stream. If that grant shows that the tract was riparian property when separated from the public domain, then *515 the next question to be determined, conformably -with the holdings in Wolfe v. Hurley and the Franklin case, is whether the property taken ‘is within range of the reasonable necessities of the situation, as produced by the forces of nature, unaided by artificial causes’. * * * ” (Italics ours.)

At first glance it might appear that this quoted language was dicta inasmuch as the land then under consideration was situated along Lake Pontchartrain; and the court had said earlier in the opinion (in answer to a contrary argument made by counsel for the board) that the property’s location on a navigable lake (rather than a river) did not make it subject to the levee servitude referred to in Article 665. However, as an alternative argument, the board had also urged that the purpose of the levee was to control the flood waters of the Mississippi River entering the lake several miles away through the Bonne Carre Spillway and that, under the Wolfe and Franklin decisions, appropriation was proper because the land was situated “within range of the reasonable necessities of the situation.” Therefore, the quoted language of the court was a square holding (in answer to this argument) that, despite the necessities of the situation relative to the Mississippi River, the property could not be appropriated unless it was first shown to have been riparian when separated from the public domain.

This conclusion was specifically affirmed in Board of Commissioners for Pontchartrain Levee District v. Baron, supra. True, the land involved therein bordered on the Seventeenth Street Canal,- a man-made waterway.

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

Related

Lonatro v. Orleans Levee District
809 F. Supp. 2d 512 (E.D. Louisiana, 2011)
Tenneco Oil Co. v. Board of Com'rs
567 So. 2d 113 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1990)
Burdin v. Board of Com'rs for Atchafalaya Basin Levee Dist.
533 So. 2d 977 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1988)
Detlic Farm & Timber Co. v. Board of Com'rs
368 So. 2d 1109 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1979)
Grayson v. Commissioners of Bossier Levee District
229 So. 2d 139 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1969)
Hathorn v. Board of Commissioners
218 So. 2d 335 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1969)
Thomas v. Board of Commissioners for the Pontchartrain Levee District
208 So. 2d 163 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 So. 2d 715, 249 La. 508, 1966 La. LEXIS 2219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeanerette-lumber-shingle-co-v-board-of-commissioners-for-the-la-1966.