Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated Government v. Kavish Shah

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 20, 2024
DocketCA-0024-0274
StatusUnknown

This text of Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated Government v. Kavish Shah (Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated Government v. Kavish Shah) 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
Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated Government v. Kavish Shah, (La. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

CA 24-274 consolidated with CA 24-273, CA 24-275, CA 24-276, CA 24-277

LAFAYETTE CITY-PARISH CONSOLIDATED

GOVERNMENT

VERSUS

KAVISH SHAH

**********

APPEAL FROM THE FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF LAFAYETTE, NO. 2022-6477 C/W 2023-0326, 2023-0413, 2023-0414, 2023-0898 HONORABLE LAURIE A. HULIN, DISTRICT JUDGE

SHANNON J. GREMILLION JUDGE

Court composed of Shannon J. Gremillion, Van H. Kyzar, and Charles G. Fitzgerald, Judges.

MOTIONS FOR LEAVE OF COURT TO FILE AMICUS CURIAE BRIEFS GRANTED. JUDGMENT AFFIRMED. Lawrence E. Marino Paige Casselman Beyt Oats & Marino 100 E. Vermilion Street, Suite 400 Lafayette, LA 70501 (337) 233-1100 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: Lafayette City-Parish ConsolidatedGovernment

Gary McGoffin John S. Cook Durio, McGoffin, Stagg & Guidry 220 Heymann Boulevard Lafayette, La 70503 (337) 233-0300 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: Kavish Shah

Patrick M. Wartelle Leake & Anderson, L.L.P. 600 Jefferson Street, Suite 600 Lafayette, LA 70501 (337) 233-7430 COUNSEL FOR AMICUS CURIAE: Louisiana Energy and Power Authority

Sean D. Moore Brett P. Fenasci Entergy Services 639 Loyola Avenue, 26th Floor New Orleans, LA 70113 (504) 576-7048 COUNSEL FOR AMICUS CURIAE: Entergy Louisiana, LLC Entergy New Orleans, LLC GREMILLION, Judge.

In this expropriation case, consolidated with cases involving the neighbors of

the defendants/appellees herein, the Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated

Government (LCP) appeals the award of severance damages and attorney fees and

seeks repayment of damages and fees in excess of what this court finds appropriate.

Further, Entergy Louisiana, LLC, Entergy New Orleans, LLC (collectively,

“Entergy”) and the Louisiana Energy and Power Authority (the Authority) have each

sought permission to file amicus curiae briefs.

For the reasons that follow, we grant the motions to file amicus curiae briefs

and affirm the judgment of the trial court.

FACTS

Defendant owns property on Butcher Switch Road in Lafayette Parish. LCP

was attempting to upgrade its electrical service in the area. LCP offered Shah

$5,042.00. This offer was rejected. LCP sued to acquire the utility servitude across

the street side of defendants’ property, and that of their neighbors on Butcher Switch

Road, to replace existing wood poles with galvanized steel poles.

The matter proceeded to trial on August 30, 2023.

LCP’s Chief Electrical Engineer, Hunter Boudreaux, testified that the new 75-

foot-tall, 21.6-inch diameter, galvanized steel poles will replace the existing 43.8-

foot-tall wooden poles, which are 14.49 inches in diameter. These sturdier poles are

necessitated by the installation of a new electrical substation north of Interstate 10

and east of Interstate 49, an area that has never had a substation.

The lines along Butcher Switch Road have never included transmission lines

(lines that send power from one substation to another), only distribution lines (lines

that service electrical customers). The distribution lines would be placed at their

current height and the transmission lines above those. All lines will be placed on the road side of the poles to minimize the depth of the servitude. Boudreaux testified

that in his experience, galvanized steel poles detract from the surrounding scenery

less than wooden poles because the galvanized steel blends into the sky and

background better.

According to Boudreaux, the National Electrical Safety Code determines what

clearances, vertical and horizontal, must be given for distribution and transmission

lines. LCP’s proposed lines would mandate between thirteen and fifteen feet of

clearance, which is why it sought the fifteen feet of servitude.

LCP currently has an existing roadway servitude extending thirty-five feet

from the centerline of East Butcher Switch. The existing poles are located at the

edge of that servitude. While the lines will extend over defendants’ property because

they overhang an existing servitude in favor of LCP, the defendant is not

compensated for those lines.

Although a utility servitude in favor of the Southwest Louisiana Electrical

Membership Corporation (SLEMCO) existed across the property, its dimensions

were never established; therefore, LCP sought a fifteen-foot-deep servitude. At

some point the Lafayette Utility System “purchased” many of SLEMCO’s customers.

The exact location of that servitude, in fact, was not established and currently is not

known. According to Bradford Habetz Millett, a Professional Land Surveyor hired

by LCP to perform a route survey on the proposed servitude, she did not attempt to

establish the location of that servitude. The 1958 act that created the servitude did

not specify its depth. The property is also encumbered by a 1982 servitude in favor

of South Central Bell Telephone Company (Bell). That servitude is ten feet deep

and “parallel and adjacent to the North right of way line of Butcher Switch Road for

a distance ± 200 feet.”

2 To establish the value of the taking, LCP called Michael Cope, a licensed real

estate appraiser who has performed at least 3,500 appraisals in his career, including

approximately 1,600 servitude appraisals. Cope is a recognized specialist in right of

way appraisal by the International Right of Way Association. The trial court

accepted him as an expert in general appraisal.

Cope testified that he valued the property pre-taking, a value of the parcel

being taken, and the after-taking value. To arrive at these values, Cope employed a

sales comparison analysis to compare the area of the servitude and compare it to

vacant land that had been sold in the area in the thirty months before the taking.

Cope found four comparable sales in that period. Those properties sold for between

$1.11 and $2.51 per square foot. Cope opined that defendant’s land was worth $2.22

per square foot.

Cope did not adjust his valuation to factor the SLEMCO servitude that already

encumbered the property, but he did the Bell servitude. Cope also performed a sales

comparison analysis of the defendant’s home. Cope valued the home and land at

$676,050.00.

To adjust for the after-taking value, Cope compared sales of vacant lots in the

area that were encumbered by servitudes with those that were unencumbered. He

opined that the taken parcel was devalued by eighty percent, giving a value of

$5,042.00.

Cope opined that there was no after-taking difference in the value of the

untaken portion of defendants’ property; in other words, there were no severance

damages. In fact, Cope argued that “there is no severance damage to the remainder

from the acquisition of transmission line servitudes.” That is, no severance damages

occur unless the analysis indicates that the property has sustained “100-percent

3 impact[.]” Severance damages, then, can almost never result from transmission line

servitudes.

To bolster this opinion, Cope also performed a sales comparison analysis of

Lafayette-area homes with transmission lines similar to those proposed by LCP. All

of the properties he included in this analysis were “very similar to the subject

property.” Cope also surveyed the listing and selling agents that participated in the

transaction to verify that the transactions were all arm’s-length sales. These agents

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Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated Government v. Kavish Shah, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lafayette-city-parish-consolidated-government-v-kavish-shah-lactapp-2024.