Louisiana Power and Light Company v. BOUCHEL

143 So. 2d 270
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 2, 1962
Docket21471
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 143 So. 2d 270 (Louisiana Power and Light Company v. BOUCHEL) 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
Louisiana Power and Light Company v. BOUCHEL, 143 So. 2d 270 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

143 So.2d 270 (1962)

LOUISIANA POWER AND LIGHT COMPANY
v.
Lionel de BOUCHEL et al.
(Consolidated with Nos. 21472-21474, 21476-21479).

No. 21471.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

July 2, 1962.

*271 Clarence F. Favret and Ewell C. Potts, Jr., New Orleans, for defendants and appellants.

Monroe & Lemann, Melvin I. Schwartzman, Andrew P. Carter and Eugene G. Taggart, New Orleans, for plaintiff and appellee.

Before McBRIDE, SAMUEL and JOHNSON, JJ.

McBRIDE, Judge.

This appeal was taken by the defendants in one of the eight cases filed against several landowners by Louisiana Power & Light Company, a corporation authorized to do business in Louisiana, engaged in developing, transmitting and selling electricity for power, lighting, heating and other uses, said suits being authorized under LSA-R.S. 19:2(9). The corporation by said suits is seeking to expropriate a strip of ground across the lands of defendants therein for the purposes of a right of way. The suits were consolidated for trial in the lower court and a separate judgment was rendered in each. An appeal was taken on behalf of the defendant or defendants in each suit, and all appeals were consolidated before us for argument.

This matter was considered by us on a motion to dismiss the appeal. See La.App., 117 So.2d 94.

The lands of Lionel de Bouchel, et al., are located on the left descending bank of the Mississippi River in the Parish of St. Bernard about seven miles below Canal Street in the City of New Orleans, and the plaintiff herein seeks to have the right of way above-mentioned run for a distance of 2,048 feet across said defendants' land, said strip embracing 4.69 acres. Plaintiff tendered to defendants $155.45 for said right of way which defendants refused and this suit ensued. After the trial, judgment was rendered granting plaintiff a servitude and right of way 100 feet in width for the abovementioned distance for the erection and maintenance of an electric transmission line over and across the tract of land of defendants with the right of ingress and egress upon the said right of way upon the payment to defendants of the sum of $469. Defendants have appealed from the judgment and are now contending that the value of the right of way as fixed by the trial judge is inadequate and that the amount awarded should be increased. The trial judge concluded that the land was worth $200 per acre and that one-half of that sum should be allowed per acre for the land embraced in the right of way. Defendants are contending that the land is worth $500 per acre and that the judgment should be increased accordingly. The trial judge rendered comprehensive and well-considered *272 reasons for judgment, and the following portion of said reasons is now adopted by us as part of our opinion herein:

"* * * As stated above, all the lands admittedly are either swampland or marshland, subject to tidal overflow and rainfall inundation. Swampland will bear trees. Marshland will not. There is no development of any kind in the general area, neither residential, commercial, nor industrial. There are plans afoot to construct a channel from the Gulf of Mexico to the Industrial Canal which, when completed, will provide a short cut for heavy shipping into New Orleans. The route of this canal will pass through the area between the 40-arpent canal and Lake Borgne, very near the Lake Borgne side of the general area, and will be at a distance of some three miles from the proposed location of plaintiff's line. While reasonably certain of completion, this `seaway' depends entirely upon continuing federal subsidy.
"The line will be a two-pole, H-frame type, with three conductors suspended from the crossarms. These conductors will, at their lowest point of sage, be approximately 25 feet above the ground level. The strip expropriated will be usable by defendants, or their assignees, for all purposes, except the construction of buildings thereon, such as, cattle grazing, trapping, hunting, fishing; the right to build roads and fences; and all mineral rights.
"Mr. Max J. Derbes, Sr. appeared as expert for plaintiff, Mr. Derbes approached the property on foot as close as the levee would permit but, because of the swamp conditions, could not walk the proposed line. As a substitute, he flew over the line in a helicopter, making four trips, two each way. As comparable sales he cited:
"(a) Acquisitions of 100-foot right-of-way along portions of this same subject line, at a price of $66.15 per acre among which was one acquisition from Williams, Inc., owners of vast acreage in St. Bernard and elsewhere in Louisiana;
"(b) A sale of high land about one mile East of the subject property on a basis of $330.72 per acre;
"(c) Rights-of-way on the Eastern boundary of the subject property for $26.43 and $29.41 per acre;
"(d) A sale of high land in September 1957, accessible to two concrete streets at $484.02 per acre;
"(e) A sale of high land in April 1957, at $350.71 per acre;
"(f) A sale of high land in April 1958, at $49.09 per acre, 8 miles Northeast of the subject property;
"(g) A sale in April 1958 of 700 feet back from a highway in the general area at $26.89 per acre.
"Two `rules of thumb' used by Derbes and experts generally, in analyzing comparable sales, are: (a) the valuation of a servitude should be approximately 50% of the fee value in those instances where the owner will retain all uses of the property except for the construction of buildings and, (b) marsh and swampland is generally worth a maximum of one-fourth the value of high land. Upon an analysis of all the comparables available to him, Derbes concluded that the subject property was worth $132.30 per acre in fee, or $66.15 per acre for a servitude.
"Messrs. Angus Eason and Cliff Probst testified as experts for the defendants, and fixed the value at $650.00 per acre, plus, for the right-of-way alone. They based their conclusions on: (a) `Comparables' and (b) The `Seaway' enhancement. Their `comparables' were:
"(1) A right-of-way agreement between Realty Holding Company and *273 New Orleans Public Service, Inc. in April of 1943. This transaction was during war-time and is a number of miles distant from the subject property, and actually within the area of the City of New Orleans; and, the right-of-way contained a clause by which the grantors surrendered and waived all claims for damages. Here, defendants, have reserved all rights to any damages suffered, or may be suffered.
"(2) A right-of-way obtained by Tennessee Gas Transmission Company in the area of Delacroix, some 10 miles distant from the subject property. This, like the right-of-way above, is not an appropriate `comparable'.
"(3) A right-of-way acquired by American Telephone and Telegraph Company against the East End Realty Company, Inc. That was for the laying of a sub-surface coaxial cable abutting a public highway, the main artery into New Orleans from the Eastern United States, which our Supreme Court found to be available for commercial development ([American Tel. & Tel. Co. v. East End Realty Co.] 223 La. 532, 66 So. (2d) 327) and allowed 2 cents per square foot. This is not comparable to swampland on the Northeast side of the 40-arpent canal in St.

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Bluebook (online)
143 So. 2d 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-power-and-light-company-v-bouchel-lactapp-1962.