Louisiana Power & Light Co. v. Roy

198 So. 2d 484, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 4904
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1966
DocketNo. 10620
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 198 So. 2d 484 (Louisiana Power & Light Co. v. Roy) 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 & Light Co. v. Roy, 198 So. 2d 484, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 4904 (La. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinions

GLADNEY, Judge.

The Louisiana Power and Light Company, an expropriating authority so empowered under LSA-R.S. 12:2 et seq., instituted this proceeding for the purpose of obtaining a right of way or servitude to locate, construct and maintain an extra high voltage electric transmission line across the property of Lucian M. Roy, the defendant herein, who answered, denying first, the necessity therefor, and second, the adequacy of the compensation offered. After disposing of the first- defense, the parties stipulated that the sole issue presented for decision on this appeal relates to damages or compensation due to the defendant landowner for his land falling within the right of way, and severance damages to his property lying beyond the servitude. The case was tried upon this issue and resulted in a judgment condemning the plaintiff to pay the sum of $6,112.50 as compensation for the land embraced in the servitude, and the further sum of $8,-775.00 as damages to the remainder of defendant’s property lying on both sides of the right of way, thus making a total award of $14,887.50, together with legal interest, expert fees and costs. From the decree plaintiff has appealed and appellee has answered the appeal seeking an increase in the award.

With respect to the servitude or use of the right of way through the Roy property, there has been or will be erected two steel towers, 119.6 feet and 124.6 f^et tall, respectively anchored to underground concrete footings, the bases of which comprise areas measuring 37' X 17' for the smaller towers and 4F X IS' for the larger. Each tower bears two cross arms or bars, the lower arm measuring 96 feet in width and the upper arm measuring 89 feet in width. From the upper arm will be suspended three phases of three conductors (cables) each-or a total of nine cables, each measuring one and one-fourth inches in diameter and weighing one and' one-fourth pounds per foot. These conductors transmit 500,-000 volts. From the lower arm will be suspended two 230,000 volt circuits, comprising six conductors, equally as large and as heavy as the 500,000 volt conductors. Above the arms from the top of the towers will hang two shield wires that measure %6ths of an inch in diameter and weigh .5 pound per foot. This maze of cables covers a vertical space of 53 feet with the lowest at the maximum point of sag being 27 feet above ground at 60° Fahrenheit. Twenty or more feet above the lower cables hang the 500,000 volt circuits and thirty-three feet above them are the two insulation wires. The servitude over the property affects a strip 200 feet wide, extending 1775 feet in length and containing 8.15 acres. The center line of the right of way enters defendant’s property on the south line at a point 300 to 400 yards southwesterly from Walnut Bayou, its eastern boundary, and extends diagonally across it to a point 1915 feet from the Bayou.

The property consists of 125 acres situated seven miles east of Tallulah, Madison Parish, Louisiána, on an asphalt surfaced highway. It is rectangular in shape and fronts about one quarter of a mile on the westerly side of Walnut Bayou. Defendant lives on the property in a five room frame house which will be removed when his new dwelling, now under construction, is completed. Admittedly, the highest and best use of defendant’s property is agricultural or farming. Likewise, all witnesses testifying as to the value of the property agreed that the subject tract was made of the best and most fertile soil, is highly productive, and enjoys a history of good and intensive cultivation.

The trial court rendered judgment condemning appellant to pay the sum of $14,-887.50 as compensation for the land embraced in the servitude and damages to the remainder on both sides of the right of way. In arriving at this sum the court fixed a valuation for the land embraced within the servitude of $1,500.00 per acre subject to a credit of $750.00 for the owner’s retention value. Thus, the 8.15 acres in the right of way as valued for compen[486]*486sation purposes, was fixed at $6,112.50. The court found the remainder of the tract consisting of 117 acres has been damaged to the extent of $75.00 per acre or a total of $8,775.00. After the appeal was lodged in this court the defendant answered the appeal asking that the award of $14,887.50 be increased to the sum of $16,470.50 for the loss' of a pecan tree standing in the right of way and valued at $1,600.00.

Appellant urges that the trial court erroneously placed an inflated value on the area within the right of way, allowed exorbitant severance damages to the remainder of defendant’s property and erred in allowing costs for defendant’s witness, Malcolm C. Sevier, as an expert appraiser.

On the trial of the case in order to establish the fair market value of the servitude required, plaintiff presented as experts Wayne Medley and Dean Carter both of whom used the market data approach. In addition to the testimony of the owner of the property, Lucian M. Roy, the defense relied upon the expert testimony of Kermit Williams and Malcolm C. Sevier.

Through the use of comparables, Medley arrived at a per acre fair market value of $360.00 and Carter fixed such value at $350.00. Medley assigned a retention value of $70.00 per acre to the area within the right of way proper and Carter assigned a retention value of $100.00 per acre. By use of these figures Medley assigned a value of $2,380.00 as damages sustained for the 8.15 acres taken, and Carter the sum of $2,040.00. With respect to severance damages Medley testified he found no evidence that the proposed power line would cause damages to defendant’s property outside of the right of way. As a basis therefor, he testified that in his opinion the high-, est and best use of the property was as a farm and that portion lying outside of the right of way could be farmed as well after the construction of the power line as before. Carter was of the opinion that two small tracts comprising 2.3 acres to the north of the right of way and 5.4 acres to the south of the right of way would be damaged $100.00 per acre, or $770.00.

Roy testified he considered his property worth $600.00 per acre, but he valued the acreage within the right of way at $1,500.00 per acre. In explanation he said he thought he was entitled to ask a premium price for the property so taken. He recognized it would have a twenty per cent retention value. Defendant’s expert, Kermit Williams, gave his opinion fixing the fair market value of the property lying within the right of way at $600.00 per acre with no retention value to the defendant. Williams, in arriving at the per acre value of $600.00, relied upon the income approach and the market data approach as evidenced by certain comparables. This witness referred also to recent payments made for certain right of ways in St. Martin and Pointe Coupee Parishes. He suggested that the 114 acres after excluding that portion of defendant’s property within the right of way, would suffer a diminution in value of $100.00 per acre. He concluded that plaintiff should be entitled to the sum of $17,-900.00 as total compensation for the servitude. The amount of the appraisal included $1,600.00 for the loss of the pecan shade tree. Sevier valued the Roy property at $700.00 per acre, stating that he placed a value on the 8.15 acres within the right of way at $1,400.00 per acre as he was of the opinion that the 200 foot strip as carved out of the entire tract should be doubled in value. In determining the fee value of the entire property at $700.00 per acre he considered certain comparables and the use of irrigation due to the proximity of Walnut Bayou.

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Related

Central Louisiana Electric Company, Inc. v. Davis
291 So. 2d 489 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1974)
Southwestern Electric Power Co. v. Jones
256 So. 2d 677 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1972)
State v. Upstream, Inc.
209 So. 2d 85 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
198 So. 2d 484, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 4904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-power-light-co-v-roy-lactapp-1966.