Louisiana Power & Light Company v. Dileo

79 So. 2d 150, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 705
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 25, 1955
Docket3989
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 79 So. 2d 150 (Louisiana Power & Light Company v. Dileo) 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 Company v. Dileo, 79 So. 2d 150, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 705 (La. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

79 So.2d 150 (1955)

LOUISIANA POWER & LIGHT COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Sam J. DILEO et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 3989.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

March 25, 1955.
Rehearing Denied April 22, 1955.

*153 Monroe & Lemann, New Orleans, Reid & Reid, Hammond, for appellant.

Zelden & Zelden, New Orleans, Joseph D. Lupo, Independence, for appellee.

TATE, Judge.

In December, 1953, Louisiana Power & Light Company (hereinafter denoted as "the Company") instituted expropriation suits against six property owners in Tangipahoa Parish. These suits were consolidated on trial and appeal. In this opinion, we will give reasons for judgment in all cases, since all concern closely related questions of law and fact, and we will render separate decrees hereinafter reported as follows: Louisiana Power & Light Company v. Dileo, 79 So.2d 162; Louisiana Power & Light Company v. Rogers, 79 So.2d 161; Louisiana Power & Light Company v. Starkey, 79 So.2d 161; Louisiana Power & Light Company v. Lavigne, 79 So.2d 160; Louisiana Power & Light Company v. Rogers, 79 So.2d 160; Louisiana Power & Light Company v. Forrest, 79 So.2d 162.

Plaintiff-appellant Company appealed suspensively and devolutively from the amount of the awards to the defendant landowners herein, furnishing bond according to law for the suspensive appeal and as fixed by court order for the devolutive appeal. In this court, all defendants-appellees filed motions to dismiss the suspensive appeal, and defendant C. G. Forrest alone filed an answer requesting an increase in the amount awarded to him. (While the other defendant-landowners requested increase of the awards, they did so only by statements of counsel in brief. Having failed to appeal or to answer the Company's appeal, any request for increase by these latter defendants cannot be considered.)

Defendant-appellees' contend that the company's suspensive appeals should be dismissed since no suspensive appeal is permitted in expropriation suits, LSA-R.S. 19:13 (except for certain limited purposes not here relevant). It is unnecessary, however, to decide this because the present suspensive appeals suspend nothing and are surplusage. Under the same statute, LSA-R.S. 19:13, the Company must deposit the money into the register of Court before taking possession of the property expropriated; and these judgments have not become executory as to payment of the money to the landowners, there having been no attempt by the Company to take the expropriated property.

*154 The defendants have raised certain defenses, such as that of prematurity for failure of the Company to offer a sum for the proposed right of way prior to suit; but all defenses to these suits (except defendants' claim as to the amount of compensation for the land sought and of severance damages for the remaining portion of the properties) have been waived by the failure of defendants herein to file answer within ten days of service, LSA-R.S. 19:6, 7; State v. Landry, 219 La. 721, 53 So.2d 908. All defendants having filed answer twenty-seven days or more after service, the trial court properly ruled that the sole issue before it was that of quantum, which is the sole issue before us on appeal.

The land sought to be expropriated in these six suits forms a continuous strip just west of U. S. Highway 51 in Tangipahoa Parish. During 1953, Highway 51 was widened from 18 to 24 feet. Plaintiff Company had since before 1930 maintained poles and a power line on the western side of Highway 51, but the widening brought the highway edge just six feet from these poles. The Louisiana Department of Highways requested removal of the poles from their present location so close to the present pavement, as creating a hazard to traffic, and also as interfering with maintenance of the shoulder and new ditches.

Since the defense of alternative relocation of this power line has been waived by failure of defendants to file answers within ten days, we must accept the uncontradicted testimony of Company and Department of Highway engineers that a right of way west of the highway 30 feet in width (15 feet on both sides of the poles and lines) is required for maintenance and safe operation of this type of power line, for clearance of underbrush, and trimming growth of trees and bushes, State v. Cooper, 213 La. 1016, 36 So.2d 22. The Department of Highways' right of way extends 41 feet west of the present paved highway edge, and in the present proceedings by letter and sworn testimony the Department's consent was given to location of the proposed new power line within its highway right of way, but west of the western ditch, at a point not closer to the highway than 33 feet west of said highway.

This proposed relocation of the poles and power line would place it eight feet within (or east of the western edge) of the Department of Highways' right of way, but the proposed Company right of way would extend west a total of 15 feet, or seven additional feet into defendant-landowners land beyond the highway right of way. (It would also extend east 15 feet from the pole into the highway right of way.)

Defendant-landowners objected to (as enlarging or altering the demands of the petition) introduction by the Company of a composite map showing locations of all tracts sought to be expropriated and with slightly different measurements than the plats attached to the separate petitions under LSA-R.S. 19:2.1(2); and also to any evidence tending to show that because of prior highway rights of way the Company did not need as much land as sought in the original petitions. The trial court correctly admitted the evidence insofar as by it the Company did not seek land beyond or in addition to the limits of the land sought in the original petitions.

On the day of trial and in its briefs since, the Company has argued that it needs to expropriate only 7 additional feet of the defendants' land rather than the 31 feet originally sought. The Company bases this contention upon the introduction of Department of Highway rights of way granted in 1929 by the predecessors in title of all present defendants (except as to one of the three Starkey tracts, which we will discuss briefly below), the western boundary of which highway rights of way extends 41 feet from the western edge of the present Highway pavement.

These highway rights of way without exception grant an 80-foot right of way "over and across" the landowner's land and contain the provision:

"It is expressly understood and agreed that this dedication and transfer *155 of the above described right of way is made for and shall be used solely for the construction and maintenance of the said Hammond-Amite State Highway (Route No. 33)."[1]

(These rights of way, incidentally, were without exception given without cash consideration, the stated consideration being to accept the advantages accruing by location of the highway through the premises.) Thus the State through its highway right of way servitude "has no right of ownership in the part, but only the right of using it", Article 658, LSA-Civil Code, and further the extent and mode of this servitude is regulated by the contract creating it, Article 722, LSA-Civil Code.

Plaintiff-Company properly sought the consent of the Department of Highways to place their poles on and line across the land subject to the highway right of way.

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Bluebook (online)
79 So. 2d 150, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-power-light-company-v-dileo-lactapp-1955.