Louisiana Soc. for Prevention of Cruelty to Children v. Board of Levee Com'rs

78 So. 249, 143 La. 90, 1917 La. LEXIS 1750
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 11, 1917
DocketNo. 21376
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 78 So. 249 (Louisiana Soc. for Prevention of Cruelty to Children v. Board of Levee Com'rs) 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
Louisiana Soc. for Prevention of Cruelty to Children v. Board of Levee Com'rs, 78 So. 249, 143 La. 90, 1917 La. LEXIS 1750 (La. 1917).

Opinions

PROVOSTY, J.

Along the banks of the Mississippi river in the state of Louisiana earth embankments, or levees, are built for holding in the river when in times of freshet it rises above the general level of the country. There is such a levee in front of the plaintiff’s property in the city of New Orleans. It is some 20 feet high, as we gather, and has a 50-foot crown and a slope on the land side of 8 to 1 — 8 feet horizontal to 1 perpendicular. The banks of the river are not stable; on the lower side of bends, where the current strikes, they cave, or are eroded and washed away, so that the levee has occasionally to be moved back, when dangerously close to the river bank. When it is thus moved back the space required for its new location and for the public road which usually runs along the base of the levee on the land side is taken without the necessity of an expropriation' and without compensation — by right of public servitudes of levee and road which all lands fronting on rivers owe in Louisiana. Ruch v. City of New Orleans, 43 La. Ann. 275, 9 South. 473; Pontchartrain, etc., v. Board, 49 La. Ann. 570, 21 South. 765. This servitude of levee was, however modified by the Constitution of 1S98, our present Constitution, by the adoption of the following provision:

“Art. 312. Any person whose property has been appropriated within twelve months prior to the adoption of this Constitution, or whose property may hereafter be appropriated by -the Orleans levee board for levee purposes, shall have a right in action against said board in any court of competent jurisdiction for the value of said property, and whatever judgments may be finally rendered against the board shall be paid out of the taxes collected by it in the same manner as other disbursements are made: Provided, that this shall not apply to batture property, nor to vacant property, where only a part thereof has been taken for levee purposes, and where the effect of the levee building would be to protect the remaining part of the same prop[93]*93erty; nor to any property on any part of the river front, the administration and control of which is vested, for the purposes of commerce, cither in the state or city authorities, and on which improvements have been erected under grants from the city of New Orleans, or other authority, nor to the said improvement: Provided, that said board shall have power to appropriate property subject to such servitude, for levee building, as under existing laws, without making such compensation in advance.”

The levee in front of plaintiff’s property has been moved back, and plaintiff has brought this suit under this constitutional provision.

Plaintiff’s property is situated on the outskirts of the city, in a neighborhood where the streets, although platted, are not all opened, and are not cared for by the city. Whether the water, sewerage, and drainage systems of the city extend that far, the record does not show. It has a frontage of 325 feet on the river by a depth of 319 feet, and is bounded on one side by Jourdan avenue and on the other side by the land of the Ursuline Convent. Before the levee was moved back, there was a road and a banquette between the front yard and levee. Now the levee passes about 5 feet from the front porch of the main building, cutting off about half of the area of the property, including all of the front yard. The property was acquired by plaintiff in 1905, and was being used as a home for homeless children whom plaintiff took charge of, and as a sort of reformatory for culprit children sent there by the courts. The work was philanthropic; but the city contributed to the expenses. When the fact that the levee was to be moved back became known, plaintiff decided to abandon that location and locate elsewhere. But this was, as we gather, because plaintiff was under the impression that the defendant board would take and pay for the entire property. Plaintiff has discontinued that part of its work consisting in providing a home, and has turned over the premises to the city ; not, however, because of the levee having been constructed, but for the reason that the city’s contribution towards the expenses of the work was considered insufficient.

Plaintiff’s demand is for a lump sum of $75,000, for the entire property, on the theory that the entire property has been appropriated, and that it is worth at least that much. The argument is that the part which remains is no longer suitable for the purposes for which it has heretofore been used; it being now too small in area for those purposes, and unsanitary, owing to dampness caused by the seepage water percolating through the levee and to the drainage water from the slope of the levee, and that, therefore, the whole property has been appropriated.

But, evidently, the whole has not been appropriated. Even if it were true that the part left was no longer suitable for plaintiff’s purposes, the most that this could possibly show would be that the value of this remainder had been reduced.

The servitude which the defendant board is exercising entitles it to nothing more than sufficient space for the construction of the levee. It can take no more than this, for, if it did, it would be taking land not needed for levee purposes, and all it could do with it would be to sell it, and thus it would be converted from a levee board to a sort of dealer in real estate. It is utterly without authority to use for such a purpose the money realized from taxes imposed and collected for levee purposes solely, and confided to it to be used solely for levee purposes. In like manner, and for the same reason, it can appropriate only land; not any improvements that may happen to be on the land which it appropriates. On the other hand, while it cannot appropriate these improvements, it manifestly appropriates plaintiff’s property to the extent that plaintiff is deprived of these improvements; that is, to the extent that plaintiff is damaged in having to remove [95]*95them, or in losing those which have no removable value. The basis of settlement as to the property which is actually taken must therefore be the market value of the property taken with the improvements upon it, less the removable value of the improvements.

On this market value the parties are very far from agreeing. Plaintiff would have it determined by the price at which the defendant board purchased the adjoining property from the Ursuline Convent and Lambou & Noel at private sale. Defendant on the other hand would have it fixed by the general market value of similarly situated land in that vicinity.

Defendant objected to proof of what was paid to the convent and to Lambou & Noel, on the ground that the price paid in expropriation proceedings, as the result either of a judgment or of an agreement of parties, is not a safe criterion, and is not admissible. In La. Ry. & Nav. Co. v. Morere, 116 La. 997, 41 South. 236, and in La. Ry. & Nav. Co. v. Sarpy, 117 La. 156, 41 South. 477, this court held that such evidence was admissible; that the objection to it should go only to its effect.

The evidence was admissible. But these two sales are of no great assistance for arriving at the value of plaintiff’s property. The price paid per square foot is testified to, but there was $58,000 worth of improvements on the convent property, and no evidence has been offered as to what was the number of feet, nor of what was the total price, except that one of the questions asked of Mayor Behrman by defendant’s counsel is whether the defendant board did not pay interest to the convent on $216,000.

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Bluebook (online)
78 So. 249, 143 La. 90, 1917 La. LEXIS 1750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-soc-for-prevention-of-cruelty-to-children-v-board-of-levee-la-1917.