Marathon Pipe Line Co. v. Pitcher

368 So. 2d 994, 1979 La. LEXIS 5552
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 5, 1979
Docket62768
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 368 So. 2d 994 (Marathon Pipe Line Co. v. Pitcher) 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
Marathon Pipe Line Co. v. Pitcher, 368 So. 2d 994, 1979 La. LEXIS 5552 (La. 1979).

Opinion

368 So.2d 994 (1979)

MARATHON PIPE LINE COMPANY
v.
Mrs. Charlie Holcombe PITCHER.

No. 62768.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

March 5, 1979.
Rehearing Denied April 9, 1979.

Ashton L. Stewart, Stewart & Preis, Baton Rouge, for defendant-applicant.

Thomas R. Blum, Ralph L. Kaskell, Jr., Deutsch, Kerrigan & Stiles, New Orleans, for plaintiff-respondent.

SUMMERS, Chief Justice.[*]

Marathon Pipe Line Co. instituted this expropriation proceeding to obtain a 20-foot permanent servitude for a petroleum pipeline along a pipeline corridor in East Baton Rouge Parish. Defendant Charlie Holcombe Pitcher, who owns property which the pipeline will traverse, resisted the taking. She contends that Sections 1-14 of Title 19 and Sections 251-254 of Title 45 of the Revised Statutes, under which plaintiff claims the right of expropriation, are unconstitutional in contravention of Section 4 of Article I of the Constitution of Louisiana. Alternatively, defendant alleged the servitude should be limited in certain respects and that substantial severance damages should be awarded in addition to the *995 award for the servitude expropriated and for attorney's fees.

It is defendant's contention that her 35-acre tract of land to be traversed diagonally by the pipeline is located within the city limits of Baton Rouge and is surrounded by newly developed and built-up residential subdivisions. The highest and best use of her property is said to be for development as a residential subdivision. Installation of the pipeline would therefore impede the construction of a necessary access road to a residential subdivision planned to be developed on her property.

Constitutionality of the statutes was upheld in the trial court and defendant was awarded $5,074.50 as compensation for the servitude expropriated, and $10,000 for severance damages, plus costs and attorney's fees.

In adjudicating the servitude to plaintiff the trial judge, as suggested by Marathon in its petition, imposed this obligation:

"[I]n the event defendant, or her successor in title, constructs the street described hereinafter across plaintiff's pipeline, and it is necessary for plaintiff's pipeline to be encased or otherwise protected to permit construction of said street, such encasement or protection shall be accomplished at the expense of plaintiff, Marathon Pipe Line Company, provided, however, that plaintiff shall be required to accomplish such encasement and protection (a) only if the street constructed by defendant is an extension of East Parnell Avenue from Sherwood Forest Subdivision, Thirteenth Filing, directly across Flannery Road into her property, and then only to the extent necessary to permit construction of a street with a right-of-way sixty (60') feet in width."

In the Court of Appeal the judgment was affirmed. 361 So.2d 314. Defendant applied to this Court for a review of this judgment, contending that it was error to permit the expropriation without requiring the full payment of compensation for the taking in money. Certiorari was granted. 362 So.2d 787.

In her presentation to this Court defendant explains that the trial and appellate courts employed an erroneous basis for fixing the amount of compensation to which she is entitled. Those courts reduced the market value of defendant's property by the amount required to encase the pipeline where the street would cross, instead of awarding the amount necessary to complete the encasement as part of the compensation due the landowner. The stipulated cost of encasement was $19,394.10. This amount, defendant claims, should have been awarded to her at the time of the taking in addition to the $15,074.00.

From the testimony and exhibits on file it is evident that the highest and best use of defendant's property is for development as a residential subdivision. Development of such a subdivision will require a street leading from the public road into plaintiff's property. To properly develop plaintiff's property as a residential subdivision the street will have to traverse plaintiff's pipeline, and it will be necessary to encase that pipeline. The cost of the encasement at the time of the taking was stipulated to be $19,394.10. These facts establish that the cost of encasement is a "damage" to defendant's property which affects its present market value. The diminution in value is "damage" for which compensation is due. The sole question, then, is whether that damage should have been compensated to defendant in money prior to the taking or whether the court properly imposed an obligation on the pipeline company to encase the pipe "in the event defendant, or her successors in title, construct the street" and "it is necessary for plaintiff's pipeline to be encased."

Aside from the fact that two contingencies are made part of defendant's obligation to encase the pipe, there is little doubt that the laying of the pipeline across defendant's property does affect its market value. And that effect is due to the reasonable certainty that in order to put the property to its highest and best use a street will be required and it will be necessary to encase the pipeline.

*996 Dakin and Klein in Eminent Domain in Louisiana at page 96 considered this question, saying:

"Every parcel of land is presumed to have a single use which is its most economically profitable. It is this premise which the courts and the appraisers mean to convey when they use the term `highest and best use'. Not infrequently, a partial expropriation of or a public improvement on an adjacent property has the effect of destroying the highest and best use of a parcel, thereby resulting in injury quite measurable in dollars and cents. In calculating the compensation, the courts are first concerned with determining what is and was the highest and best use of the land and the remainder. The rule here is that the highest and best use of the remainder is the point of interest, and it is to be determined immediately before and immediately after the taking."

Because of its limited adaptation as a residential subdivision the market value of the property suffers whether a street is constructed over the pipeline or not. It is the impediment created by the pipeline which creates the diminution in value. This diminution in value is not therefore compensated under the obligation imposed upon plaintiff by the Court of Appeal "in the event defendant, or her successors in title, construct the street." Such a contingency, which may or may not occur, is one the fulfillment of which requires that Marathon Pipe Line Company be in existence and be the owner of the pipeline when the obligation to encase becomes executory. This is so for there is no obligation imposed upon Marathon's successors or assigns. Added to this uncertainty is a further condition that encasement will depend upon whether "it is necessary for plaintiff's pipeline to be encased." This leaves open for future controversy and litigation the question whether encasement of the pipeline is then necessary.

In general terms the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution embodies as part of its due process guarantee the principle that "private property [shall not] be taken for public use, without just compensation."

Section 4 of Article I of Louisiana's Constitution contains more detailed protections for the owners of private property. In this State every person has the right to acquire, own, control, use, enjoy, protect, and dispose of private property.

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Bluebook (online)
368 So. 2d 994, 1979 La. LEXIS 5552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marathon-pipe-line-co-v-pitcher-la-1979.