Michigan Wisconsin Pipeline Company v. Fruge

227 So. 2d 606
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 9, 1970
Docket2788
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 227 So. 2d 606 (Michigan Wisconsin Pipeline Company v. Fruge) 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
Michigan Wisconsin Pipeline Company v. Fruge, 227 So. 2d 606 (La. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

227 So.2d 606 (1969)

MICHIGAN WISCONSIN PIPELINE COMPANY
v.
Eula Mae FRUGE.

No. 2788.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

September 8, 1969.
Rehearing Denied October 22, 1969.
Second Rehearing Denied October 23, 1969.
Writ Refused January 9, 1970.

*608 Shotwell, Brown & Sperry, by Burt W. Sperry, Monroe, and Edwards, Edwards & Broadhurst, by Nolan J. Edwards, Crowley, for plaintiff-appellant.

Pugh, Buatt, Landry & Pugh, by Lawrence G. Pugh, Jr., Crowley, for defendant-appellee.

Before TATE, FRUGE and CULPEPPER, Judges.

CULPEPPER, Judge.

This is a companion case to Michigan Wisconsin Pipeline Company v. Elroy Hebert, La.App., 227 So.2d 615 and Michigan Wisconsin Pipeline Company v. Clifford Hebert, La.App., 227 So.2d 616, in which separate decisions are being rendered by us this date. In these three consolidated cases plaintiff seeks to expropriate a servitude across farm lands owned by defendants, for the construction of a 26 inch high pressure natural gas pipeline. The district judge granted the expropriation and awarded compensation and damages. Plaintiff appealed, seeking to reduce the awards and also to remove certain restrictions from the servitude. Defendants answered the appeals, seeking both the denial of the right to expropriate and, alternatively, increases in the awards.

The general facts are that the three defendants are brothers and sister who own adjoining tracts of land, whose best use is for rice farming. Plaintiff owns an existing 26 inch natural gas pipeline across defendants' rice fields. The new servitude is for a loop line, to be constructed parallel to and 25 feet from the existing pipeline. For this purpose plaintiff seeks to expropriate a permanent servitude 50 feet in width and an additional temporary construction servitude 25 feet in width.

EXCEPTION OF NONJOINDER:

In their answers to the appeals defendants reurge an exception of nonjoinder of an indispensable party. The basis of this exception is that Vorice Hebert, a brother of the defendants, has leased the land in question since about 1942 for the purpose of growing rice on a sharecrop basis, 4/5 interest to the lessee and 1/5 to the lessors. The lease for the present year was not reduced to writing nor recorded until June 26, 1967, which was 11 days after these three expropriation suits were filed on June 15, 1967. In addition to the leases, there is an instrument dated August 31, 1965 and recorded on September 2, 1965 whereby the defendant landowners granted to Vorice Hebert a servitude to construct irrigation canals across the properties in question.

Defendants contend that by virtue of the rights owned by Vorice Hebert under the leases and the servitude for irrigation canals he is an indispensable party to this litigation.

The issues raised in the exception of nonjoinder have already been considered and decided by this court when these cases were previously before us. See Michigan Wisconsin Pipeline Company v. Fruge, La. App., 210 So.2d 375 (3rd Cir. 1968). We held there that Vorice Hebert is not an indispensable party. That solely because of the servitude which he owns for the construction of irrigation canals he may be a necessary party. See LSA-CCP Articles 641-647. We remanded the case to allow Vorice Hebert to assert any rights for damages to his irrigation canals. The record now before us on appeal does not show that Vorice Hebert has been made a party to assert any such rights. Accordingly, the district court judgment denying the exception of nonjoinder is affirmed.

EXCEPTION OF PREMATURITY:

Defendants also reurge an exception of prematurity based on the grounds that the expropriating authority did not *609 conduct bona fide negotiations with the landowners prior to the institution of this suit. This question has also been considered and decided by us in the previous appeal, Michigan Wisconsin Pipeline Company v. Fruge, supra. Accordingly, the district court judgment denying the exception of prematurity is affirmed.

NECESSITY OF EXPROPRIATION:

Defendants next contend plaintiff failed to establish the expropriation is necessary for the public convenience. Without detailing the evidence, it is sufficient to state that plaintiff proved it is a Delaware corporation authorized to do business in Louisiana as a natural gas company, U.S.C.A. Title 15, Section 717 (a) and (b), with the power to expropriate. The Federal Power Commission issued plaintiff certificates of public convenience and necessity to construct the proposed loop line to transport natural gas from the State of Louisiana to a point in the State of Michigan. Plaintiff's officers and engineers testified as to the public convenience and necessity, as well as the route chosen. There is no evidence submitted by defendants to the contrary. Hence, we affirm the district court judgment granting the expropriation sought.

THE TRIAL COURT AWARDS:

The principal issues on appeal concern the amounts of the awards for compensation and damages. The awards by the district judge were as follows: Eula Mae Fruge, compensation for the servitude taken—$625, damages—$250, total—$875; Elroy Hebert, compensation for the servitude taken—$3,975, damages to the land— $1,590, damages to rice crop—$1,590, total— $7,155; Clifford Hebert, compensation for the servitude taken—$3,000, damages— $1,200, total—$4,200.

VALUATION OF SERVITUDES TAKEN AND SEVERANCE DAMAGES:

Plaintiff's principal complaint is that the district court award for the value of the servitude taken is not based on comparable sales which show the property to have a value of $400 to $500 per acre in fee but, instead is based on alleged comparable sales of 29 servitudes for gas pipelines. Defendants' two expert appraisers, Mr. A. Byron Core and Mr. Stanley A. Tiger, used these comparable sales of similar servitudes to estimate a value of $50 per rod for the servitude taken. In his written reasons for judgment, the district judge states $50 per rod is too high. Nevertheless, he apparently followed the reasoning of defendants' experts to some extent in awarding for the value of the servitude taken, together with severance damages, an amount considerably in excess of that which could be justified on the basis of a value of $500 per acre in fee.

The plaintiff called two expert real estate appraisers, Mr. Maurice Chappuis and Mr. Marion Edwards, both of whom are highly qualified. Although there are minor variations in their respective appraisals, their testimony can be summarized as follows: Based on several recent comparable sales, the lands of Clifford and Elroy Hebert, which front on public roads, have a fee value of $500 per acre. The land of Eula Mae Fruge, being an interior tract with no road frontage, is valued at $400 per acre. After the taking, the fee burdened with the servitude will have a remaining value of $100 per acre, which means that the value of the servitude expropriated is $400 and $300 per acre respectively. Defendants suffered no severance damage to the land outside the servitude because there is already an existing pipeline; the new pipeline will be buried to a depth of 30 inches below the surface and will not interfere with the continued use of the property to grow rice; and, furthermore, their experience in the sale of rice farms has shown that the presence of pipelines across such property does not reduce the market value. These two experts allowed 10% of the fee value as a rental for the temporary work space.

Defendants also called two expert real estate appraisers, Mr. A. Byron Core and *610 Mr.

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