Mills v. State Through Dept. of Highways
This text of 416 So. 2d 957 (Mills v. State Through Dept. of Highways) 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.
Opinion
Lilliann Bouldin MILLS, Pike Hall Trichel, and Milton C. Trichel, Jr.
v.
STATE of Louisiana Through the DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS.
Lilliann Bouldin MILLS, Pike Hall Trichel, and Milton C. Trichel, Jr.
v.
STATE of Louisiana Through the DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION AND DEVELOPMENT.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
William W. Irwin, Jr., Bryan Miller, Harvey Lee Hall, Johnie E. Branch, Jr., Baton Rouge, for defendant-appellant, State of La. through Dept. of Highways (now Dept. of Transp. and Development.
Milton C. Trichel, Jr., Neil Martin Trichel, Eileen Trichel Baldwin, Shreveport, for plaintiffs-appellees.
*958 Before PRICE, MARVIN, and JASPER E. JONES, JJ.
MARVIN, Judge.
In these consolidated possessory actions, the State appeals a judgment maintaining the landowners' possessory right of enjoyment of 523.54' of access along the west side of their property that abuts the State's right of way at the interchange of Interstate 220 with U.S. Highway 71 in Shreveport.
We had earlier held that the State's expropriation of the southernmost .892 acres of the landowners' property did not include the 523.54' control of access. State, Dept. of Highways v. Trichel, 348 So.2d 1260 (La. App. 2d Cir. 1977). Before that opinion, the landowners filed the first of these possessory actions, alleging as a disturbance in fact, the State's appropriation and partial fencing of the right of access. When the State resumed its efforts to fence the entire 523.54' some 14 months later, the landowners filed the second of these possessory actions. Construction of the interchange has been completed and the highway opened to traffic many months before these actions were tried.
The "just compensation" merits of the expropriation of the .892 acre was consolidated with the possessory actions below, but has not been tried. The judgment appealed allows the State 60 days in which to either expropriate the right of access or institute a petitory action. That judgment also stayed the trial of the expropriation action for 60 days. See State, Dept. of Highways v. Trichel, 415 So.2d 22 (La.App. 2d Cir. 1982), where the State's appeal in the expropriation action was dismissed.
In this appeal, the State did not file an exception of no cause of action, but suggests in three specifications of error that the landowners "have no cause to complain" and should not be able to bring a possessory action in circumstances where the State is exercising its police power of regulating and controlling traffic upon the public highway right of way. LSA-Const. Art. 1, § 4, LRS 48:304, State ex rel. Gebelin v. Department of Highways, 200 La. 409, 8 So.2d 71 (1942); Department of Hwys. v. Southwestern Elec. Pow. Co., 243 La. 563, 145 So.2d 312 (1962).[1]
In these circumstances, we shall consider on our own notice the landowners' cause of action. CCP 927. In Gebelin, the State expropriated a highway right of way for which the landowners were paid $30,000. After the expropriation was concluded and the highway was constructed, the landowners brought actions to mandamus the State to allow them access to the highway and to enjoin the State from interfering with the landowners' construction of access ways. Alternatively, the landowners sought a money judgment for the diminution in value of the remainder of their property. The State contended that it was acting within its constitutional and statutory authority to regulate use of the highway and that its refusal to permit access ways to the landowners was not an invasion of the landowners' property rights. The supreme court did not agree and upheld the judgment that granted several access ways to the landowners.
"An abutting landowner on a public highway has a special right of easement... in the public road for access purposes... a property right which cannot be ... taken from him without due compensation. * * *
"The Department of Highways has authority... to limit the ... access ... to such extent as the department deems necessary for the public safety ... [b]ut the authority is not above or beyond that of the court. To deny to the landowner a judicial investigation ... would violate his constitutional guarantee that private property shall not be taken or damaged except for public purposes and after just *959 and adequate compensation is paid." 8 So.2d at p. 74, 75.
After Gebelin, the Legislature authorized the highway department to prohibit access to highways. See LRS 48:1(12), 302, 303, 344, and State v. Hub Realty Company, 239 La. 154, 118 So.2d 364 (1960), and statutes cited therein.
"The highway authorities may design any controlled-access facility and ... prohibit access ..." § 302, in part.
"Entrances to and exits from private properties adjacent to the rights of way of state highways may be ... prohibited in the interest of the safety of the traveling public ... The department may apply to the courts for such process as may be necessary to make the provisions of this section effective." § 344, in part.
"The highway authorities may acquire private ... property and property rights for controlled-access facilities ... including rights of access ... by donation, purchase, exchange, lease, or expropriation in the same manner as they ... may be authorized to acquire property ..." § 303, in part.
LRS 48:441 et seq., the quick-taking statute, states the manner in which the department may acquire "both corporeal property and servitudes ..." by expropriation. § 441. Emphasis supplied. When the requirements of that statute have been followed, the "title to the property and property rights specified in the petition [for expropriation] shall vest in the department and the right to just and adequate compensation shall vest in the persons entitled thereto." § 445, in part. Emphasis supplied.
In its argument here, the State recognizes that the owner of lands abutting a public highway has the special property right of access to a public highway abutting his property, but contends that the "inherent police power of the State gives the highway authorities ... the power to control the use of that right by deciding at which point or points along the boundary... access shall or shall not be available for the use of said right." This quotation from Gebelin is cited as authority for that argument.
"But an [abutting] owner is not entitled, as against the public, to access to his land at all points in the boundary ... although entire access may not be cut off. If he has free and convenient access to his property, and his means of ingress and egress are not substantially interfered with by the public, he has no cause for complaint." 8 So.2d at p. 75.
The quoted principles have not been enervated by the 1975 Louisiana Constitution or by the statutes enacted since Gebelin. We view these authorities and Gebelin as stating that the abutting landowner has cause for complaint if the highway authority, in the exercises of its police power, substantially interferes with his means of ingress and egress to the public highway without expropriating that access and paying just compensation.
The threshold question then is whether the landowner has alleged or shown that his right of access has been substantially interfered with by the State highway authorities in the exercise of its recognized police power.
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