Ogden v. Police Jury of Concordia Parish

28 F. Supp. 402, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2599
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedJuly 31, 1939
DocketNo. 78
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 28 F. Supp. 402 (Ogden v. Police Jury of Concordia Parish) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ogden v. Police Jury of Concordia Parish, 28 F. Supp. 402, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2599 (W.D. La. 1939).

Opinion

PORTERIE, District Judge.

This suit is instituted by Mrs. Marion Davis Ogden and others, alleging. themselves to be the heirs of the late Don Jose Vidal, and, as such, entitled to recover [403]*403of and against The Police Jury of Concordia Parish and The Board of Commissioners of the Fifth Louisiana Levee District the principal sum of $14,040, as their alleged proportionate part of a contract between said Police Jury and Board of Levee Commissioners under the following circumstances:

By deed of November 18, 1809, the aforesaid Don Jose Vidal conveyed, bargained and sold to the magistracy of Concordia Parish, whose rights subsequently became vested in the Police Jury as the governing body thereof, certain real property as described in the complaint and otherwise identified in the pleadings in this cause, which property we will designate herein as the “old Court House Square.”

This deed from Vidal contained the two clauses following, which present the vital issue in this litigation, to-wit:

(a) That the land was sold to the Parish “for the sole and only purpose of building and erecting thereon a Courthouse, jail and public offices and buildings for the use and benefit of said parish”; and

(b) “Provided moreover nevertheless that if at any time hereafter, the said parish or any other authority whatever shall remove or change from the above premises the Courthouse and other public buildings above recited to any other place or places, then and in that case the said Joseph Vidal, his heirs, executors, administrators or assigns shall by these presents have full power and authority to take possession of the same; he, the said Joseph Vidal, his heirs, executors, administrators, or assigns refunding and paying back for the use of said parish one thousand dollars (being the full sum which he, the said Joseph Vidal, hath received and paid for the same above mentioned hoitse erected and built upon the premises aforesaid), and for all other buildings that shall be hereafter erected on the said premises hereby remised, he, the said Joseph Vidal, his heirs, executors and administrators shall well and truly pay, for the use of the parish aforesaid, such sum or sums therefor as shall be awarded and adjudged by two persons appointed by the parties therein in interest.”

Following the conveyance from Vidal in 1809 the governing authority of the Parish of Concordia used the site thus acquired for the location thereon of the Parish Court House and other public buildings, all continuously for a period of one hundred and thirty years, or up until the early part of the year 1939. On January 18, 1939, the Police Jury of the Parish of Concordia, pursuant to special resolution of the Police Jury, conveyed to the Board of Commissioners of the Fifth Louisiana Levee District certain rights of easement, fiowage rights and other real rights in and over the old Court House Square, and following upon such act of conveyance of January 18, 1939, the Police Jury razed and removed from the site the old public buildings and the Levee Board thereafter dredged and excavated the land in part and constructed thereon an emergency levee in part. These acts of the Levee Board were done in conjunction and cooperation with the United States Government authorities, represented and acting through the Corps of Army Engineers, as a part and portion of the project for flood control and levee construction in the alluvial valley of the Mississippi river, and particularly toward consummation of the Vidalia setback levee project, all designed to remove the peril of the Natchez Gorge and the flood dangers which it presented.

The conveyance herein mentioned from the Police Jury to the Board of Levee Commissioners was made for a recited consideration of $40,000, to be paid by the Levee Board to the Police Jury pursuant to an agreement of compromise adjustment by and between those two public bodies, as exemplified in Ordinance No. 171 of the Police Jury of the Parish of Concordia. That Ordinance recited and recites the agreement between the two bodies and declares especially that the conveyance is being made by the Police Jury for the reasons that the old Court House Square was and is no longer needed for public use, and, in fact, had become physically dangerous for use by the citizens of the Parish, due to imminent flood danger; and, further, specially declares that the amount of compensation agreed upon, to-wit: $40,000, represents an allocation of value of $1,000 for the real property, or old Court House Square, and $39,000 for the loss of the public buildings thereon.

These acts and transactions having occurred on March 31, 1939, the plaintiffs in this cause filed the present suit, alleging themselves to represent together ^oths of the outstanding interests of heirship under [404]*404Don Jose Vidal, and, as such, entitled to a recovery against the public bodies defendant of ^oths of the $40,000 compensation agreed upon between those two bodies, all under and by virtue of the restrictive and reversionary clauses in the original Vidal deed of 1809. Issue was thereafter joined in the suit through separate motions for summary judgment filed in behalf of the Police Jury of Concordia Parish and the Board of Commissioners of the Fifth Louisiana Levee District, pursuant to Rule No. 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

These motions for summary judgment present substantially identical defensive propositions, and those propositions are quoted verbatim from brief of movers:

One. “That subsequent to the transfer of 1809 from Vidal to the magistracy of Concordia Parish the said Vidal transferred all of his remaining right, title and interest in and to the old Court House Square to his son-in-law, Samuel Davis, and, furthermore, that subsequent thereto the • said Samuel Davis by confirmatory deed and separate donation did transfer to the Police Jury of Concordia Parish all of the right, title and interest acquired or owned by him in the old Court House Square without reservation of any reversionary interest and in order forever to quiet and put at rest any possibility of dispute against the title of said Police Jury; by which said acts it is argued that there occurred a complete divestiture of any reversionary interest in the said Vidal or Davis, or the heirs of either of them.

“It may be noted that it is specially stipulated that the parties plaintiff are not only heirs of Jose Vidal but also are heirs in the direct descending line of his son-in-law, the said Samuel Davis, here mentioned.”

Two. “The further proposition is advanced by defendants that the deed from Vidal to the Police Jury constituted no more than a contract between parties subject at all times to the overriding exercise of the inherent sovereign powers of the State of Louisiana, commonly denominated the police powers of the State.”

Three. “That the State of Louisiana and its political subdivisions, the Boards of Levee Commissioners, are and at all times have -been vested with inherent sovereign power in the matter of levees and flood control as exemplified in the historical levee servitude to which all lands adjacent to rivers in the State have at all times been subject.”

Four.

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Bluebook (online)
28 F. Supp. 402, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogden-v-police-jury-of-concordia-parish-lawd-1939.