Ogden v. Police Jury of East Baton Rouge Parish

118 So. 65, 166 La. 869, 1928 La. LEXIS 1976
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 2, 1928
DocketNo. 28925.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 118 So. 65 (Ogden v. Police Jury of East Baton Rouge Parish) 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
Ogden v. Police Jury of East Baton Rouge Parish, 118 So. 65, 166 La. 869, 1928 La. LEXIS 1976 (La. 1928).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The plaintiff owns some lots and a small tract of land, constituting a subdivision known as Ogden Park, situated directly eastward and adjacent to the city of Baton Rouge.

There is also an improved subdivision, known as Edgewood Lawn, which lies northeast of the city of Baton Rouge, and north of the property of the plaintiff.

In March, 1926, certain taxpayers owning property in the Edgewood Lawn subdivision petitioned the police jury to create said subdivision into a road district, which was accordingly done by ordinance of said jury adopted on April 13, 1926. The district is designated as subroad district No. 1 U.

The purpose for which said road district was created, as suggested in the petition and declared in the ordinance of the police jury, *871 was to curb and gutter, gravel, and storm sewer the streets of said subdivision,' designated as Edgewood Drive, Morrison, Teddy, Wilson (or Bryan), Hummel, and Stevens, to curb and gutter, gravel, and' storm sewer north 20 feet on Woodlawn Drive, curb and gutter and storm sewer on the east side of Eryoux street and the west side of Le Jeune and south side of Phelps street.

In due course an election was held in said district, and a bond issue of $22,000 was authorized to carry out the purpose for which the district was created.

Thereafter, some time in May, the police jury, after due advertisement, entered into a contract with Robert E. Thibodeaux to perform the work contemplated and required under the ordinance creating the said road district.

The contractor was proceeding to carry out his contract, but in such a manner as to affect the drainage outside and beyond the territory embraced in the road district, when this suit was filed asking for an injunction against him and against the police jury.

The plaintiff, in an elaborate petition, substantially charges:

That the police jury, under the guise and pretense of laying curbs and gutters and storm sewers in the said subroad district, intends to divert the drainage of said road district, or said Edgewood Lawn subdivision, from the natural direction of its flow, and to carry it, by running 24-inch pipe line from the south boundary of said road district, outside thereof to the open ditch on the north side of the Greenwell Springs road, which lies 500 feet or more south of the road district, and to conduct said drainage west along said Greenwell Springs road and through a culvert or culverts under said road into a large canal which runs along the Jefferson Highway in front of petitioner’s property.

That, in order to conduct the drainage as stated, it will be necessary to dig, at some points between Edgewood Lawn and the Greenwell Springs road, to a depth of more than 4 feet, and there bury the pipe line. That it will also be necessary to deepen and widen the ditch along the north side of Green-well Springs road and the culvert under said road in order to accomplish said purpose.

That in order to divert the drainage of Edgewood Lawn into the drainage canal of the Jefferson Highway, it is necessary to pierce and to cross through the natural divide which separates the drainage towards the University Lake and the drainage towards what is known as Ward’s creek, part of which latter drainage consists of the said drainage canal along the Jefferson Highway.

That the said canal, which naturally drains into Ward’s creek or Perkins’ swamp', is the only means of drainage and of carrying off the surface waters and rainwater from Ogden Park, and from the grounds of the Central High School lying just west of the petitioner’s property, and from several other popular suburbs west of said park.

That the aforesaid drainage canal along the Jefferson Highway is now taxed to its capacity to carry off the ordinary surface water of the subdivisions and property which naturally drain into it.

That any increase in the amount of water discharged into said drainage canal would cause, with every rain, a complete overflow of the petitioner’s property.

That the diversion of said drainage and sewerage disposal will overflow and interfere with the use of the property, and that the school board, which is erecting a $500,000 school building adjoining the property of the petitioner, has petitioned the police jury against the unwarranted diversion.

It is further alleged that Edgewood Lawn now drains through an enormous concrete box culvert ’running from a point near the northeast corner of said Edgewood Lawn in a westerly direction to University Lake; that *873 the bottom of the said culvert is 3 f.eet lower than the present bottom of the culvert which crosses under - the Greenwell Springs roach

The police jury answered, denying any purpose or intent to divert the drainage by guise or pretense, but allegéd:

That it was designed to drain a portion of the surface of the road district into University Lake and to carry the balance of the water originating in said road district, or coming into it by natural means, across the Greenwell Springs road and south through the natural drainage across said road and south, as is its right under the laws of the state.

That the water handled by such drainage could readily be conducted by the natural drainage of said territory down to and across the Greenwell Springs road without resorting to the digging referred to by plaintiff. That the manner of caring for the drainage adds nothing to the burden of plaintiff or other lower proprietors, and does not increase the servitude of drain enjoyed by said road district as the dominant proprietor.

It is alleged that the drainage cared for by the concrete box culvert at the northeast corner of Edgewood Lawn is wholly artificial, that prior to the opening of this drain into said lake, there was no natural drainage whatsoever west from Edgewood Lawn, but that originally the only natural drainage of said area was south across the Greenwell Springs road and through the natural drain leading south.

It is further alleged:

That there is a natural divide between the territory of said road district and the University Lake; which many years ago was pierced artificially in order that the waters from the area within said road district might run west into the drain that finally emptied into the Mississippi river, but of recent years has been levied so as to form the University Lake.

That between said road district and the lake on the west, on the north, and on the east are natural elevations or divides that slope respectively, east, south, and west into the area of said road district, causing the waters naturally to flow into said road district, and on south as originally the only normal and natural way by which said territory between these divides, forming the watershed of this prong of Ward’s creek, might be drained.

The city of Baton Rouge intervened in the suit, and joined with the defendant in opposing interference with the action of the police jury in its efforts to furnish drainage facilities to the Edgewood Lawn subdivision.

There was judgment in the lower court perpetually enjoining the police jury, as the governing body of subroad district No. 1 U, and Robert E.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hamilton v. City of Shreveport
180 So. 2d 30 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1966)
Adams v. Town of Ruston
193 So. 688 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 So. 65, 166 La. 869, 1928 La. LEXIS 1976, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogden-v-police-jury-of-east-baton-rouge-parish-la-1928.