Olympia Roofing Co. v. City of New Orleans

234 So. 2d 273, 1970 La. App. LEXIS 5566
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 6, 1970
DocketNo. 3692
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 234 So. 2d 273 (Olympia Roofing Co. v. City of New Orleans) 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
Olympia Roofing Co. v. City of New Orleans, 234 So. 2d 273, 1970 La. App. LEXIS 5566 (La. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

REDMANN, Judge.

Olympia Roofing Company, Inc. bought certain land at a private sale negotiated with and executed by the Union Passenger Terminal Committee, purporting to act as the “City of New Orleans through the Union Passenger Terminal Committee,” under claimed authority hereinafter delineated. When Olympia applied to the City for a building permit the City refused the permit on the theory Olympia’s purported purchase was a nullity, and that title to the property remained in the City.

Olympia then brought this proceeding to require the City to recognize Olympia’s title and issue the requested building permit. A fuller report of the circumstances may be found at La.App., 324 So.2d 98, where we denied a motion to dismiss this appeal.

The City appeals from a judgment declaring Olympia the owner of the land and ordering the City to issue the building permit.

The Issue

Generally, the position of the City of New Orleans is that under the applicable constitutional provisions the City itself alone has the power to sell, and even under the Agreement constituting the Committee that power remains in the City itself.

Olympia’s position is that under that Agreement’s grant to the Committee of “supervision and control of all * * * acquisition and disposal” of Union Passenger Terminal land by the City, the Committee has the power to sell acting as the City through the Committee.

There is not the least suggestion, and not the faintest suspicion, that the Committee’s' sale was for less than market value or otherwise involved any favoritism.

Nor is there any argument against Olympia’s entitlement to the desired building permit if Olympia’s title is good.

The sole issue is thus whether the Committee had authority to make the sale.

Constitutional Provisions

La. Const, art. 14 § 31.3 is the fundamental law relative to the creation of the New Orleans Union Passenger Terminal. The Committee exists because it was created under authority of that constitutional provision. It can have no power contrary to that provision.

[275]*275The constitutional provision’s “General Authorizations” begin:

“The City of New Orleans, acting through the Public Belt Railroad Commission, shall have the power, in any manner it may determine, to acquire, construct, maintain and operate one or more railroad passenger stations * * ” (emphasis supplied)

and all approaches and appurtenances. In “the maintenance and operation” of the station etc. no City or Public Belt funds (except from station etc. revenues) could be expended.

And the City, “through” Public Belt, is authorized to subsequently improve, enlarge, etc. any station.

And the City, “through” Public Belt, is authorized to lend to railroad companies, for specific related purposes, funds from the proceeds of the station revenue bonds.

Subsection (A) of § 31.3, “Contracts”, authorizes the City, “through” Public Belt, to contract with railroads for the use by them of the station and approaches, etc. Then follows the provision that the station etc.

“ * * * shall be under the control and management of the Public Belt Railroad Commission, but any contract entered into pursuant to this Subsection (A) or resolution adopted by said Commission by a vote of a majority of all the members thereof, may vest in a Committee or other body composed of representatives of any and all interested parties, including but not limited to representatives of any railroad company or railroad companies, constituted as provided in such contract or resolution, such powers as may be specified in such contract or resolution for supervising or controlling the acquisition, construction, maintenance and operation of said passenger station or stations, the approaches thereto and appurtenances thereof, and any tracks or other property referred to in
Section 31.3 hereof. * * *" (Emphasis supplied.)

Subsection (A) also declares the policy that the station “shall not be operated at a profit to the City of New Orleans or the Public Belt Railroad Commission”, but

“ * * * after all costs with interest have been reimbursed (but in no event sooner than 1988), the City of New Orleans shall receive, in addition to all costs of maintenance and operation, a net rental in an amount equal to what the taxes would be on the stations or facilities furnished by it, based on their then fair value if the same were not tax exempt.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Subsection (B), titled “Bond Issue”, authorizes the City “through its Commission Council” to issue up to $15,000,000 of its bonds, on recommendation of Public Belt, to acquire and construct .the station and approaches, and any land, etc.

Limitations on this authority include, in Subsection (B) (a), that the bonds were to be secured solely by (1) mortgage of the station, approaches, and generally all property acquired pursuant to § 31.3; (2) pledge of net revenues from operation; and (3) pledge and assignment of contracts for use of facilities by railroads under subsection (A). The bonds were to be paid solely from those same sources, “and not by any tax * * * nor out of any other funds, revenues” or other assets of the City.

(Thus it is clear that neither the bonds for acquisition and construction, nor the maintenance and operation, could in any part be paid for by the City.)

The limitations of paragraph (a) of Subsection (B) further provide:

“ * * * In the event of any foreclosure of any such mortgage, the purchaser at foreclosure sale, and his successors and assigns, shall have a franchise for the use and operation of said passenger station or stations and all other property mortgaged thereby, subject to [276]*276any contract or contracts which may be made superior to the lien of the mortgage foreclosed upon, until the latest date of maturity specified in any bond secured thereby at any time theretofore outstanding, at the end of which period title thereto shall revert to the City of New Orleans.'- Said mortgage or mortgages shall contain such stipulations, terms, provisions and conditions, not inconsistent herewith, as the City of New Orleans, upon the recommendation of the Public Belt Railroad Commission, may determine.” (Emphasis supplied.)

A further limitation on the bond-issuing authority is that of paragraph (b) of Subsection (B) :

“Said passenger station or stations, the approaches thereto and appurtenances thereof, and all other property and right of use or possession of property acquired, constructed or dedicated pursuant to Section 31.3 hereof, which shall he owned by the City of New Orleans, shall be exempt from every form of taxation, and shall in no manner be hypothecated, leased or alienated by the City of Neiv Orleans, except as herein set forth; provided, however, that any real or personal property acquired pursuant to Section 31.3 hereof not needed for the construction or operation of any facility referred to in Section 31.3 hereof may, by the Commission Council of the City of New Orleans, be leased or sold or dedicated to public purposes of the City of New Orleans.

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Olympia Roofing Co., Inc. v. City of New Orleans
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236 So. 2d 498 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1970)

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Bluebook (online)
234 So. 2d 273, 1970 La. App. LEXIS 5566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olympia-roofing-co-v-city-of-new-orleans-lactapp-1970.