Orleans Parish School Board v. Paternostro

107 So. 2d 451, 236 La. 223, 1958 La. LEXIS 1301
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 15, 1958
Docket44077
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 107 So. 2d 451 (Orleans Parish School Board v. Paternostro) 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
Orleans Parish School Board v. Paternostro, 107 So. 2d 451, 236 La. 223, 1958 La. LEXIS 1301 (La. 1958).

Opinion

TATE, Justice.

The sole question raised by this appeal in the present expropriation suit is whether the trial court erred in fixing the amount awarded to the property owner for the taking.

After trial, the district court awarded the owner the sum of $30,000 for his improved city property. The plaintiff school board’s appeal seeks reduction of this award to $21,125; the defendant property owner has answered the appeal, requesting that the award be increased to $47,175.

The property expropriated 1 is situated at the corner of South Rocheblave and Third Streets in New Orleans and has the dimensions of thirty feet and five inches (30'5") front on South Rocheblave Street by a depth of one hundred seventeen feet *228 {117Q' along Third Street. The inside half of the one-story building located on the lot is, to a depth of 68^/2 feet, devoted to a 5-room residence. The remainder of the building is devoted to a bar and cocktail lounge, 2 a restaurant and kitchen, 3 a barber shop, 4 and a garage, 5 all of such premises being available for renting for commercial purposes. All witnesses testifying agreed that the improvements were in excellent condition.

The measure of fair compensation for property to be awarded the owner in expropriation proceedings is ordinarily '“the market value, or the price which would be agreed upon at a voluntary sale between a willing seller and a willing purchaser, taking into consideration all available uses to which the land might be put,” State through Department of Highways v. Ragusa, 234 La. 51, 99 So.2d 20, 21, and cases therein cited. See also comprehensive Comment, “Expropriation — A Survey of Louisiana Law”, 18 La.L.Rev. 509 (1958) at 538 et seq.

The market value placed upon the subject property by the expert realtors testi•fying on behalf of the school board was $21,125. They arrived at this figure by taking into consideration recent sales of, and by capitalization of the rentals of, allegedly comparable property. Because of the great discrepancy between such appraisal and the two valuations ($35,000 and $47,054 respectively) of the property by the defendant owner’s witnesses, the trial court upon its own motion appointed realtor Cliff Probst as the court’s expert to examine and evaluate the property. This latter expert, based upon both replacement cost and capitalization of rental income, arrived at a market value for the property of between $29,939 (replacement) and $30,000 (capitalization). 6 In making its award the trial court essentially accepted the latter valuation placed upon the property by this last-named expert witness.

Able counsel for the school board appellant argues that the court erred in so doing and urges that instead the lower valuation by the school board’s expert realtors should have been accepted, because: (1) the school board’s appraisals *230 (unlike that by the court’s expert) were based upon recent sales of comparable property, which the- jurisprudence indicates- to be the best guide to determine the market value of property sought to be expropriated, State v. Sullivan, 235 La. 314, 103 So.2d 458, Recreation and Park Commission of East Baton Rouge Parish v. Perkins, 231 La. 869, 93 So.2d 198; (2) in arriving at a market value by capitalization of income, the rental amounts and the rate of capitalization used by the school board’s realtors were allegedly better based upon comparable property and less a matter of individual opinion than were such figures utilized by the court’s expert in arriving at his higher valuation.

As- to the first argument, the only recent allegedly comparable sales upon which the school board’s valuation was made were three acquisitions of, and an agreement to buy at a certain price, properties in the immediate neighborhood by the school board itself in the course of the same acquisition program for construction of a public school for which the present property is sought to be expropriated. We think the trial court did not err in accepting the opinion of the court-appointed ' expert that these could not be regarded as' comparable sales because they were not “willing seller” transactions. Aside from the obvious lack of comparability of some of the properties, 7 sales of other property to the condemning authority may be entitled to consideration but, being made under the threat of expropriation, are not controlling as comparable sales to fix market value of the property to be expropriated. State v. Sauls, 234 La. 241, 99 So.2d 97; State v. Dowling, 205 La. 1061, 18 So.2d 616. This is the general rule in many other American jurisdictions also, 4 Nichols, Eminent Domain (3rd ed. 1950) Section 12.3113(2), p. 70, the rationale being that such transactions are not the result of free bargaining between a purchaser and a vendor willing but not obliged to buy or sell, which is the test of market value. See 1 Orgel, Valuation Under Eminent Domain (2nd ed. 1953) Section 147, p. 615, cf. Section 22, p. 99. 8

There being no recent comparable, sales- by which to appraise the current market value of the subject property, the trial court could properly accept the testi *232 mony of the expert appointed by it, who attempted to establish market value by determining what an investor in the open market might pay for said property based upon capitalization of the net rental income to be expected therefrom, which valuation was further corroborated by a similar figure arrived at by computing the estimated reproduction cost of the improvements less depreciation plus the value of the lot itself. Efurd v. City of Shreveport, 235 La. 555, 105 So.2d 219; State v. Sauls, 234 La. 241, 99 So.2d 97; Rapides Parish School Board v. Nassif, 232 La. 218, 94 So.2d 40. This expert took into consideration the market value of the property as an economic unit suitable for business operation by one living in the connected residence, such unit fortuitously located with an exempt commercial status in a congested residential! y zoned neighborhood.

Mr. Probst, the court-appointed expert, reached his capitalized value of the property as follows: From gross estimated annual rental value of $3,360, 9 estimated annual expenses of $917 10 were deducted, leaving an estimated net annual rental income of $2,343. Mr. Probst felt that a prospective buyer purchasing the property for investment would expect a net return of 7\7z% upon the purchase price invested in this combined commercial-residential property; he computed the price required to bring this return at $32,500 (from which, in making its award, the court deducted the depreciated value, $2,500, of some removable fixtures located in the premises, see footnote 6 above).

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Bluebook (online)
107 So. 2d 451, 236 La. 223, 1958 La. LEXIS 1301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orleans-parish-school-board-v-paternostro-la-1958.