Pillow v. Board of Com'rs

425 So. 2d 1267
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 28, 1983
Docket15041-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 425 So. 2d 1267 (Pillow v. Board of Com'rs) 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
Pillow v. Board of Com'rs, 425 So. 2d 1267 (La. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

425 So.2d 1267 (1982)

Dudley B. PILLOW, Jr., et al., Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS FOR the FIFTH LOUISIANA LEVEE DISTRICT, Defendants-Appellants.

No. 15041-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

October 25, 1982.
Rehearing Denied December 9, 1982.
Writ Granted January 28, 1983.

*1269 Mack E. Barham, New Orleans, Henry C. Sevier, Jr., Tallulah, Frank Voelker, Jr., Lake Providence, E.H. Lancaster, Jr., Tallulah, for Plaintiffs-Appellees.

William J. Guste, Jr., Gary Keyser, Michael O. Hesse, Baton Rouge, C. Calvin Adams, Jr., Tallulah, for defendants-appellants.

Before HALL, JASPER E. JONES and NORRIS, JJ.

NORRIS, Judge.

In this inverse appropriation proceeding, defendant, Board of Commissioners for the Fifth Louisiana Levee District (hereinafter referred to as "Levee Board"), appeals a judgment of the district court awarding plaintiffs, Dudley B. Pillow, Jr., Watson Pillow, and Lois Pillow Robertson (hereinafter referred to as the "Pillows"), $409,189.70 as the fair market value of property taken for a levee servitude and severance damages to portions of the remaining property plus attorneys' fees of 1/3 of the principal and interest under the judgment plus 12% interest on the attorneys' fees until paid. We amend and affirm.

FACTS

This lengthy, involved litigation was initially brought when thirty five plaintiffs, who are owners of land and other real rights in the Fifth Louisiana Levee District composed of the parishes of East Carroll, Madison, Tensas, and Concordia, filed a class action against the Levee Board in the district court for Madison Parish on July 7, 1978, seeking injunctive, declaratory and alternative relief.

This matter arose when the Levee Board acting in concert with the U.S. Corps of Engineers and the Louisiana State Department of Public Works in July, 1973, began appropriating lands for the construction, reconstruction, raising, enlargement, repair, *1270 relocation, realignment, widening and improvement of the levee along the right descending bank of the Mississippi River from the Arkansas state line on the north to the southernmost limits of the Levee Board's jurisdiction. The taking of property in Madison Parish was in connection with the Young's Point or Reid Bedford Levee Enlargement and Berm Project. At the time of the filing of the original suit, certain contracts had been completed covering certain areas of the project, other contracts were underway and still other contracts were being advertised for bids.

The importance of an adequate Flood Control Plan for the lower Mississippi valley goes without mention. Levees are a key element of the flood control plan, working in combination with floodways, channel improvement and stabilization, and tributary basin improvements. Memories of the 1927 Flood and the 1973 Flood are sufficient to emphasize the importance of projects such as the Young's Point project as it relates to the broad plan of the Mississippi River Commission to prevent destructive floods in the Lower Valley under the authority of the Flood Control Act of 1928.

In connection with this project, the Levee Board passed resolutions of "appropriation" and/or informed the plaintiffs in the original class action that their lands would be taken and that they would receive no more than the assessed value for those portions appropriated lying landward of the levee, no compensation for lands lying riverward of the levee and no severance damages. Plaintiffs then brought this class action, for injunctive and declaratory relief and asserting an action of inverse expropriation actively seeking and suing for redress as to all property taken or damaged by the Levee Board without proper exercise of expropriation.

Thereafter, several exceptions were filed by the Levee Board. On October 4, 1978, pursuant to a motion made by the plaintiffs in the original petition, the district court rendered an ex parte order certifying the suit as a class action and ordering that notice be given to all class members by mail and by publication. By separate order of the same date, the Levee Board was ordered to show cause why the ex parte order should not be affirmed and confirmed. Defendant filed additional exceptions, and on October 17, 1978, a hearing was held on all pending motions and exceptions. Judgment was rendered overruling the majority of the Levee Board's exceptions and ordering that the certification of the action as a class action be maintained. The Levee Board filed two applications for writs, one directed primarily toward the propriety of the granting of the class action and one toward the propriety of the suit as an action for declaratory judgment. We granted writs primarily to review the class action issue and determined that the class action was not allowable in this case for numerous reasons, concluding that the values of effectuating substantive law, judicial efficiency and individual fairness would not be served by allowing this action to proceed as a class action. Pillow v. Board of Commissioners for the Fifth Louisiana Levee District, 369 So.2d 1172 (La.App. 2d Cir.1979) writ denied 373 So.2d 525 (La.1979). We ruled only on that issue and specifically noted that no other issue other than the allowance of the class action was considered or ruled upon in our opinion. The case was remanded for further consistent proceedings.

On June 9, 1980, the plaintiffs in the original Class Action filed an Amended Petition transforming the class action seeking declaratory relief to an ordinary proceeding seeking just compensation and damages, including the fair market value of property taken, appropriated, used or destroyed for levee or levee drainage purposes and for all damages to the full extent of the losses occasioned by the taking, appropriation, use or destruction of plaintiffs' property, including interest, attorneys' fees, experts' fees and all costs.

Plaintiffs then proceeded to particularize the claims of each of the plaintiffs or groups of plaintiffs. For reasons that will be explained more fully later in this opinion, we concern ourselves only with the particular claims of the Pillows.

*1271 The Pillows alleged that they were the owners of a certain tract of land in Madison Parish and that their property was "appropriated" by the Levee Board on April 13, 1978; May 24, 1978; and June 21, 1978. They further alleged that pursuant to the "appropriations" the following land was actually taken:

1) 70 acres cultivatable land on North End-Riverside of levee;
2) 7 acres wood and waste land North End-Riverside of levee;
3) 6.68 acres cultivatable land on landside of levee on North End;
4) 30 acres wood and waste on South End-Riverside of levee; and
5) 9.474 acres on South side of Placelandside of levee.

Finally, they asserted a claim for damages, attorneys' fees, experts' fees and costs as well as injunctive and other relief.

On September 8, 1980, the Levee Board filed its peremptory exceptions of no cause and/or no right of action which were amended and supplemented on October 27, 1980. The original exceptions of no cause of action claimed that the petition failed to state a cause of action under the exsisting law because it failed to allege the property was assessed for taxes in the preceding year and the amount of the assessment.[1]

After a hearing on these exceptions on November 9, 1980, the trial court referred certain of the exceptions to the merits.

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425 So. 2d 1267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pillow-v-board-of-comrs-lactapp-1983.