Reymond v. State ex rel. Department of Highways

217 So. 2d 488, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4541
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 16, 1968
DocketNo. 7499
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 217 So. 2d 488 (Reymond v. State ex rel. Department of Highways) 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
Reymond v. State ex rel. Department of Highways, 217 So. 2d 488, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4541 (La. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

LOTTINGER, Judge.

This is a suit for damages to property filed by Mabel M. Reymond, as petitioner, against the State of Louisiana, Department of Highways and Farnsworth Division, Fruin-Colnon Contracting Co. as defendants. Brought into this suit as a third party defendant was Reymond Concrete Pile Division of Reymond International, Inc. After trial on the merits, the Lower Court awarded judgment in favor of petitioner and against the Department of Highways in the sum of $8,750.00, with legal interest thereon at the rate of five per cent per an-num from date of demand until paid. Judgment was also rendered in favor of defendant Fruin-Colnon Contracting Co. as well as in favor of third party defendant Reymond International, Inc., dismissing the suit as to each of said defendants. From this judgment the Department of Highways, together with Fruin-Colnon Contracting, have both filed appeals to this Court, and Fruin-Colnon Contracting Co. has further filed an appeal from the judgment of the Lower Court dismissing its third party demand against Reymond International, Inc.

The record discloses that petitioner purchased her residence located at 3464 South Eugene Street in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, during October of 1956 for the consideration of $9,975.00. Her residence was a modest five room dwelling of frame construction. It was some fifteen to eighteen years old at the time she purchased it, and the dwelling was situated on a lot of approximately fifty feet front on South Eugene Street. Prior to the construction of the Interstate Highway, the house was located in a well established subdivision of comparable, or better class residences.

Some time during 1962, construction of Interstate Highway commenced. This [490]*490highway did not take any of Mrs. Rey-mond’s property, however it did take all the residential property across South Eugene Street from her house. Furthermore, the highway was constructed at such an angle that South Eugene Street had to be re-routed and, while Mrs. Reymond’s property still faced Eugene Street it has been separated and isolated from the remaining portion of the subdivision and neighborhood. There are only three other residences on Eugene Street that share a fate similar to that of Mrs. Reymond.

During most of the construction activities in 1963, heavy equipment was being operated in the vicinity of Mrs. Reymond’s residence and pile driving operations were being conducted in the summer of the same year. Petitioner claims damages against the defendants for diminution in the value of her property as a consequence and denial of accessability to and from her property, as well as structural damages to her residence caused by the Department of Highways and its contractors, during the course of their pile driving operations and other activities on the adjacent lands. Her demands are based upon the provisions of Article I, Section 2 of the Louisiana Constitution which provides:

“No person shall be deprived of life, lib erty or property, except by due process of law. Except as otherwise provided in this Constitution, private property shall not be taken or damaged except for public purposes and after just and adequate compensation is paid.” (italics supplied.)

With regard to compensation for dam ages claimed as a result of the depreciatior, in value of the property of petitioner as a consequence of the location of Interstate, the Lower Court in a well considered opinion said:

“Logically, the Courts of this State have not allowed recovery for consequential damages in cases of an expropriation character where there is no physical taking or physical invasion of the property, except in rare instances. As stated by counsel for the State: * * allowing recovery for this type of claim would open a Pandora’s box to a virtual multitude of claims from' people living near any new highway.’ Faced with the payment of claims of this magnitude, new highway development would become economically impossible. Improvement of our system of highways means continual changes and effect on existing sectors of the urban areas of our country. This improvement, of necessity, will not only have a general, but an individual effect on the lives and property of each of the citizens so affected. As such, they share the risk of the best and worst aspects of the improvement.

Accordingly, the Courts have developed a guide for claims for consequential damages where there is no actual taking of the property by expropriation.

As stated in an early Louisiana case of this type, Jarnagin v. Louisiana Highway Commission [La.App.], 5 So.2d 660:

‘We are of the opinion that a physical invasion of real property or of a real right is not indispensable to the infliction of damages within the meaning of the constitutional guaranty under discussion. If the public improvement, as a consequential effect, has caused special damage to the property, such as is not sustained by the public or the neighborhood generally, whether it abuts the improvement or not, an action lies to recover. * * *’
‘But the damage for which compensation is to be made is a damage to the property itself, and does not include a mere infringement of the owner’s personal pleasure or enjoyment. Merely rendering private property less desirable for certain purposes, or even causing personal annoyance or discomfort in its use, will not constitute the damage contemplated by the Constitution, but the property itself must suffer some diminution in substance, or be rendered intrinsically less valuable by reason of the public use. To warrant a recovery the damage must [491]*491be different in kind from that sustained by the people of the whole neighborhood. If it differs only in degree from that suffered in common by the people of the neighborhood, the injury is not within the provision of the Constitution.’

Thus the rule established permits recovery in these cases only where there is substantial proof of special damages shown. It is interesting to note that the Jarnagin case, supra, is a companion case to two other cases evolving out of the construction of an overpass in Winnfield during 1938, and which clearly illustrate the application of the above described rule. These are Thieme v. Louisiana Highway Commission [La.App.], 5 So.2d 167, and Carter v. Louisiana Highway Commission [La.App.], 6 So.2d 159. In Jarnagin, supra, the Court said in reviewing the facts and denying recovery:

Tn the present case, granting that plaintiff’s property has suffered some damage by way of inconvenience from the erection of the overpass, such damage is not special or exclusive as to her property. All other property owners on Front Street south of hers, and also owners for one block east and several blocks south, who formerly reached Lafayette Street via Front Street, are likewise affected. The damage or injury inflicted, whether such in legal contemplation or not, is more or less common to all owners, in that neighborhood. * * *’

In Thieme, supra, recovery was also denied where the plaintiff complained there was no access from his property to Front Street and he had to travel two extra blocks after the construction of the overpass. The Court observed:

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Related

Chaney v. Travelers Insurance Co.
238 So. 2d 847 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1970)
Compass v. Department of Highways
224 So. 2d 102 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1969)
Reymond v. State ex rel. Department of Highways
219 So. 2d 512 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
217 So. 2d 488, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reymond-v-state-ex-rel-department-of-highways-lactapp-1968.