Russell v. Town of Amite City
This text of 771 So. 2d 289 (Russell v. Town of Amite City) 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.
Opinion
Robert Weldon RUSSELL, Mary F. Russell, Robert S. McClendon, II and Carmen Maria McClendon
v.
TOWN OF AMITE CITY, Louisiana, and Parker C. Gabriel, Chief of Police for the Town of Amite City, Louisiana.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
Duncan S. Kemp, III, Hammond, Counsel for Plaintiffs-AppelleesRobert Weldon Russell, Mary F. Russell, Robert S. McClendon, II and Carmen Maria McClendon.
Joseph H. Simpson, Amite, Counsel for Defendants-AppellantsTown of Amite *290 City, Louisiana, and Parker C. Gabriel, Chief of Police for the Town of Amite City, Louisiana.
BEFORE: FOIL, FITZSIMMONS, and DUPLANTIER[1], JJ.
FITZSIMMONS, J.
Plaintiffs, Robert Weldon Russell, Mary F. Russell, Robert S. McClendon, II and Carmen Maria McClendon, filed a motion for partial summary judgment. Plaintiffs prayed for a grant of summary judgment declaring the town ordinance "establishing the Amite Historic Preservation District and the Amite Historic Preservation District Commission, null, void and without effect as a result of the failure of the Town of Amite City to comply with the provisions of Revised Statutes 25:731, et seq.,...." Plaintiffs also asked that the adoption by the district and the commission of "rules, regulations, policies, procedures and standards" be declared null for failure to follow the requirements of La. R.S. 25:737. The trial court declared the city ordinance null and void. Because the district and commission were without effect, the court found moot the issue of the validity of the rules issued by the commission. Defendants, Town of Amite City, Louisiana, and Parker C. Gabriel, Chief of Police of Amite City, appealed the trial court's partial summary judgment in favor of plaintiffs. We affirm.
Although not all old buildings and structures should be saved, preservation of historically significant properties is an important quest. Historic emoluments can add to the value, both monetary and cultural, of the properties themselves and the community. See La. R.S. 25:731. Equally important are the consequences of an historic district to private property ownership. Much like zoning ordinances, requirements laid down by an historic district commission may have a profound effect on private property rights. Tucker v. City Council for City of New Orleans, 343 So.2d 396, 397-98 (La.App. 4th Cir.), writ denied, 345 So.2d 56 (La.1977).
The ordinance adopted was taken primarily from the applicable state statute. The ordinance provided, in part, that "[n]o private building, structure, or edifice, including fences, boundary walls, party walls, signs, exterior light fixtures, steps and paving or other appurtenant fixtures shall be erected, altered, stored, moved or demolished within the" historic preservation district without the approval of the historic preservation district commission. Code of Ordinances, Part 12. Planning and Development, Chapter 7, Section 12-7004(a); see La. R.S. 25:737A. These provisions may well be in derogation of private property ownership rights, and thus, must strictly comply with the enabling statutes. See Bunch v. Town of St. Francisville, 446 So.2d 1357, 1361 (La.App. 1st Cir.1984). Therefore, standard due process considerations necessitate some notice to residents and property owners of proposed historic districts. The public must be given an opportunity to consider the effect the creation would have on the town's development and the use of private property.
Constitution Article 6, Section 17, provides that a governmental unit "may (1) adopt regulations for ... historic preservation" and "(2) create commissions and districts to implement those regulations...." However, this authority is subject to the "procedures established by law...."
In Title 25, Chapter 16 of Louisiana Revised Statutes, the legislature provided those referenced procedures. It enacted specific statutes governing "Historic Preservation Districts."[2] "Any municipality, *291... parish, ... or similar governmental unit, ... may establish ... an historic preservation district commission" and "make such appropriations as are necessary for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of this Chapter." La. R.S. 25:732. A reading of La. R.S. 25:733, et seq. makes it clear that the legislature requires that certain steps be followed. If those requirements are not met, the creation of both the historic preservation district and historic preservation district commission falls. The lead sentence of La. R.S. 25:733 provides that "[p]rior to the establishment of an historic preservation district commission, the following steps shall be taken...." These steps include that, at a minimum, an investigation of the buildings and area proposed for designation as historic must be undertaken. See La. R.S. 25:733(1). After that investigation, the investigatory or study committee "shall" present its report to the local planning or zoning agency; or, if these agencies do not exist, to the governing body of the governmental unit. La. R.S. 25:733(2). Unequivocally, "[a] public hearing shall be held ... at which hearing the report and recommendations of this historic preservation study committee shall be presented and an opportunity afforded the public to consider them ." La. R.S. 25:733(5). Written notice of the hearing "shall be published in the official journal...." Id. After the public notice and hearing, a final written report and recommendations "shall" be made to the governing body. La. R.S. 25:733(6). The final report and recommendations "shall be reviewed in full at an open meeting of the governing body of the governmental unit involved...." La. R.S. 25:733(7). At this mark in the path, the governing body may reject, adopt, or revise the recommendations. The final action of the governing body on the report and recommendations "shall be published in the manner usually provided for the official publication of its acts...." La. R.S. 25:734.
The path continues with other mandatory processes. "After final consideration of the report and recommendations," the governing body may choose to create an "historic preservation district." La. R.S. 25:736. The governing body "may pass an ordinance, law or resolution, ... enacting appropriate regulations in accordance with the provisions of this Chapter, and in accordance with the following guidelines, terms and conditions:" For example, the chief executive of the governmental unit "shall appoint an historic preservation district commission...." La. R.S. 25:736 & 736(1) (As previously noted, La. R.S. 25:733 requires an investigation and initial report precede the creation of the commission.).
Subject to the ordinance establishing the historic preservation district commission, the commission has the authority and power to regulate an historic preservation district. La. R.S. 25:737A. In La. R.S. 25:742, the Louisiana Legislature provided, as follows: "It is the intent and purpose of this Chapter that the regulatory powers conferred by it on an historic preservation district commission, created under its authority, shall apply to all private property, in the area controlled by it, ... insofar as they constitute part of the entirely or tout ensemble of the historic section." However, the governing body need not seek the advice of the commission before initiating a change or construction on a public area or way. La. R.S. 25:742. On appeal of the commission's decision, requested by "any person ... aggrieved," the governing body has the power to affirm, or to "reverse, change, or modify any decision of the commission...." La. R.S. 25:741.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
771 So. 2d 289, 2000 WL 1673434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-town-of-amite-city-lactapp-2000.