Simmons v. BOARD OF COM'RS, BOSSIER LEVEE DISTRICT

624 So. 2d 935, 1993 WL 366797
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 22, 1993
Docket25,093-CA, 25,094-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 624 So. 2d 935 (Simmons v. BOARD OF COM'RS, BOSSIER LEVEE DISTRICT) 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
Simmons v. BOARD OF COM'RS, BOSSIER LEVEE DISTRICT, 624 So. 2d 935, 1993 WL 366797 (La. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

624 So.2d 935 (1993)

Kenneth Don SIMMONS, et al.
v.
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF the BOSSIER LEVEE DISTRICT, et al.
Victor E. GROSJEAN, et al.
v.
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF the BOSSIER LEVEE DISTRICT, et al.

Nos. 25,093-CA, 25,094-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

September 22, 1993.

*938 F.Q. Hood, Bossier City, for Bossier Levee Dist.

William J. Doran, Jr., Norman L. Sisson & Sharon F. Lyles, Baton Rouge, for State of Louisiana, D.O.T.D.

Sam N. Gregorio, Shreveport, James T. Adams, Bossier City, for Simmons, et al.

Booth, Lockard, Politz, LeSage & D'Anna, Shreveport by Nyle A. Politz, for Grosjean, et al.

Before MARVIN, LINDSAY and VICTORY, JJ.

MARVIN, Chief Judge.

Defendants, the State of Louisiana, DOTD, and the Board of Commissioners of the Bossier Levee District (Board) appeal a judgment totaling about $1.75 million that was awarded to the 33 plaintiff owners of residential lots in Bossier Parish, for property loss and damage caused by the defendants' dredging of drainage canals along the rear of plaintiffs' lots that began in the fall of 1985 and continued until early 1986.

We amend and affirm.

Within a day or so after the dredging occurred behind each respective lot, the canal banks, consisting of wooded land, developed crevices and dropped off in large sections toward the water in the canal. The banks continued to crack and drop off intermittently, albeit less dramatically thereafter, and had not completely stabilized at the time of trial in May 1992, more than six years after the dredging ceased.

Plaintiffs dismissed other named defendants, including the dredging contractor and the individual Board members, shortly before trial. The State stipulated liability under various provisions of the state constitution, including Art. 1, § 4 (compensation for taking or damaging private property for a public purpose), and under CC Art. 667 (strict liability for damage to neighboring property). The Board stipulated only to Art. 667 strict liability, reserving its right to have the court determine whether it was liable on constitutional grounds.

The trial court found that the land and trees actually lost when the canal banks failed were "taken" in the constitutional sense, and that the taking caused and will continue to cause severance damages to the remaining property. The court awarded compensation for the value of the land and trees lost, mental anguish damages, and severance damages for the present and expected future damage to the remaining property.

The court awarded attorney fees under LRS 13:5111 in the amount of one-third of the awards for land and tree loss, exclusive *939 of mental anguish and severance damages. The court's awards, including attorney fees, range from about $37,000-$214,000 per lot, averaging about $103,000 per lot.

The court assessed legal interest from date of judicial demand and expert witness fees for plaintiffs' experts in amounts less than the experts' total charges.

Defendants appealed, seeking a reduction in the awards for actual losses, severance damages and expert witness fees, and a reversal of the awards for mental anguish and attorney fees.

Plaintiffs answered the appeal, claiming that the attorney fee awards should be increased to one-third of their entire recovery, including severance damages, and that legal interest should run from the date of the taking. Plaintiffs also seek an increase in the expert witness fees and ask that legal interest be awarded on all costs, including expert witness and attorney fees, from the date of the judgment fixing the fees. In their appellate brief or in oral argument, plaintiffs have expressly abandoned their claims for an increase in the damage awards.

FACTS

Plaintiffs own 19 of 24 contiguous lots in the Hickory Ridge Estates and Carriage Oaks East subdivisions. The Grosjean and Doucet plaintiffs each own two adjoining lots, using one for their homes and the other for recreational structures. For simplicity, we regard plaintiffs as owning 17 lots, as did the litigants and the expert witnesses in the trial court.

Plaintiffs' lots front on Hickory Ridge Drive, at the eastern and more rural end of Bossier City. The lots are bounded in the rear by Flat River and Benoit Bayou, separate bodies of water which effectively form a single stream behind plaintiffs' property, notwithstanding that Flat River flows in a southerly direction and Benoit Bayou (sometimes called Macks Bayou) flows northerly. The streams converge about 700 feet from the southernmost line of plaintiffs' property, with Flat River continuing to run to the east. The Coy Road Bridge crosses Flat River at the northernmost end of plaintiffs' property, while the Hickory Ridge Bridge crosses Benoit Bayou to the south. This sketch, not to scale, depicts the general area:

*940

*941 The lots are large, originally measuring about 100 × 300 feet in Carriage Oaks East and about 240 × 420 feet in Hickory Ridge Estates. The rear boundary of each lot is the center line of the stream. The subdivision plats show a 100-foot Board servitude across the rear of the lots.

Before the dredging occurred, the lots sloped gently and gradually toward the water. The rear of each lot was covered with trees that blocked plaintiffs' view of the opposite bank, which was undeveloped. Plaintiffs testified that they bought the property because of the privacy and natural beauty it offered, allowing them to enjoy the tranquility of country living while still being near city conveniences.

DREDGING OPERATIONS

The dredging behind plaintiffs' property was done by the Board, under the State's supervision, as part of a project to improve drainage in other sections of Bossier Parish. The bank slopes were relatively flat before the dredging began, averaging about 5 feet horizontally to one foot vertically, designated as a 5:1 slope ratio. The project plans called for a much steeper slope of 2:1 after excavation. The State did not take soil samples to determine the characteristics of the soil before the work began on Flat River, downstream and to the east of plaintiffs' property.

In early October 1985, as the dredging moved upstream on Flat River toward plaintiffs' property, the contractor, Guinn Brothers, Inc., began having difficulty achieving the channel depth called for by the project plans. Guinn's principal, George Guinn, Jr., testified that the soil became sandy or "soupy" about four or five feet before the bottom grade called for by the plans was reached, and that continued digging caused some relatively minor bank failures without increasing the channel depth. Guinn immediately reported the soil problem to the State's engineers, both orally and in writing, and sought permission to deviate from the project plans in the sandy areas to prevent additional bank failures. The State instructed Guinn follow the plans.

The more severe bank failures began on or about October 25, 1985, the day after the excavation reached the rear of plaintiff Parker's property, at the confluence of Flat River and Benoit Bayou. The canal banks were intact when the dredging stopped around 11:00 p.m. on October 24. By 7:00 the next morning, the ground near the stream had cracked and dropped off or slid about 8-12 feet toward the stream, leaving many crevices across the rear of the lot, the largest of which measured about three feet in width and about six feet in depth.

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Bluebook (online)
624 So. 2d 935, 1993 WL 366797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-board-of-comrs-bossier-levee-district-lactapp-1993.