State, Department of Highways v. Kilpatrick
This text of 327 So. 2d 452 (State, Department of Highways v. Kilpatrick) 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
STATE of Louisiana, DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Willard H. KILPATRICK, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*453 D. Ross Banister, William W. Irwin, Jr., Jerry F. Davis, Robert L. Ledoux, Johnie E. Branch, Jr. and Jack C. Fruge, Sr., Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellant.
Holloway, Baker, Culpepper & Brunson by Herman A. Castete and William H. Baker, Jonesboro, for defendant-appellee.
Before PRICE, HALL and MARVIN, JJ.
En Banc. Rehearing Denied March 15, 1976.[*]
HALL, Judge.
This is an expropriation suit arising out of the widening and improving of Highway 167, known as the Jonesboro-Hodge Highway. The district court awarded the defendant-landowner the total sum of $34,746.75 as just compensation, itemized as $24,396.75 for the property taken based on a finding of 10,843 square feet taken at a value of $2.25 per square foot, and $10,350 as severance damages based on a finding that the property remaining after the expropriation suffered a diminution in value from $2.25 per square foot to $2 per square foot. The district court also awarded a total of $4,022.62 for expert witness fees.
The Highway Department appealed specifying that the trial court erred (1) in determining the amount of land taken; (2) in finding that the subject tract had a value of $2.25 per square foot as commercial property at the time of taking rather than a value of $1.20 per square foot; (3) in awarding any severance damages; and (4) in awarding an excessive amount in expert witness fees.
Amount of Land Taken
The property owned by defendant at the time of the taking was an unimproved lot containing approximately 3½ acres located at the northeast corner of Highway 167 (which runs north and south) and Alexander Street (which runs east and west) in Jonesboro, Louisiana. The lot was bounded on the west by Highway 167 and had a frontage of 237.5 feet on the highway according to the deed by which defendant acquired the property. The depth of the property, along Alexander Street, was 560.2 feet.
The property expropriated is a small triangle in the extreme southwest corner of defendant's property described as beginning at the southwest corner and measuring 29.4 feet along defendant's west property line, 29.39 feet along defendant's south property line, with a hypotenuse of 42.65 feet. The triangular tract taken contains 431.4 square feet.
It is undisputed that defendant's west property line is established by the deed by which he acquired the property as the east right-of-way line of Highway 167. The point of disagreement which gives rise to the principal dispute as to the amount of land actually being taken is the location of the east right-of-way line of Highway 167. The Department of Highways contends the east right-of-way line of Highway 167, and consequently defendant's west property line, lies 50 feet east of the center line of the highway by virtue of a recorded rightof-way instrument granted by defendant's ancestor in title in 1929. Defendant contends the State has no recorded right-ofway and, consequently, the east right-ofway line of Highway 167, and the west line of defendant's property, is the east line of the existing pavement. Defendant contends the Highway Department is actually *454 taking and using, in connection with the widening project, several thousand square feet of defendant's property lying between the edge of the pavement and a line 50 feet east of the center line of the highway.
The Highway Department introduced into evidence a right-of-way deed recorded in December, 1929, by which J. P. Peevy granted to the State of Louisiana a rightof-way having a width of 50 feet on both sides of the center line of the Jonesboro-Hodge State Highway (Route #5), being a total right-of-way of 100 feet over and across his land, being the same land conveyed to him by W. S. Jones by act of sale dated February 20, 1919. By the act of sale referred to in the right-of-way deed, Jones sold to Peevy the W/2 of the SW/4 of Sec. 30, T 15 N, R 3W, in which the subject property lies, and other property.
In addition to the description of the rightof-way cited above, the right-of-way deed refers to the right-of-way as running through the "SW/4 of the NW/4" of Sec. 30. This is an obvious erroneous transposition of "NW/4 of the SW/4" which is clarified when viewed in light of the foregoing reference to the sale from Jones to Peevy, and when viewed in light of the fact that the Jonesboro-Hodge Highway actually runs through the NW/4 of the SW/4 of Sec. 30.
We hold that the right-of-way deed from Peevy to the State of Louisiana effectively conveyed a right-of-way 100 feet in width, 50 feet on both sides of the center line of the Jonesboro-Hodge Highway as located by the State highway engineer at the time the highway was constructed in about 1929. It follows that defendant is not entitled to be compensated for the property lying between the edge of the existing pavement and the 50 foot right-of-way line, which property lies within the existing right-ofway and is not owned by Defendant.
Defendant next contends that even if the State has a 50 foot right-of-way east of the center line of the highway, the line as staked by the Highway Department in connection with the current project encroaches 2 feet onto defendant's property and defendant is entitled to be compensated for an additional strip 2 feet in width across the entire frontage of his property. Defendant further contends that his south property line is located approximately 5 feet south of the line as shown on the Highway Department survey and defendant is entitled to be compensated for additional square footage being taken on the south side of the triangle.
In support of his position defendant offered the testimony of and a survey prepared by Richard Crawford, an experienced and capable surveyor and civil engineer. Crawford's survey shows the 2 foot encroachment and the additional property owned by defendant south of the tract shown on the Highway Department's plat.
In arriving at the location of the southwest corner and the west line of defendant's property, Crawford measured 50 feet east from the center line of the pavement of Highway 167 as it now exists. Crawford testified the highway had been widened since its original construction and that the only completely accurate way to determine the true center line of the highway as it originally existed would be to locate the original Highway Department monuments and markers, which was not done. The validity of the property line established by Crawford on the basis of a measurement from the center line of the existing highway is questionable, according to his own candid testimony.
Even if Crawford's location of the southwest corner of defendant's property is correct, it does not follow that the Highway Department has taken more square footage than is contained in the triangular tract described in the Department's petition *455 and in the order of expropriation. The property taken is a triangle of certain dimensions in the southwest corner of defendant's property. That is all the Highway Department has taken, regardless of the exact location of the southwest corner of defendant's property on the ground. The triangular tract is being taken for clearance of view at the intersection and there is to be no physical construction thereon.
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327 So. 2d 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-department-of-highways-v-kilpatrick-lactapp-1976.