State, Department of Highways v. Marks
This text of 188 So. 2d 653 (State, Department of Highways v. Marks) 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, Through the DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS
v.
Sumter D. MARKS, Jr., Trustee for Elizabeth O'Connor Pratt, et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
D. Ross Banister, Glenn S. Darsey, Ben C. Norgress, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellant.
Phelps, Dunbar, Marks, Claverie & Sims, Sumter D. Marks, Jr., New Orleans, for defendants-appellees.
Before SAMUEL, CHASEZ and HALL, JJ.
*654 HALL, Judge.
The State of Louisiana through the Department of Highways filed suit on July 31, 1959 seeking to expropriate for highway purposes a strip of land through certain property held in the name of Sumter D. Marks, Jr. (as trustee for the actual owners) and obtained on the same date an ex parte order condemning the strip to it in full ownership (subject to reservation to the owners of the mineral rights in accordance with LSA-R.S. 9:5806) upon the deposit by it in the registry of the Court of the sum of $8,236.00, being the amount estimated by its appraisers as being just and adequate compensation for the land taken. No amount was deposited for severance damages.
Prior to the taking, the property owned by the condemnee consisted of a triangular portion of ground with the apex of the triangle at the northern extremity of the tract. The strip condemned to the Highway Department cuts in an east-west direction through the upper half of the triangle, resulting in there remaining to the owners a small triangular portion of ground lying north of the part taken, and a larger portion, trapezoidal in shape, lying to the south.
The original property contained 5.405 acres or 235,441.8 square feet; the portion expropriated contains 55,179.9 square feet, or 1.3 acres; the northerly triangular remainder contains 40,170 square feet, or 0.9 of an acre; and the southerly remainder contains 140,083.7 square feet or 3.2 acres.
The $8,236.00 deposited in the registry by the Highway Department represents approximately $0.15 per square foot for the property taken.
The condemnee withdrew the $8,236.00 deposit, without prejudice, and in due course answered plaintiff's petition claiming $1.00 per square foot, or a total of $55,179.90 for the property taken, plus an additional amount of $11,850.00 as severance damages to the triangular portion of the property left on the north side of the proposed highway. The condemnee's claim for severance damages consisted of $4,000.00 representing loss in value, plus $7,850.00 representing drainage damage to the northern remainder. No severance damages were claimed for the trapezoidal portion of ground left on the south side.
Following trial on the merits the District Judge fixed the value of the part taken by the Highway Department at the sum of $22,071.96 and the severance damages at $8,000.00, making a total of $30,071.96, and (taking into consideration the condemnee's withdrawal of the $8,236.00 deposit) rendered judgment in condemnee's favor for $21,835.96 plus legal interest from July 31, 1959 until paid.
The Department of Highways appealed. The condemnee answered the appeal praying that the severance damages allowed by the Trial Court be increased from $8,000.00 to the sum of $11,850.00.
The issues are: (a) the market value of the property expropriated, (b) the amount of severance damage, if any, to the north remainder property and (c) whether there were special benefits to the remaining properties which would off-set in whole or in part any severance damages.
The property in question is an unimproved tract situated in the City of Gretna near the dividing line between Jefferson and Orleans Parishes. It lies approximately one-half mile back (east) of the Mississippi River and approximately one-half mile south of the eastern approach to the Greater New Orleans Mississippi River Bridge. It is bounded on the south by a strip of land belonging to Julius F. Hotard et als. which separates it from Anson Street; on its westerly side by a strip belonging to the Southern Pacific Railroad which lies between the property in question and the railroad right of way; and is bounded on its easterly side by Oakdale Subdivision. The only access to the property (without crossing lands of others) *655 is a dedicated, but undeveloped street, which runs through the Oakdale Subdivision and stops at the eastern boundary of the subject property. The property as a whole is low and poorly drained.
At the trial each party produced two expert appraisers, those testifying on behalf of the condemnee being Omer F. Kuebel and Elmer G. Weigel; those for the Highway Department being John F. Carrere and Max Derbes, Jr. The condemnee, in addition, adduced the testimony of Alvin E. Hotard, a civil engineer and surveyor.
Mr. Kuebel, on behalf of the condemnee, testified that the highest and best use of the subject property was for industrial use. He testified that in his opinion the property taken was worth $0.45 per square foot or a total of $24,830.10 as of July 31, 1959, the date of the taking. He further testified that the remaining triangular strip suffered damages in the sum of $8,000.00 as the result of the highway construction $4,000.00 thereof being a 10% loss in market value due to its triangular shape and less desirability, and $4,000.00 due to the obstruction of drainage by the construction of the highway. Mr. Kuebel further testified that this small triangular plot had been offered for sale for two years but no offers to buy had been received.
Mr. Weigel assigned a value of $0.40 per square foot for the property taken for the highway or a total of $22,071.96. He further testified that great damage had been done to the triangular tract left north of the highway, the value thereof being reduced by $0.20 per square foot, or a total of $8,000.00. He ascribed the loss in value to its size and shape and to its inadequate drainage due to the highway construction.
Mr. Alvin E. Hotard was produced as an engineering expert on behalf of the condemnee. Mr. Hotard has lived in Gretna all of his life and has been City Engineer of Gretna for 27 years.
Mr. Hotard testified that the highway had been so constructed that the triangular strip of property remaining north of the right of way was thereafter completely blocked in from the standpoint of drainage. The elevation of the roadway itself was so high that the adjacent tract could not drain, and although catch basins had been built in connection with the street or highway they had no openings to tie into the adjacent property. He stated that the property had some drainage problems before construction of the highway but this could have been alleviated at a cost of $1,215.00, but testified that after construction of the highway the northern triangular portion could not be drained without first filling in the property. The cost of filling in the property and then providing drainage was given by Mr. Hotard as $7,440.00 for filling and $1,625.00 for drainage or a total of $9,065.00, which exceeds by $7,850.00 what it would have cost to drain the property before the building of the highway.
Messrs. Carrere and Derbes, Jr., testifying for the Highway Department, each placed a value of $0.15 a square foot or $8,236.00 for the property taken. These two witnesses had signed the estimate of just compensation annexed to plaintiff's petition. Both testified that no severance damage had been suffered by either the northern or the southern remainder. Mr.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
188 So. 2d 653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-department-of-highways-v-marks-lactapp-1966.