STATE, DEPT. OF HIGHWAYS v. Monsur

258 So. 2d 162
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 6, 1972
Docket3725
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 258 So. 2d 162 (STATE, DEPT. OF HIGHWAYS v. Monsur) 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
STATE, DEPT. OF HIGHWAYS v. Monsur, 258 So. 2d 162 (La. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

258 So.2d 162 (1972)

STATE of Louisiana, Through the DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Habeeb MONSUR, Jr., et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 3725.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

February 7, 1972.
Rehearing Denied March 1, 1972.
Writ Refused April 6, 1972.

*163 Johnie E. Branch, Jr., Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellant.

Alfred Mansour, of Mansour & Lauve, Alexandria, for defendants-appellees.

Before FRUGE, SAVOY and HOOD, JJ.

HOOD, Judge.

This is an expropriation suit instituted by the State of Louisiana, through the Department of Highways, under the provisions of LSA-R.S. 48:441 et seq. The defendants are Habeeb Monsur, Jr., and Neil Daspit. A part of defendants' property was taken by the state for use in improving and relocating a section of U.S. Highway 71 in Rapides Parish.

The suit was filed and the order of expropriation was signed on November 12, 1969. Plaintiff deposited $39,156.00 in the registry of the court, representing its estimate of the value of the property taken and severance damages. Defendants answered, praying that they be awarded $110,100.00, less the amount deposited in the registry of the court.

The case was tried on March 31, 1971, and thereafter judgment was rendered by the trial court condemning plaintiff to pay defendants $70,809.00, less the amount previously deposited. Plaintiff appealed. Defendants have answered the appeal, praying that the amount of the award be increased to $86,650.00.

The issue, generally, is whether the award made by the trial court is either excessive or inadequate.

The parent tract which defendants owned at the time of the taking contained 10.27 acres. It was located about threefourths of a mile south of the corporate limits of the City of Alexandria, on the west side of U.S. Highway 71, in Rapides Parish. It had a frontage of 670.56 feet on that highway, by a depth of 646.80 feet, extending from the highway to the right of way of the Chicago Rock Island and Pacific Railway Company. It was bounded on the east by Highway 71, on the south by property owned by Joseph J. Medica, on the west by the railroad right of way and on the north by property owned by Chester D. Wells, et al. A moderately high pressure gas pipe line ran on and along the west side of this 10.27 acre tract, parallel to and near the railroad right of way.

Defendants purchased this 10.27 acre parent tract from Josephine Medica Genova on February 6, 1969, or about nine months before this expropriation suit was filed. The purchase price for the entire tract was $60,000.00, or a little less than $6,000.00 per acre.

On the day the property was purchased, defendants recorded in the clerk's office a plat which subdivides the 10.27 acre tract into 20 lots and two streets, and designates that area as the Renee Subdivision. The plat was prepared by Louis J. Daigre, Civil Engineer, on February 3, 1969. The two streets shown on the plat are each 50 feet wide, and they run east and west through the proposed subdivision, extending from the highway on the east to the railroad right of way on the west.

In this expropriation proceeding plaintiff has taken the full ownership of practically all of the east part of defendants' parent tract. The property being taken includes all of the Renee Subdivision lots which have a frontage on U.S. Highway 71, except for a part of Lot 20, in the southeast corner of that subdivision, which has a frontage of 150 feet on the highway. The property which is being expropriated is to be used for relocating, improving and *164 four-laning U.S. Highway 71. When the construction of this new highway is completed, of course, defendants' remaining property will have access to it.

The land being taken here comprises 5.12 acres of the original 10.27 acre parent tract. The expropriation order, however, decrees plaintiff to be the owner of three separate parcels of land, so as to exclude from the taking the dedicated public streets shown in the plat of the Renee Subdivision. These three parcels contained a total of 181,863 square feet. There remained after the taking a part of Lot 20, containing 12,750 square feet, located in the southeast corner of the parent tract and having a frontage of 150 feet on Highway 71. There also remained the western part of the parent tract, containing 134,666 square feet and including the entire frontage of the parent tract on the railroad right of way.

A plat showing the 10.27 acre tract involved in this suit, and the adjoining tract of land owned by Joseph J. Medica, is attached hereto and marked "Appendix A." This plat shows the subdivision of defendants' parent tract into 20 lots, with the dedication of two streets running east and west through it. The plat also shows the part of the Medica tract and the portions of defendants' property which have been taken by plaintiff. The three parcels of land which plaintiff has taken from defendants in the instant suit are designated on the attached plat as Tract "9-4," Tract "9-9" and Tract "9-10."

Defendants' property is level and is generally well drained. It is located in a rural area, and up to the time of the taking it had never been used for any purpose other than for farming. There were no improvements on the land, except for a frame house located partly on that land and partly on the adjoining Medica tract. No value was attached to that house.

Shortly after defendants purchased the property they cut two dirt streets running east and west in the locations shown on the plat. They never received a permit to install culverts in the ditches along the west side of the highway, however, so there has never been any access to these streets, and they apparently have never been used. No improvements, other than the cutting of these streets, were made on the property between the time defendants purchased it and the date of the taking. One appraiser stated that "the dirt streets were simply ditched in," and the photographs in the record show that only a minimum amount of dirt work was done to identify these two strips of land as streets.

Lots Five and Six of this subdivision were sold by defendants on February 18, 1969. These two lots were located in the extreme northwest corner of the parent tract, adjoining the railroad right of way, and no part of either of those lots has been expropriated by plaintiff. Both lots were reconveyed to defendants at a later date, so at the time of the trial defendants still owned all of the remainder of the parent tract. None of the appraisers attached any significance, insofar as determining value is concerned, to the fact that two lots had been sold by and returned to defendants.

The appraisers who testified at the trial concluded that the highest and best use of the subject property was for commercial and industrial use, although no property in that immediate vicinity had been developed for that purpose. They apparently reached that conclusion because the land fronted on a public highway and on a railroad, it had ready access to a railroad siding or spur track, natural gas was available for commercial or industrial use, and very little land with immediate access to a railroad and a good highway was available in that area.

Darrell V. Willet, a real estate expert called by plaintiff, appraised defendants' property twice, the first appraisal being made as a unit or as open acreage, without considering the plat of Renee Subdivision. The second appraisal was made as subdivision property, on a lot or front foot or *165 square foot basis.

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Bluebook (online)
258 So. 2d 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-dept-of-highways-v-monsur-lactapp-1972.