State, Dept. of Hwys. v. LAMAR ADVERTISING COMPANY OF LOUISIANA, INC.

279 So. 2d 671, 1973 La. LEXIS 6120
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 11, 1973
Docket53148
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 279 So. 2d 671 (State, Dept. of Hwys. v. LAMAR ADVERTISING COMPANY OF LOUISIANA, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State, Dept. of Hwys. v. LAMAR ADVERTISING COMPANY OF LOUISIANA, INC., 279 So. 2d 671, 1973 La. LEXIS 6120 (La. 1973).

Opinion

279 So.2d 671 (1973)

STATE of Louisiana, Through the DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS, Plaintiff-Relator,
v.
LAMAR ADVERTISING COMPANY OF LOUISIANA, INC., et al., Defendants-Respondents.

No. 53148.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

June 11, 1973.

*672 D. Ross Banister, Jesse S. Moore, Jr., Johnie E. Branch, Jr., Alva Jones, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-relator.

Sanders, Miller, Downing & Kean, R. Gordon Kean, Jr., Baton Rouge, Mellon, Cavanaugh & Due, Karl W. Cavanaugh, Denham Springs, for defendants-respondents.

TATE, Justice.

These proceedings involve seven suits filed by the plaintiff highway department against the defendant advertising-sign owners. In accordance with the Department's prayer, the defendants were ordered to show cause on a day set ten days later why they should not be enjoined from maintaining the signs and should not be ordered to remove them. Not joined as defendants were the owners of the land on which the signs were erected.

At the hearing, the trial court maintained the exceptions pleading non-joinder *673 of the landowner as an indispensable party in each suit, La.C.Civ.P. Art. 927(3), and the exceptions pleading unauthorized use of summary process, La.C.Civ.P. Art. 926(3). The essential issues before us are whether these rulings are correct.

The court of appeal granted supervisory writs to review these rulings. After hearing, it affirmed the determination that the landowners were indispensable parties. It remanded the proceedings for their joinder by amendment, with instructions that, after such amendment, the proceedings be returned to the intermediate court for it to rule whether the Department properly utilized summary procedure. 271 So.2d 49 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1972).

We granted certiorari, La., 272 So.2d 373 (1973), to determine (a) whether the landowners are indispensable parties in suits such as the present and (b) whether the department is entitled to use summary process.

I.

The department filed these proceedings under Act 474 of 1966 (La.R.S. 48:461-461.15). This act provides for the control of outdoor advertising and junkyards in areas adjacent to the Interstate and primary highway systems of the State. The legislation was specifically authorized by Art. 6, Section 19.3, La.Constitution (as amended by Act 552 of 1966). The constitutional provision and the legislation declare it to be in the public interest, for reasons detailed more fully there, to regulate and restrict the erection and maintenance of outdoor advertising signs near such throughways. The constitutional amendment authorized the legislature to vest in the highway department "the full police power of the state" to accomplish the purposes set forth.

The legislation so authorized prohibited the erection of outdoor advertising signs within six hundred sixty feet of the highway right of way, La.R.S. 48:461.2, with exceptions not here pertinent, La.R.S. 48:461.2, 461.4. It also provided for a four-year delay period for nonconforming uses to exist, 461.5, and for compensation for removal of those lawfully erected or in existence on the effective date of the act, 461.6.

Pertinently to the present issue, however, it provides for the removal of unlawful advertising signs or devices erected in violation of the statute. 461.7.[1] The cited section requires an owner of such devices to remove them within thirty days after notice, and, if he fails to do so, the Department is authorized to remove them at his expense.

Under this provision, the present seven suits were brought against defendants who were alleged to be unlawfully maintaining advertising signs in violation of the statute. In each instance, it is alleged that the sign was erected after the effective date in 1966 of the statute and was unlawfully erected within six hundred sixty feet of the highway right of way, in violation of the said statute.

II

II. Are the landowners indispensable parties?

The Department contends that it is not necessary to join the landowners as defendants in these suits. The Department forcefully argues that, if indeed the signs *674 were unlawfully erected in violation of the statute, the landowners can have no interest in a suit by the Department against the sign-owners to remove them from their illegal placement. (If, on the other hand, the signs were lawfully placed, the Department points out, the present suits should be dismissed on their merits, and so any right of compensation to the landowners for a pre-existing or lawfully placed sign, 461.6, could not be prejudiced by these suits.)

The defendants, on the other hand, suggest that the landowners may have a real and actual interest: The signs may under the terms of the agreement belong to the landowners rather than the sign-erector defendants; the removal of the signs may result in a loss of rentals to the landowners.

The district court and the court of appeal concluded that the landowners are indispensable parties to this litigation. The court of appeal explained: "The landowners without question have property rights of value for the outdoor advertising sites, and the law does not permit these rights to be adjudged without making the landowners parties to the litigation."

The Code of Civil Procedure of 1960 adopted the concepts of "indispensable" and "necessary" parties to clarify what had proved to be a problem area for the courts.[2] The articles were essentially modeled after the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, as those rules were then written.[3]

Article 641 of our 1960 code defines indispensable parties and requires their compulsory joinder. The article provides:

"Indispensable parties to an action are those whose interests in the subject matter are so interrelated, and would be so directly affected by the judgment, that a complete and equitable adjudication of the controversy cannot be made unless they are joined in the action.
"No adjudication of an action can be made unless all indispensable parties are joined therein."

Necessary parties are defined and their joinder regulated by Article 642, which provides:

"Necessary parties to an action are those whose interests in the subject matter are separable and would not be directly affected by the judgment if they were not before the court, but whose joinder would be necessary for a complete adjudication of the controversy.
"An adjudication of an action may be made even if all necessary parties are not joined therein, but when timely objection is made to the nonjoinder of a necessary party the court shall require his joinder if he is subject to its jurisdiction."

The procedural consequences differ greatly according to the characterization of a party as "indispensable" or as "necessary". The failure to join an indispensable party may be raised at any time or may even be noticed by the trial or appellate court on its own motion. Articles 645, 927. On the other hand, the failure to join a merely necessary party, See Article 642 below, must be raised by a dilatory exception, *675 Article 645, and is waived if not timely raised in limine, Articles 926, 928.

Unfortunately, this new formulation of indispensable and necessary parties has not proven a satisfactory guide for our courts in the cases decided since the adoption of the new code.

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Bluebook (online)
279 So. 2d 671, 1973 La. LEXIS 6120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-dept-of-hwys-v-lamar-advertising-company-of-louisiana-inc-la-1973.