STATE, DOTD v. Caroline Atkins Crawford Business Trusts

538 So. 2d 1078, 1989 WL 10665
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 8, 1989
Docket87-1179
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 538 So. 2d 1078 (STATE, DOTD v. Caroline Atkins Crawford Business Trusts) 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, DOTD v. Caroline Atkins Crawford Business Trusts, 538 So. 2d 1078, 1989 WL 10665 (La. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

538 So.2d 1078 (1989)

STATE of Louisiana, DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION AND DEVELOPMENT, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
CAROLINE ATKINS CRAWFORD BUSINESS TRUSTS, et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 87-1179.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

February 8, 1989.
Rehearing Denied March 8, 1989.
Writ Denied May 12, 1989.

*1080 Bertrand & Soileau, Ronald J. Bertrand, Rayne, for plaintiff-appellant.

Watson, Murchison, Raymond Arthur, Natchitoches, for defendants-appellees.

Before DOMENGEAUX, STOKER and DOUCET, JJ.

DOMENGEAUX, Judge.

This case is another in a series of expropriation suits resulting from the construction of Interstate 49. On April 6th, 1983, the State expropriated 133 acres from the defendants out of a formerly 3,600 acre tract, commonly referred to as Bayou Camitte Plantation. The State deposited $306,304.00 in the Registry of the Court as their estimate of full compensation to the landowners for the taking. This figure consisted of $237,867.00 as the value of the property actually taken and $68,437.00 for the severance damages to the remainder. At the trial, both sides stipulated that the only issue to be litigated was the amount of severance damages to fifteen separate fields located on both sides of the Interstate Highway.

After a trial on the merits, the Trial Judge ruled in favor of the landowners and awarded the following amounts. For severance damages to three fields identified at trial as A2, F1 and F2, the Court awarded a total of $105,794.00. This award has not been appealed by the State. For duplication of numerous improvements located on the southern half of the plantation that were no longer easily accessible from the northern half, the Court awarded "cost to cure" of $311,504.00. The court also awarded damages for "economic loss" to the plantation. This award was broken down into "fixed, nonrecurring losses" and "annual, recurring losses" projected for the next twenty-five years on each of the fifteen parcels of land. Nonrecurring losses amounted to $141,185.40 and annual recurring losses for the next twenty-five years amounted to $926,302.27 resulting in a total economic loss award of $1,067,487.67. Finally the Court awarded $250,000.00 as reasonable attorney's fees.

The State appeals three awards by the Trial Court: (1) $311,504.00 for duplication of improvements, (2) $1,067,487.67 for the economic losses, both fixed and recurring, and (3) $250,000.00 in attorney's fees.

FACTS

Before the taking, Bayou Camitte Plantation consisted of 3,600 contiguous acres located along the right descending bank of the Cane River in a rural area of Natchitoches Parish. The plantation raised cattle and produced various commercial crops, including cotton, soybeans, milo and timber. Louisiana Highway 1 and the Missouri-Pacific Railroad cross the plantation in an east to west direction. North-south thoroughfares through the property were provided by Louisiana Highway 119 and Parish Roads 829 and 820. Additionally, private roads ran throughout the property.

In April, 1983, the State expropriated 133 acres through the center of the plantation for the construction of I-49. The expropriated strip ran south of and generally parallel to the Missouri-Pacific Railroad line. The land expropriated had been used as cotton land. After the taking, the only access to the southern half of the plantation was through the overpass at La. Highway 119.

The State paid the landowners $237,867.00 for the value of the land and improvements actually expropriated. The landowners did not contest this amount, but refused to accept the State's offer of $68,437.00 for severance damages to the remaining property. The landowners claimed that 933.17 acres (or fifteen separate fields) were damaged by the expropriation.

A trial on the merits was held in December, 1986, at which time both sides stipulated that the only issue to be litigated was the severance damages to the remaining property. Two expert real estate appraisers, James A. Young and Randy LaCaze testified on behalf of the landowners. Both appraisors prepared lengthy reports on the effect I-49 would have on the plantation which listed extensive severance damages to the property.

*1081 Initially, the reports detailed damage to three fields, identified as A2, F1 and F2. After the taking, field A2 was landlocked. To regain access required that a bridge be built across Bayou Derbonne and a 1.25 acre right-of-way through an adjoining neighbor's property be purchased. The cost of regaining this access was $82,000.00. As a landlocked piece of property, field A2 was worth only fifty percent of its former value, or $113,310.00. The Trial Judge awarded the landowner the "cost of cure" amount of $82,000.00 as it was the least costly method of compensation.

Field F1 was also landlocked and valued as such at $16,480.00. The cost to restore access was calculated to be $19,000.00. As the cost to cure was greater than the value of the property, the reports considered the property to be a total loss as an "uneconomic unit" and, as such, the Trial Judge awarded the landowners $16,480.00 as severance damages to this field.

Field F2 was landlocked and too small to be economically farmed. However, by filling in a ditch that separated it from field F3 and thus forming one large field, its access would be restored and it would again be an economically usable unit. Costs of $7,314.00 to fill the ditch were awarded to the landowners.

The awards for fields A2, F1 and F2 totaled to $105,794.00. The State has not appealed these awards and therefore their correctness shall not be reviewed on appeal. The remaining awards that the State has appealed, namely $311,504.00 for duplication of improvements, $1,067,487.67 for economic loss and $250,000.00 in attorney's fees shall be discussed more fully in conjunction with the merits of each assignment of error.

DUPLICATION OF IMPROVEMENTS

The State appeals the Trial Judge's award of $311,504.00 for the duplication of ten (10) improvements located on the northern half of the property that, after the taking, were less accessible from the southern half. Before the taking, La. Highway 119, otherwise known as Gorum Road, had been one of the primary public roadways the plantation used to reach the southern fields. Parish roads 820 and 829 provided access on the eastern and western ends of the plantation. After the taking, access to the southern half was limited to Gorum Road, underneath the overpass at I-49. The landowners' expert real estate appraisers determined that it was essential that ten (10) improvements be duplicated on the southern half "in order to make the property owner whole". Cost to reproduce the "functional use" of these improvements (without regard to any depreciation of the existing improvements) were estimated as follows:

Corral with hay barn                      $113,839.00
Hay storage barn with pens                $ 41,149.00
Tractor shed                              $ 23,887.00
Water well                                $  3,500.00
General site improvements                 $  9,500.00
Barn and cattle shelter                   $ 31,976.00
Residence relocation and tie-in-costs     $  6,000.00
Restoration of irrigation                 $ 63,643.00
Restoration of field road tie-in          $  4,785.00
Private drainage ditch silt removal       $ 13,225.00
                                          ___________
Total "cost to cure"                      $311,504.00

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Bluebook (online)
538 So. 2d 1078, 1989 WL 10665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-dotd-v-caroline-atkins-crawford-business-trusts-lactapp-1989.