State ex rel. Department of Highways v. Poche

135 So. 2d 136, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1491
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 13, 1961
DocketNo. 5242
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 135 So. 2d 136 (State ex rel. Department of Highways v. Poche) 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 ex rel. Department of Highways v. Poche, 135 So. 2d 136, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1491 (La. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

RSID, Judge.

This is an expropriation suit filed by the State of Louisiana through Louisiana Highway Department to expropriate a tract of land belonging to Paul W. Poche being triangular in shape, measuring 344 feet front on Wadesboro Road by a depth on the west side of 498.66 feet, being a depth of 595.98 feet on the east side and containing 2.028 acres.

The improvements on the property consist of a one story frame weather board house containing 6 rooms and bath, asbestos shingle roof and concrete block piers and the plumbing in the house consists of sink, tub, toilet, lavatory and side arm water heater. The house had concrete front steps, wood porches, asphalt tile flooring in the kitchen and bath, and beaded ceiling walls. The total area was 1,230 square feet and the house was approximately thirty years old. The auxiliary buildings consisted of an unfinished concrete block building, a 30 x 16 foot feed house and a 9x4 chicken house, a shed 10 x 15 feet and a lean-to shed 9 x 12 feet. There was located on the property a 400 foot water well and fencing and landscaping. The property contained a service station constructed of concrete blocks and stucco measuring 40 x 14 feet and a 32 x 9 foot galvanized iron building in the rear.

The Department of Highways deposited the sum of $11,822 in the Registry of the Court, being the value its appraisers placed on the property taken, and damage to the remainder of the property as a result of the taking.

The defendant filed answer asking that the award be raised to $23,450.

The case was duly tried and trial Court rendered Judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for $16,640 less $11,822 deposited in the Registry of the Court, leaving a balance of $4,818 due the owner.

From this Judgment the plaintiff prose'--cuted this appeal.

This suit is a companion suit to one filed by the plaintiffs against Joseph E. Ebrecht No. 5245 on the Docket of this Court, 135 So.2d 630, that involved property located in close proximity to this property. The State used the same two appraisers as they used in the Ebrecht case, namely, Mr. Max Derbes Sr., and Carroll Trahan. The defendant used four appraisers, two of whom, Mr. T. G. Womack and Mr. R. E. Perrin Sr., were used in the Ebrecht case but defendant had two additional appraisers, Robert O. Farris and Ernest Wainwright.

The qualifications of Mr. Derbes and Mr. Trahan were listed in the Ebrecht suit and we do not see any necessity of listing them over again. Suffice it to say that Mr. Derbes had a long and impressive list of qualifications in the technical methods of appraisement as well as experience in the general real .estate filed but had no experience or knowledge of the market demands for real estate in the area of the subject property.

Mr. Trahan, an employee of the Department of Highways, had no technical training but only experience. He had three years experience dealing in business, combining real estate and insurance in Hammond, but had no personal experience in the Ponchatoula area.

We commented on qualifications of Mr. Womack and Mr. Perrin in the Ebrecht suit, briefly: Mr. Perrin had been a contractor for fifty years and had appraised real estate in this area for the Homestead Association in the area of Ponchatoula for the Resettlement Administration, and for individuals.

Mr. Womack had been engaged in buying and selling real estate for fifty years and had been for the past eight and one-half years located in Hammond and did considerable appraisal work in this area. In addition he worked for eight years [138]*138as a -Highway Agent for the Department of Highways, locating rights-of-way, securing deeds, and making appraisals such as was made in this case by the State Department’s appraisers.

Mr. Robert Perrin, an appraiser used by the defendant testified that he was a retail merchant and real estate broker, had been engaged in the real estate business in the Parish of Tangipahoa over twelve years, had occasion to handle the purchase and selling of various pieces of real estate in the Ponchatoula area and was familiar with land values in this area. He was an approved appraiser for the Veterans Administration and Federal Housing Authority all during the war. He has been used by the Ponchatoula Homestead Association, Hammond Building and Loan Association, the Guaranty Bank and Trust Company on occasion to make appraisals on which loans were made. In addition he was an approved appraiser for Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company and made numerous appraisals on property for them in the Hammond area.

Mr. Ernest Wainwright, the other appraiser used by the defendant, testified that he resided in Hammond, had been in the building trade about forty years and the contracting business about twenty-nine years, and was a builder and constructor of homes and commercial buildings at the present time. In addition to that he did most of the appraising for the Hammond Building and Loan Association, and that he had been doing same for about sixteen years, and that loans were made on the basis of his appraisals.

There was a wide difference in the valuation placed upon the property by the two sets of appraisers.

The property herein taken is in the form of a triangle with a 600 foot frontage on the Wadesboro road and a 350 foot frontage on the Springfield Road. Mr. Farris placed a total valuation of $27,000 on the property based on its market value being the price he believed a willing purchaser would .pay a willing seller for the property. He broke this valuation down as follows: the dwelling itself was appraised at $10,500; he believed this was a conservative market estimate of the property in its depreciated condition. He placed a valuation on what he termed the commercial filling station and garage combination building, partially unfinished building that could be completed at a fairly reasonable price at $8,500. He estimated that the improvements on the property would bring a rental of between $250 and $300 per month and that he felt that he could secure a tenant for the house of Mr. Poche for between $100 and $150 per month.

He based his estimate of the monthly rental on the filling station property on the amount of gallonage that could be handled. He stated that he knew for a fact, that the next filling station to this property sold 162,000 gallons of gasoline •in 1957 which would bring a rental of some $500 per month.

He gave an evaluation of the land on which the dwelling was situated of $7,500. The valuation he placed on the filling station included the land upon which it was situated. He further testified that he used some comparables he was familiar with in the Hammond-Ponchatoula area. Fie gave no recordation data but discussed a house sold on the corner of the old Cov-ington Highway and Range Road in Hammond which had less land than this one which sold for $22,000. He used other comparables which he was familiar with, one a sale of a much smaller piece of property in Hammond on Flighway 51 of less than an acre, probably 200 x 180 feet for about $44,000 and another piece of property on Highway 51 between Hammond and Ponchatoula which he sold as use for a junk yard and on an acreage basis of $1,70(5 per acre. He used another comparable of a 100 x 150 foot lot sold for' around $8,000.

[139]*139Mr. Wainwright placed a valuation of $20,063, even, on the property. This did not include an artesian well on which he placed a valuation of $500. Mr.

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Related

State, Dept. of Highways v. Christ Baptist Church
197 So. 2d 83 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1967)

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135 So. 2d 136, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-department-of-highways-v-poche-lactapp-1961.