State ex rel. Department of Highways v. Rachl

136 So. 2d 105, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1584
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 11, 1961
DocketNo. 390
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 136 So. 2d 105 (State ex rel. Department of Highways v. Rachl) 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. Rachl, 136 So. 2d 105, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1584 (La. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

CULPEPPER, Judge.

This expropriation suit was brought by the plaintiff under the provisions of the so-called “Highway Expropriation Act” which provides for expropriation by a declaration of taking (LSA-R.S. 48:441 et seq.). At the time plaintiff filed its petition of expropriation, a title dispute existed amongst the defendants as to all but 2.5 acres of the tract of land containing 9.1 acres from which the 2.768 acre right of way was taken. Plaintiff alleged the existence of this title dispute and set forth that the defendant, Joseph Rachl, had a record title to 'the parcel of land, containing 9.1 acres, outlined in yellow on an attached plat of survey, and that the defendants, George B. Wasey, Katheryn Beatty Harmon, Dorothy Beatty Martin and Sam H. Jones, held a record title to a larger parcel of land (containing approximately 11 acres) outlined in green on said attached plat. The said plat attached to plaintiff’s petition shows that the 9.1 acres outlined in yellow, and claimed by Joseph Rachl, is overlapped by the approximately 11 acre tract outlined in green and claimed by the remaining defendants, except as to the northernmost 2.5acres of said 9.1 acre tract which said 2.5 acres is shown to be owned by Joseph Rachl alone.

Also named as defendants were certain unknown owners, or claimants, under tax sales of record, who were represented by a.curator ad hoc. No claim was established by these unknown owners and consequently they have been eliminated from this litigation.

The property taken by this expropriation consists of a right of way, 300 feet in width and' containing 2.768 acres in the extreme southern portion of said 9.1 acre tract, for the new “National System of Interstate and Defense Highways”, to which no access is permitted except at certain designated points.

After these proceedings were filed, the named defendants entered into a compromise agreement resolving their title dispute. Joseph Rachl was recognized as the owner of the northernmost 2.5 acres of said 9.1 acre tract. As to the remaining 6.6 acres (which was actually all that was in dispute) Joseph Rachl was recognized as the owner of an undivided one-half interest and the remaining defendants named were recognized as the owners of the other undivided one-half interest.

At the time of filing its original petition of expropriation, the plaintiff deposited in the Registry of the Court the total sum of $2,975 of which $2,860 was stated to be for “Value of land” and $115 was stated [107]*107to be for “Damages”. By a supplemental and amended petition filed on December 8, 1959, the plaintiff increased the amount deposited to a total of $5,650 of which $3,450 was stated to be for “Value of land” and $2,200 was stated to be for “Damages”.

After the named defendants settled their title dispute, the sole issue in the lower court was the value of the land taken and the severance damages to the 6.1 acres remaining north of the right of way expropriated (a small triangular area, containing about acre, remained south of the right of way expropriated but no damages are claimed as to this small area). The trial judge found that the highest and best use of the 9.1 acre tract in question was for light industrial purposes, and that before the taking, it had a value of $1,600 per acre. For the 2.768 acres actually taken, the court therefore awarded $4,428. 80.

As to severance damages, the trial judge concluded that, as a result of the taking, access to the railroad would be denied and consequently the remaining land would be useful only for low cost residential purposes with a reduction in value to $900 per acre. For the 3.6 acres owned in indivisión by all of the named defendants, the trial judge awarded $700 per acre or a total of $2,520 in severance damages. Likewise, for the 2.5 acres owned separately by the defendant, Joseph Rachl, the trial judge awarded $700 per acre or a total of $1,750, this amount being awarded to Joseph Rachl alone. The total amount of the lower court’s award to all defendants for compensation and damages was the sum of $9,231.54, which included interest on the amount finally awarded, but not previously deposited in the Registry of the Court (as provided by LSA-R.S. 48:455).

From the lower court’s judgment the plaintiff, State of Louisiana, has appealed, asking that (1) the award of $1,750 for severance damages to Joseph Rachl be annulled because, as of the date of trial, the 2.5 acre tract was separately owned by Joseph Rachl and was an entirely separate tract of land, no part of which was expropriated; (2) that the award per acre for the servitude taken be reduced from $1,600 per acre to $1,250 per acre; and (3) that the severance damages per acre to the jointly owned land be reduced from $700 to $360 per acre.

The defendants have answered the appeal asking that the judgment of the district court be amended by increasing the per acre award for the land taken from $1,600 to $3,000 per acre; and (2) that the damages be increased from $700 per acre to the amount of their claim, which was $2,000 per acre, both as to the jointly owned land and as to that wholly owned by the defendant, Joseph Rachl.

Addressing ourselves first to the argument made on appeal by plaintiff that the trial judge erred in granting any severance damage to the 2.5 acres owned separately by Joseph Rachl, we note at the outset that this case was not argued or briefed in the lower court and it is therefore very understandable that the trial judge did not perceive from plaintiff’s pleadings or evidence that it intended to make this contention. The trial judge stated in his written opinion that “The parties to this suit and the real estate experts, however, apparently treat and have valued the entire '9 acres as one tract.”

The defendants contend that since the plaintiff has treated the 9.1 acres as a single tract, in its original and supplemental petitions, and in its deposits in the Registry of the Court and in the presentation of plaintiff’s expert testimony, it is now too late on appeal for the State to change its position, even though there might be some merit to its contention. Defendants contend that the State is actually trying to amend its petition in the appellate court.

In its brief, filed in this court, the S'ate admits freely that its deposit of $2,200 for severance damages was allotted to both the 3.6 acres owned in indivisión by [108]*108the defendants and the: 2.5 acres owned separately by Joseph Rachl, but the State contends that this was done through error and that actually the 2.5 acres owned separately by Joseph Rachl is entitled to no severance damages whatever because no part of it was expropriated.

Our first problem is to decide whether the State, under its pleadings, its evidence and its deposits, can now, for the first time, on appeal, take the position that the deposit was made in error and ask that the $1,750 awarded to Joseph Rachl separately be refunded to the State.

When the. State filed its original petition in May of 1958 a record title to the entire 9.1 acre tract was in. the name of Joseph Rachl. An overlapping record title, to all but the northernmost 2.5 acres, also appeared in the flames of the remaining named defendants. At the.outset, the State had no way of knowing who would be decreed the rightful, owners of the disputed 6.6 acres which included the 2.768 acres expropriated. If the court finally determined that Joseph Rachl owned the entire 9.1 acres then he would, of course, be entitled to severance damages to all the remaining portion of this tract not taken.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 So. 2d 105, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-department-of-highways-v-rachl-lactapp-1961.