State ex rel. Department of Highways v. Watkins

155 So. 2d 245, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 1854
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 15, 1963
DocketNo. 908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 155 So. 2d 245 (State ex rel. Department of Highways v. Watkins) 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. Watkins, 155 So. 2d 245, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 1854 (La. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

FRUGÉ, Judge.

By two separate proceedings, the plaintiff Department of Highways expropriated: (a) A .798-acre strip in full ownership, subject to a reservation in perpetuity in favor of the defendant of all oil, gas or other minerals; (b) Full ownership of a 3.832-acre tract and a 5.824-acre tract, both subject to the same mineral reservation as hereinabove set forth.

The instant case arises out of the former taking. A companion suit of the same title was based upon the second taking, La.App., 155 So.2d 250. Both appeals were consolidated for argument and this opinion will set forth the reasons for the judgments in both suits.

In the present suit, which involves the .798-acre strip of land, the plaintiff Department of Highways deposited in the registry of the court as its estimate of compensation, $1,197.00 as the value of the land taken. After trial on the merits, the district judge found the value of the property taken to be $3,192.00. In the companion suit, involving the 3.832-acre and 5.824-acre tracts, the plaintiff deposited in the registry of the court $3,462.00. The trial judge found the value of these two tracts to be $18,316.00 and rendered judgment in favor of the defendant in this amount. From both: of these judgments plaintiff has appealed.

The right of the plaintiff to expropriate-the defendant’s property is not at issue, the sole question before this court being the correctness of the trial judge’s valuation of' the land taken.

The trial judge succinctly set forth in his-written reasons the relevant facts which: need be considered by this court, as follows:

“From the evidence the Court finds that the parcels are being taken out of what originally was a plantation of one thousand acres, but which has been reduced by sales to a considerably smaller acreage. The smallest parcel involving less than one acre and the parcel containing 3.832 acres are taken out of a tract of approximately 120 acres, although Mr. Leroy Cobb, one of the appraisers for the Department of Highways treated the fractional acre parcel as being part of a 70 odd: acre tract.
“The 120 acre tract is triangular shaped with a triangular shaped parcel of land owned by the Missouri Pacific Railroad dividing the fractional acre parcel from the 3.832 acres parcel. To the north and west of the 120 acre tract and contiguous thereto, there is another tract owned by the defendant which has been subdivided into lots and some seventy-five have been sold during the past approximately six years. The tract of land out of which the parcel containing 5.824 acres is of a tract of approximately 267 acres and divided from the 120 acre tract by the road which runs from Pecanniere to the Town of Port Barree, La.
“The defendant placed upon the stand John J. Wilson, a licensed realtor and a resident of the City of Opelousas, La., whose qualifications were accepted by the Court, his experience being [247]*247a buyer and seller of real estate for some thirty odd years and approximately seven years as a realtor and appraiser.
“He testified that in his opinion the parcel of less than an acre which is ■situated in the Town of Port Barre was worth $8,000 per acre, and that the 3.832 acres were worth $5,000 per acre, and the 5.824 were worth $2,400 per acre, and he used as a basis for his •conclusion a sale in 1959 from Valentine to Tarlton Turner of 5.08 acres for $25,000, being- a parcel of land situated to the west of Port Barre some three or four miles away and approximately the same distance east of Opelousas, La.; a sale from Darbonne to Dugas in 1957 of a corner containing .54 of an acre taken out of the southwestern corner of the 267 acre tract out of which the 5.824 acres is being expropriated. The consideration ■ior the slightly more than one-half acre was $3,000. He also considered the sale from the present defendant to the present plaintiff of .231 acre for $3,116, being a triangular piece of :ground on the south side of Highway 190 opposite the 0.798 acres being expropriated herein.
“He was questioned at length as to whether or not he had valued the whole of the tracts and established his values ■on that basis. He admitted doing so, but the Court is convinced that the main basis for his fixing the values which he did were the sales referred to.
“The defendant offered the testimony of Alex F. Watkins, Jr., her husband, as well as Mr. Walter J. Champagne, Jr., and Mr. Paul Dietrich. Mr. Watkins testified concerning the sale of the small triangular parcel to the Highway, the sale of lots in the subdivision carved out of the tract in which the fractional acre and the 3.832 ..acres lie over a period of some six years for $1,000 for inside lots and $1,100 for corner lots measuring 60 x 150 feet. Mr. Champagne testified to having bought three lots in 1960 which measured 60 x 150, one being a corner lot, and the consideration being $3,900, and Mr. Dietrich bought a lot or parcel 100 x 150 feet facing Highway 190 a few hundred feet to the west of the fractional acre parcel for $5,000.
“There was offered in evidence and admitted for such weight as should be given it, a judgment rendered by this Court in the matter entitled Gulf States Utilities Company v. Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, this judgment being rendered and signed on July 30, 1962, wherein a judgment was awarded the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company in the sum of $2266.66 for an easement over 0.85 acre out of approximately twelve acres heretofore referred to which lies between the fractional acre tract and the 3.832 acre tract which was an award of $4,000 per acre.
“The plaintiff, the Louisiana Department of Highways, offered as its first witness Mr. Leroy Cobb, qualified as a realtor and appraiser, who agreed with Mr. Wilson, the witness for the defendant that the fractional acre tracts, that the highest and best use was commercial. Mr. Cobb testified that he considered the tract containing 72.88 acres out of which the fractional acre was being taken and he used sales of Alfred Mouton to Du-charme, which was a mile and half south of Opelousas off of the old Opelousas-Lafayette Highway, and the sale of Singleton to Park Development Corporation to some twenty acres near Opelousas and the sale of Metz to Collins Landos of some thirty-six acres, which property lays several miles to the east of the Watkins property. The Collins Landos property is definitely very low as was testified to by Mr. Wilson and as the Court itself [248]*248has observed on numerous occasions, having travelled Highway 190 from Opelousas to Baton Rouge and intermediate points hundreds of times.
“Mr. Cobb in his testimony made certain adjustments percentagewise in dealing with these various sales and came up with a value of $1,500 per acre for each acre of the 72.88 acre tract and consequently $1,197 for the fractional acre taken; thus his testimony and that of witness Wilson for the defendant are at considerable variance as Wilson appraised the front on Highway 190 as being commercial and worth $8,000 per acre.
“The Court, in evaluating the testimony of both witnesses and other witnesses, disagrees with the conclusions. In the case of Mr. Cobb, the recent sales used as a basis are not, in the Court’s opinion, comparable, and in the case of Mr. Wilson, he did not consider severance damages in the sale of Watkins to the Highway Department of .231 acre for $3,116.

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Related

Sterkx v. Gravity Drainage Dist. No. 1 of Rapides Par.
214 So. 2d 552 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1968)
State, Dept. of Highways v. Christ Baptist Church
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State ex rel. Department of Highways v. Watkins
155 So. 2d 250 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
155 So. 2d 245, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 1854, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-department-of-highways-v-watkins-lactapp-1963.