State v. Crockett
This text of 131 So. 2d 129 (State v. Crockett) 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.
Opinion
STATE of Louisiana, Through the DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Naomi Burleson CROCKETT et al., Defendants-Appellants.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
Love & Rigby, Shreveport, for appellants.
D. Ross Banister, Brunswig Sholars, Baton Rouge, for appellee.
*130 Before HARDY, GLADNEY and AYRES, JJ.
AYRES, Judge.
This is an expropriation suit wherein the plaintiff, State of Louisiana, through the Department of Highways, expropriated, for right-of-way purposes, defendants' property consisting of the premises bearing Municipal No. 972 Louisiana Avenue in the City of Shreveport.
Plaintiff alleged that the just compensation for said property and the improvements thereon was $22,000. The defendants contended that the property had a value of $47,000 and, in reconvention, sought judgment in that sum. From a judgment approving the appraisal and evaluation as made on behalf of the State, and casting defendants for costs, the defendants prosecute this appeal.
On this appeal, defendants specify as error the action of the court in holding (1) that, as a matter of law, the income approach to the appraisal of property is not admissible in the trial of expropriation suits and in excluding such evidence in this case; (2) that the sales relied upon by the State's appraisers were comparable sales; and (3) that the income approach for evaluation purposes was not, in this particular case, the best or appropriate method of appraising the property herein involved.
The subject property has a frontage of 85.64 feet on Louisiana Avenue and a depth of 166.5 feet to an alley. The improvement consists of the old Crockett home acquired in 1937 by William Stuart Crockett, Jr., through inheritance. The 2-story frame residence consisted originally of 10 or 12 rooms which had been extensively remodeled and renovated for commercial purposes. The residence was approximately 42 feet wide with a length of 88 feet. To the rear was a 2-story, 4-room frame garage apartment, 42 feet wide, with a length of 47 feet, built on a concrete-slab foundation with asbestos siding.
Mr. and Mrs. Crockett, after his acquisition of this property, and on completion of the remodeling done by them, conducted, in this former residence, over a number of years, an exclusive ladies' ready-to-wear apparel shop. This business, however, was closed at this location in 1952, due to the ill health of Mrs. Crockett, and re-established downtown on Milam Street where it was anticipated the operation of the business would be less strenuous. The location not proving as advantageous as contemplated, plans were made for the removal of the business to its former location.
In the meantime, in 1953, announcements were made as to the contemplated location of an expressway through the City of Shreveport which would occupy and encroach upon defendants' property, as a result of which the plans for the re-establishment of the business at its former location were abandoned. Except for the aforesaid announcements, the record establishes that the business would have been re-established at its former location. After it became known that the right of way for said expressway would either take or encroach upon defendants' property, it was obvious, as conceded by plaintiff's appraisers, that no prudent person would have then attempted the establishment of a business at that location.
The appraisals relied upon by the State for this expropriation were made during August, 1958, and the expropriation was effected May 22, 1959.
It clearly appears from the record that the best and most profitable use to which the property was suited and to which it could be put was the re-establishment of the business which had been there so successfully operated for many years. The record reveals that the gross sales of the business had ranged from $180,000 to over $300,000 annually. The valuation placed upon the property by plaintiff's appraisers in the sum of $22,000 only took into account and was predicated upon an appraisal of the lot as if it were vacant. The appraisal *131 was based upon the lineal front footage evaluation of $257. Defendants' appraisers were in general accord with this evaluation of the lot. However, no value was placed upon or assigned for the improvements. The failure to properly evaluate the improvements constitutes the primary basis for the present controversy between the State and the defendants.
The question presented for determination on this appeal relates to the "just and adequate compensation" to be paid upon the taking of defendants' private property for public purposes. Louisiana Constitution, Art. I, Sec. 2, LSA. The term "just and adequate compensation" generally denotes market value, that is, a price which would be agreed upon at a voluntary sale between an owner willing to sell and a purchaser willing to buy. State Through Department of Highways v. Barrow, 238 La. 887, 116 So.2d 703; City of New Orleans v. Noto, 217 La. 657, 47 So.2d 36; Housing Authority of Shreveport v. Green, 200 La. 463, 8 So.2d 295.
To determine the market value of the property taken in an expropriation proceeding, or the "just and adequate compensation" to be paid the owner, various approaches are recognized and utilized. Among these are prior sales of comparable property. It has been held that "* * * the best guide is evidence of sales of similar or comparable properties in the vicinity * * *" (State v. Sauls, 234 La. 241, 99 So.2d 97, 101) and that such sales are the best criteria of value in expropriation proceedings. Mississippi River Bridge Authority v. Curry, 232 La. 140, 94 So.2d 9, 11.
Another approach is the reproduction-cost approach, sometimes resorted to where the subject property contains immovable improvements, in which event, if the improvements are aged, an adjustment must be made for depreciation. Rapides Parish School Board v. Nassif, 232 La. 218, 94 So.2d 40; Texas Pac.-Missouri Pac. Terminal R. of New Orleans v. Rouprich, 166 La. 344, 117 So. 273.
The third of these approaches relates to the income or rental of the property as a factor in determining the market value of the property. State v. Sauls, supra; Housing Authority of New Orleans v. Persson, 203 La. 255, 13 So.2d 853.
While the preferable rule in the determination of property expropriated is evidence of sales of similar or comparable properties in the vicinity, where, however, the record contains no satisfactory evidence of sales comparable to that involved, ascertainment of the true value must be sought by a consideration of other factors and circumstances. State Through Department of Highways v. Stoer, 238 La. 718, 116 So.2d 498; State v. Ferris, 227 La. 13, 78 So.2d 493; Housing Authority of New Orleans v. Boudwine, 224 La. 988, 71 So.2d 541. Among such other factors is the rule, well recognized, that rental income and value of the business, which is or had been located on the premises, while not the sole criteria, are material to the extent that they assist in determining the fair market value. Housing Authority of New Orleans v. Persson, supra; Louisiana Highway Commission v. Paciera, 205 La. 784, 18 So.2d 193.
The record discloses there were no comparable sales of property in the vicinity of the subject property. In fact, from the date of the announcements of the location of the expressway in 1953, there was no market for property in the area to be taken for right-of-way purposes.
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