Texas Pacific-Missouri Pacific Terminal R. R. v. Rouprich

8 La. App. 181, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 461
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 9, 1928
DocketNo. 10,689
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 La. App. 181 (Texas Pacific-Missouri Pacific Terminal R. R. v. Rouprich) 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
Texas Pacific-Missouri Pacific Terminal R. R. v. Rouprich, 8 La. App. 181, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 461 (La. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

JONES, J.

This is a suit to expropriate a certain lease on improved real estate situated in the Town of McDonoghville in which the defendant operated a grocery store and lived with his family.

Plaintiff alleges as follows: That it is engaged in operating a railroad from New Orleans to Westwego terminating at what is known as Old Mile Post Nine at which point it connects with the line of the Texas & Pacific Railway Company; that it had a plan of extension to care for the increase in business coming into the port of New Orleans and for this purpose desired to expand its yards an additional 1,000 feet south and. • 340 feet east and west of its present tracks; that it had already acquired by lease and by private purchase in the Town of McDonoghville various properties for right-of-way and terminal purposes and that it acquired from Mrs. Caroline Rouprich, widow of Daniel F. Middleton by virtue of the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the lower court rendered in proceedings No. 5646 of the docket of the lower court and also by notarial act, the land and the building located on the land on which the defendant claims that he has a lease for the price of ten thousand, seven hundred ($10,700.00) dollars; at the time of the purchase of this property it discovered that Mrs. Middleton had leased the property with the buildings thereon to the defendant for a term of three years commencing on the 1st day of October, 1924, and ending on the 1st day of September, 1927, for a monthly rental of sixty ($60.00) dollars per month, payable monthly represented by thirty-six (36) rent notes.

This suit was filed bn July 16, 1926, and the jury’s verdict giving defendant one thousand ($1,000.00) dollars was rendered and the judgment signed on July 30, 1926.

The lease had then fourteen (14) months to run.

Defendant answered as follows: He had leased the property for the purpose of operating a grocery store, the store had been [182]*182operated by him for about ten years and during the last several years his average income, over and above his expenses, had exceeded three thousand ($3,000.00) dollars; he has used the premises as a domicile for himself and his family and he had established a trade and business, the good will of which would not survive the destruction of this particular place of business; that it would be impossible for him to re-establish the business in any other locality and that the expropriation of his lease would cause' him damages and irreparable injury.

Frank J. Tillotson, a notary public and licensed real estate dealer of the Parish of Jefferson, the only witness for plaintiff, testified that he had been in the real estate business for six years; was acquainted with the location of the property in question; that in view of the fact that all of the buildings but one in the square where defendant operates his grocery had been moved, a lease on a building in that locality would not have much value and he was doubtful if he could get ten dollars per months for a lease on defendant’s place.

He further testified that nearly all the houses have been and are being moved away from defendant's locality and there wouldn’t be anybody to patronize the place; he doesn’t think he could get sixty dollars per month for this lease; that as a real estate agent in the face of the fact that all of the houses in the square, surrounding this particular property leased by defendant, from which he could reasonably expect to obtain trade, have either been demolished or removed he would not recommend a lease to anybody under such conditions.

The defendant, Anthony M. Rouprich, the only witness for defendant, testified that he had been in this place ten years; that he used the building for a grocery store and domicile; that he had had no offers for the lease as he didn’t want to sell it; he didn’t know whether he could sell it or not, nor did he know the market value of the lease.

Defendant attempted to show that he valued the lease at two hundred fifty ($250.00) dollars per month, a total of three thousand ($3,000.00) dollars per year; that he had been operating for ten years, making three thousand dollars per year, all of which was objected to and the objection sustained by the Judge of the lower court and the evidence ordered stricken from the record on the ground that the only question involved was the market value of the lease; that contemplated and prospective profits were not elements to be considered in fixing market value in expropriation proceedings, but only actual damages were to be considered.

The record contains a written offer from plaintiff to pay defendant two hundred ($200.00) dollars for his lease.

It was incumbent on the defendant to prove that the lease at the time of the expropriation had advanced in price, but he has proved only that his lease has no market value.

The only Louisiana case on the subject is reported in 32 La. Ann. 371, entitled “In Re Morgan R. R. & S. S. Co.”

In that case certain property was expropriated on which there existed a lease, the monthly rental 'being sixty ($60.00) dollars, and the commissioners allowed the lessee four thousand twenty ($4,020.00) dollars as the value thereof.

The award of the commissioners was set aside and the lessees were granted [183]*183fifteen ($15.00) dollars per month for the unexpired term of the lease, that amount being the difference between what the lessees had to pay monthly and what the lease would sell for. The Supreme Court discussed the question of prospective profits as follows:

“The only true test of this excess of the value of the lease over the stipulated rental or price thereof, is to ascertain what sum the right of lease, leasehold, will bring over and above the rent stipulated to be paid. In the case before us the rental is sixty dollars per month. If the right of lease would sell for seventy-five dollars per month of its term, then the excess of its value over its price is fifteen dollars per month.
“The right of expropriation being a legal one, its exercise does not give rise to any other than actual damages; consequently, damages are not to be considered. The law fixes these actual damages where the whole of a thing or right is taken at the fair value of that thing or right. The fact that the owner or lessee might build a store, or a factory, or warehouse on tne lot, and derive large profits from that business would not make those contemplated profits a proper element in fixing its present value. So the fact that the lessees, by keeping a coal yard on the lot, and having free access to the wharf (which they have not, by reason of the privileges accorded to this company by the city) might realize large profits from that business, would not justify us in taking the amount of these prospective and problematical profits as the value of the lease.”

See Shreveport, etc., R. R. vs. Hinds, 50 La. Ann. 787, 24 So. 287.

“In expropriation suit market value of the property taken is the test in fixing the value.”

See Yaxoo & R. R. vs. Teissier, 134 La. 958, 64 So. 866; Hill vs. Chicago & R. R. 38 La. Ann. 599; New Orleans Pac. R. R. Co. vs. Murrell, 36 La. Ann. 344; Shreveport R. R. vs. Hinds, 50 La. Ann. 781, 24 So. 287.

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9 So. 2d 82 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1942)

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8 La. App. 181, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-pacific-missouri-pacific-terminal-r-r-v-rouprich-lactapp-1928.