Timothy Falcon and Jewell Falcon Versus The Parish of Jefferson and the Jefferson Parish Council

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 14, 2023
Docket22-CA-526
StatusUnknown

This text of Timothy Falcon and Jewell Falcon Versus The Parish of Jefferson and the Jefferson Parish Council (Timothy Falcon and Jewell Falcon Versus The Parish of Jefferson and the Jefferson Parish Council) 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
Timothy Falcon and Jewell Falcon Versus The Parish of Jefferson and the Jefferson Parish Council, (La. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

TIMOTHY FALCON AND JEWELL FALCON NO. 22-CA-526

VERSUS FIFTH CIRCUIT

THE PARISH OF JEFFERSON AND COURT OF APPEAL THE JEFFERSON PARISH COUNCIL STATE OF LOUISIANA

ON APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF JEFFERSON, STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 821-019, DIVISION "H" HONORABLE DONALD L. FORET, JUDGE PRESIDING

June 14, 2023

JUDE G. GRAVOIS JUDGE

Panel composed of Judges Jude G. Gravois, Robert A. Chaisson, and John J. Molaison, Jr.

AFFIRMED JGG RAC JJM COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE, TIMOTHY FALCON AND JEWELL FALCON Timothy S. Madden Michael L. Vincenzo

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT, THE PARISH OF JEFFERSON AND THE JEFFERSON PARISH COUNCIL Guice A. Giambrone, III Jacob K. Best Ivana Dillas GRAVOIS, J.

Defendants/appellants, the Parish of Jefferson and the Jefferson Parish

Council, appeal the trial court’s August 10, 2022 judgment which vacated the

Council’s denial of an application for resubdivision of property filed by

plaintiffs/appellees, Timothy Falcon and Jewell Falcon, and therein approved the

application for resubdivision. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiffs, Timothy Falcon and Jewell Falcon, are the owners of property

located on Willow Lawn Street in Marrero in Jefferson Parish. The property is

bounded generally by Bald Eagle Park, a pipeline canal, and Elm Lawn Drive, and

is zoned R-1A (single-family residential). Plaintiffs sought to resubdivide their

one tract of land into a residential development known as “Falcon Estates

Subdivision,” to be comprised of 20 lots for single-family homes. The first phase

of the project would include development of twelve lots, the extension of Willow

Lawn Street as a route of ingress and egress, and the partial construction of Belle

Vie Lane. Plaintiffs submitted an application for resubdivision to the Jefferson

Parish Planning Department (“the Planning Department”). Upon initial review, the

Department of Public Works opposed the application until certain stipulations were

made. One such stipulation was that there was to be no vehicular traffic or

pedestrian traffic from Falcon Estates to Bourgeois Lane, a 16-foot wide

substandard roadway adjacent to the western boundary of the subject property.1

Notably, the Traffic Engineering Division did not require a traffic impact analysis

1 Bourgeois Lane extends from Barataria Boulevard to the subject property. It is approximately 1,200 feet in length with 33 single-family lots fronting thereon. Bourgeois Lane does not provide a turn-around for emergency vehicles. The Department of Public Works strongly recommended that a permanent structure like a fence be built between Bourgeois Lane and the subject property to prevent through traffic to Bourgeois Lane.

22-CA-526 1 for the proposed resubdivision.2 Thereafter, all of the Jefferson Parish

Departments supported the revised application for resubdivision. The Planning

Department ultimately approved the application, after finding that it met all of the

requirements of the Jefferson Parish Unified Development Code.3

On June 10, 2021, a public hearing on the application for resubdivision was

held before the Planning Advisory Board (“the PAB”).4 Mr. Falcon and Tildon Jay

Dufrene, Jr., a registered land surveyor and civil engineer who was hired by the

Falcons to work on this project, spoke in favor of the proposed development.

Eight people spoke in opposition to the proposal, many of whom live on Cypress

Lawn Drive, a street which intersects with Willow Lawn Street and extends from

Barataria Boulevard. They expressed concerns regarding the exacerbation of an

existing traffic and speeding problem. Audie Hymel, a resident of Cypress Lawn

Drive, stated that he did not oppose the development, but was opposed to the use of

Willow Lawn Street as access to this development because of concerns about

traffic and speeding. He anticipated that between 75 to 100 vehicles will be added

per day, plus construction vehicles, which will contribute to the traffic and

speeding issues in the neighborhood.

Emails and letters were also submitted in opposition. Harry Solhjoo, a

resident of Cypress Lawn Drive, wrote that the proposed resubdivision will create

2 The record reflects that according to the Jefferson Parish Code of Ordinances, a traffic impact analysis would be triggered for a resubdivision containing 30 or more lots. 3 Section 33-1.4 of the Unified Development Code provides that the purpose of the Code is to: (1) promote public health, safety, comfort, order, and general welfare; (2) implement the comprehensive plan; (3) protect or enhance property values parish wide; (4) protect private property rights; (5) promote safe, orderly development, and use of land and natural resources; and (6) facilitate safe and economical provision of adequate streets, water, wastewater, stormwater, schools, parks, and other public facilities. 4 The Planning Advisory Board is a seven-member advisory board created by the Parish Charter to review all land use issues that affect the present and future use of land in the unincorporated areas of Jefferson Parish. The Board’s primary function is to provide public input on zoning matters, including land designation, land division/consolidation, and regulations. The Board holds public meetings on zoning applications before making recommendations to the Parish Council. TTC Properties, Inc. v. Par. of Jefferson, 17-363 (La. App. 5 Cir. 12/27/17), 237 So.3d 623, 626.

22-CA-526 2 additional traffic and greatly overburden Willow Lawn Street and the first block of

Cypress Lawn Drive. He stated that excessive speed is a continuous problem on

Cypress Lawn Drive, and as a parent of a five-year-old boy who was struck by a

speeding driver in front of his house, he is concerned with the resubdivision plan.

William H. Jones, Jr. of Cypress Lawn Drive wrote that traffic is “horrific” on

Cypress Lawn Drive and speeding on the street is “rampant.” He stated that the

new subdivision will only add to the current issues since, according to his

estimation, between 22 and 88 or more additional vehicles will be traveling on

Cypress Lawn Drive on a daily basis.

The PAB deferred a recommendation on the application for resubdivision

until July 8, 2021.

At a public hearing before the PAB on July 8, 2021, Mr. Falcon again spoke

in support of the proposal, and sixteen people spoke in opposition. E-mails in

opposition were also submitted for the record. Mr. Falcon stated that since the last

hearing, he had met with members of the neighboring subdivision who expressed

their concern about Willow Lawn Street being the route of ingress and egress to

Falcon Estates and had inquired as to why Bourgeois Lane could not be used. Mr.

Falcon stated that Bourgeois Lane is not an option since it is a substandard

roadway. He also stated that using Bald Eagle Park to the north for access is also

not an option, since the property immediately adjacent to his property is owned by

a church. In opposition, many residents of Cypress Lawn Drive expressed their

concern with traffic, speeding, and the parish not allowing the use of Bourgeois

Lane as access to the proposed development. Mr. Hymel again spoke in

opposition, stating that his biggest concern was traffic. The PAB deferred the case

to an August 5, 2021 public hearing and recommended that Mr. Falcon meet with

his councilman, Byron Lee, to discuss the possible use of Bourgeois Lane for this

development.

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Timothy Falcon and Jewell Falcon Versus The Parish of Jefferson and the Jefferson Parish Council, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/timothy-falcon-and-jewell-falcon-versus-the-parish-of-jefferson-and-the-lactapp-2023.