Village of Moreauville v. Boyer

71 So. 187, 138 La. 1070, 1916 La. LEXIS 1739
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 7, 1916
DocketNo. 20456
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 71 So. 187 (Village of Moreauville v. Boyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Village of Moreauville v. Boyer, 71 So. 187, 138 La. 1070, 1916 La. LEXIS 1739 (La. 1916).

Opinion

PROVOSTY, J.

The village of Moreauville, on the bank of Bayou Des Glaises, in the parish of Avoyelles, was incorporated in 1909, under the provisions of Act 136, p. 224, of 1S98, known as the “Lawrason Act.” It had not then the proportions of a metropolis, and much evidence has been taken in this case upon, the point whether it has increased or decreased since. In order to muster the 250 inhabitants required by the statute for incorporation, its limits had to be extended two miles along the bayou. There are a church, a bank, a convent, a public school, a railroad station, three stores, a dago shop, and private residences. These last are mostly along the public road along the bank of the bayou. For streets there are the public road along the bayou, or rather along the levee which is on the hank of the bayou, and two streets perpendicular to it, connecting it with a street parallel to it some distance back, called Railroad avenue or Potato street.

The great flood of 1912 overflowed that country, and did great damage. After its subsidence, it was found necessary to build a new levee along the bayou hank, further back from the bank than the former one, and for obtaining the additional space required for that purpose the front proprietors had to move back such of their fences as the flood had left standing and such of their buildings as were in the way.

Defendant’s property in the village has a frontage of 1700 feet on the bayou. When [1073]*1073the site for the new levee was staked out, he inquired of the state engineer how much space would have to be left for a public road; and the engineer, basing himself, doubtless, upon section 3371 of the Revised Statutes, which is the Act 56 of 1818, requiring public roads to be “at least twenty-five feet” wide, informed him that the space would have to be of that width; and he accordingly moved his fence and buildings back so as to allow that space. Two of the buildings near the road were, as we understand, far enough back already to allow of a space of 22 feet, and he did not move these, deeming that this space was not so narrow but that it could answer the purposes of a public road. His well also encroached somewhat upon this 25-foot space, and he built his fence around it, leaving a space of-feet between it and the foot of the levee.

The present suit is brought in enforcement of an ordinance of the board of aldermen of the village, requiring the front proprietors to leave an open space of 35 feet along their fronts. The allegation of the petition is that this width of 35 feet—

“is necessary to a proper construction and maintenance thereof [of the street or road] and to build and maintain sidewalks along same and to make proper drains and adorn and beautify it, if the authorities should so determine.”

[1] Bayou Des Glaises being a navigable stream, defendant recognizes that there is, inherent in his title to the land, an obligation to leave a space along his front for a levee and public road; but he contends that he has fully satisfied that obligation by what he has already done, and that so far as concerns the buildings and the well, which, though encroaching upon the 25 feet, do not do so to such an extent as to interfere seriously with the road, he is under no obligation to remove them.

This contention as to these encroaching works is unquestionably well founded. C. C. 862; Mithoff v. Town of Carrollton, 12 La. Ann. 185; Sauter v. Town of Vidalia, 110 La. 377, 34 South. 558.

[2] The defendant also challenges the authority of the board of aldermen over the matter of this road. He contends that this road could be laid only by a jury of freeholders under section 3369 of the Revised Statutes, and by order of the police jury of the parish of Avoyelles.

We do not agree with that ■ view. The board of aldermen is by the said statute under which the town is incorporated authorized to exercise “full jurisdiction” in the laying out of streets.

When this public road was included within the legal limits of the village, it became one of the streets of the village, and the jurisdiction or public authority over it passed from the police jury, which has authority over the roads of the parish in general, to the board of aldermen, thus clothed specially with authority over the streets of the village.

[3, 4] The sole question must be as to the width of the space thus to be left open. In the case of Mayor v. Maggioli, 4 La. Ann. 73, this court said;

“The question as to the breadth of land which a municipal corporation has the right to require for the construction of' a road and levee is, within certain limits, an administrative question, to be left to the discretion of local authorities.”

In the case of Dubose v. Levee Commissioners, 11 La. Ann. 167, the court said:

“The quantity of land to be taken for road and levee purposes presents a question of police or administration to be decided by the local authorities, whose decision should not be revised by this tribunal except for the most cogent reasons, and where there has been manifest oppression or injustice.”

In the ease of Cross v. Police Jury, 7 Rob. 121, the court said:

“Proceedings of police juries, relative to public roads involving questions of police rather than of judicial character should be sustained unless manifestly unjust.”

[1075]*1075The ordinance calls for sufficient space for a public road and also for a sidewalk; and, -as has been seen, the allegation of the petition is to the effect that the greater space is needed for a sidewalk, a drain, and for the sake of adornment and embellishment.

On the point of whether the space left open by defendant was not sufficient, much testimony was taken, consisting almost entirely of the opinions of the witnesses. If the concession were made that a greater number of opinions, ■ and weightier, were expressed on the side of plaintiff, this we do not think would help much towards a proper decision of the case; for the question ought to depend upon facts and not upon the more or less biased opinions of witnesses.

The testimony shows that the traveled part of the public road along this bayou is barely 12 to 15 feet. In the record is a photograph, showing a buggy, a 2-horse carriage, a two-horse wagon, six horsemen and one man on foot abreast in the 25-foot space left open by defendant. This proves that the need for more space for a public road is not so very imperative. In fact, from the testimony as a whole we are much impressed that if the village were not taking this property gratis, but were to pay for it, the village fathers might entertain a different opinion of the necessities of the public in the premises. Be all that, however, as it may, the conclusion we have reached is that the decided and positive preponderance of the testimony is that the 25 feet would be all that the public would need for a road, and that this additional space is for a sidewalk and perhaps for a drain; and we are of opinion that the servitude upon defendant’s property 'does not call for space for a sidewalk, but only for a levee and road.

This servitude' is not the same as that by which, according to article 455 of the Code, the banks of rivers are free to the public. It is a very much more onerous one, extending much further inland. That feature of it requiring space for a levee is peculiar to Louisiana.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 So. 187, 138 La. 1070, 1916 La. LEXIS 1739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-moreauville-v-boyer-la-1916.