Rowena BELGARDE, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
CITY OF NATCHITOCHES, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*134 Gahagan & Gahagan, by Russell E. Gahagan, Natchitoches, for plaintiff-appellant-appellee.
Watson, Williams & Brittain, by Arthur C. Watson, Natchitoches, for defendant-appellee-appellant.
Before TATE, SAVOY, and CULPEPPER, JJ.
TATE, Judge.
This is а suit by a landowner to recover for the illegal and unauthorized taking of an acre of her land by the defendant municipality. The trial court awarded the plaintiff $1,000 for the taking and an аdditional $110 for the cost of a survey.
The plaintiff's appeal seeks an increase in the award, and the defendant's answer to the appeal prays for a reduction thеreof. The only issue before us thus concerns the amount of the award.
The defendant municipality constructed a street, together with two connecting streets, through a 13-acre trаct owned by the plaintiff landowner, without securing her consent and without expropriating same.
As to the issues raised before us on this appeal:
1. Although the plaintiff's expert made a generalized estimate that the value of the acre taken was at least $1,200, we find no error in the trial court's having accepted the testimony of the defendant's experts (which was based upon comparable sales and detailed reasons) that the value of the servitude taken was not more than $500.
Insofar as the plaintiff contends that she was entitled to severance damages to the remainder of her tract caused by the construction of the municipal streets through it, we think that the preponderance of the evidence indicates that claimed severancе damages, if any such resulted, were more than offset by special benefits accruing to this remainder by reason of the construction of the improvement through it. The plaintiff therefore is not entitled to recover severance damages. Louisiana Highway Commission v. Grey,
2. In addition to the award for the actual value of the servitude, the trial court included the sum оf $500, representing additional compensation to which the court felt the plaintiff to be entitled because her land had been taken by an illegal trespass instead of through the рroper expropriation proceedings.
The plaintiff had prayed for damages for the humiliation, worry and mental anguish arising from the illegal trespass upon her propеrty. She testified that she was considerably angered and aroused by the fact that the municipality had in her absence and without her consent constructed the streets through her proрerty. This type of damages resulting from an illegal trespass onto a landowner's property is regarded under Louisiana jurisprudence as compensatory damages to which the landowner is entitled for the violation of a recognized property right through the trespass. Roge v. Kuhlman, La.App. 3 Cir.,
This type of damages is properly awarded the landowner for wrongful trespasses by municipalities as well as for those by private persons. Givens v. Town of Ruston, La.App. 2 Cir.,
In the absence of a legislаtive waiver of immunity a municipality often may not *135 be liable for torts committed while engaged in a purely governmental function, see e.g., Barber Laboratories v. City of New Orleans,
Yet another recognized exception obtains when the municipal officers or employees intentionally exercise a governmental power illegally or improperly, such as by a trespass upon or the destruction of private property without proceeding in accordance with the forms required by law. Faucheux v. Town of St. Martinville,
In the earlier Faucheux case,
We affirm the award of trespass damages by the trial court. In accordance with the authorities cited above, the trial court properly held that a municipality which appropriates property in violation of the constitution, without prior judicial authority for the taking, should pay such tresрass damages in a suit by the landowner to recover for this illegal taking. If in such an instance the landowner should receive only the value of the land taken, the municipality thus is liable only for the same amount as if it had expropriated in accordance with lawindicating, should that be the holding, that the judicial expropriation proceedings required by the constitutiоn are *136 a useless formality, while at the same time depriving the landowner of the additional compensation to which he is entitled as compensatory damages for the violаtion of his constitutional property right to be free of unlawful trespasses upon and takings of his land, whether by the municipality or by private persons.
The authorities relied upon by ablе counsel for the appellant as suggesting a contrary holding are not persuasive, since, among other reasons, they do not concern municipal corporatiоns and their liability for damages arising out of intentional and authorized trespasses by municipal officers and agents.
The amount of the award for trespass damages herein was within the disсretion of the trier of fact and is justified by the evidence in the present record.
3. The trial court additionally awarded the plaintiff $110, as the proven cost of a survey she had had mаde immediately after she discovered the trespass, in order to prove the trespass and to measure the amount of her land illegally taken. The survey was used by the plaintiff's exрert witness to prove the extent of the trespass onto her property.
The trial court awarded this as an additional expert fee for the time used by the expert to prеpare to testify in court, citing Recreation and Park Commission of East Baton Rouge Parish v. Perkins,
We find no error in the trial court's allowance of recovery for this cost of the еxpert preparing to testify in this litigation.
For the reasons assigned, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed, at the cost of the plaintiff-appellant.
Affirmed.
NOTES
Notes
[1] (by author of opinion): The doctrinе of governmental immunity, which was judicially created (see Toppi v. Arbour, La.App. 1 Cir.,
