118 So. 134 | La. | 1927
Lead Opinion
A preliminary injunction issued in due course; and afterwards there was a full trial on the merits. Whereupon there was judgment "dismissing said plaintiffs' suit at their cost."
But where, as in this case, a preliminary injunction has been allowed pendente lite, and is dissolved only as the necessary result of a final judgment disposing of the whole case, it is clear that both the right of appeal *1062 from said final judgment and the effect thereof, are governed by the provisions of the general law on the subject of appeals. C.P. arts. 565, 575, 578.
In this case the appeal was taken well within the delays allowed for the taking of a suspensive appeal. C.P. art. 593.
Addendum
In our opinion on the motion to dismiss we stated the case briefly as follows:
"Plaintiffs, claiming to be the owner of a certain portion of ground, prayed for judgment against defendant canceling and erasing a certain paving assessment levied upon said land, and perpetually enjoining defendant from collecting or attempting to collect the same; also that they be recognized as the owners of a certain strip taken off said land for street purposes, and either restored to the possession of said strip or allowed the value thereof and the damages to the rest of the land by reason of said taking.
"A preliminary injunction issued in due course; and afterwards there was a full trial on the merits. Whereupon there was judgment `dismissing said plaintiffs' suit at their cost.' [From which judgment this appeal is taken.]"
This, the strip of land in controversy, is (about) 12 feet wide, and lies between the line of "the continuation of the Canal St. Bernard" and the present property line of "St. Bernard avenue," the street which was paved. *1063
And Armstrong Donaldson, plaintiffs' ancestor, had acquired from Alfred Dube, on June 5, 1920, certain property described as measuring 107 feet front "on the continuation of Canal St. Bernard," but with a note written into his said title that "it is here noted for more clearness that, since the opening of St. Bernard avenue, the above-described property fronts on said St. Bernard avenue." And in the title by which said Alfred Dube acquired said property from Joseph Fortune Meyers, on September 1, 1890, the same note appears.
And the evidence shows that St. Bernard avenue has been actually opened for more than 30 years; that the buildings and fences on plaintiffs' property are actually erected on the property line of said avenue, and have stood there for more than 30 years; that said buildings and improvements have always been known and described as "No. 1921 St. Bernard Ave."
All of which is sufficient in our opinion to presume a dedication of said street by plaintiffs' authors.
For although it may be true that the mere use of an open passage by the public, without intent on the part of the owner to dedicate said passage as a street, will create no right in the public, nevertheless the question of intent to dedicate to public use is one of fact, and may be inferred from the circumstances in each particular case.
In New Orleans v. Carrollton Land Co.,
"No deed or act of conveyance is necessary to dedicate land or rights in immovable property to the public. Nor is any particular form necessary to the dedication of land to the public use. All that is required is the assent of the owner of the land, and the fact that it is being used for the purposes intended."
See, also, Sheen v. Stothart, 29 La. Ann. 633; Baton Rouge v. Bird, 21 La. Ann. 244; *1064 Pickett v. Brown, 18 La. Ann. 560; N.O. C.R.R. Co. v. Carrollton, 3 La. Ann. 282; Eggerson v. Ancar, 6 Orleans App. 417.
Moreover, even if the land had belonged to plaintiffs, it was taken and the street paved more than two years before the filing of this suit, and hence any claim for damages on that account would then be prescribed. R.C.C. arts. 2630, 2640; Act 96 of 1896 (amending Rev. Stat. § 1479); Jefferson L.P.R. Co. v. City of New Orleans, 31 La. Ann. 478. The plea of prescription filed in this court would be good if needed.
It is admitted, at least not seriously denied, and is established by the evidence, that, even with the pavement laid in front of it, the property is not worth and will not sell for more than $1,500. And the assessment for the paving levied against it exceeds $3,000; the said assessment being levied according to the front foot rule in the same manner as it was levied against all other properties fronting on the street which was paved.
It is contended that this constitutes a taking of private property for public use without compensation, contrary to the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, forbidding a state to deprive any person of his property without due process of law. And plaintiffs rely on Norwood v. Baker,
"The exaction from the owner of private property of the cost of a public improvement in substantial excess of the special benefits accruing to him, is to the extent of such excess, *1065 a taking, under the guise of taxation, of private property for public use without compensation."
It will be observed however, that such a rule would require that, in every instance, each property sought to be assessed for a public improvement would have to be separately appraised as to its approximate value, both before and after the public improvement, and the assessment for such public improvement could never exceed the difference between these two appraisements.
In other words, such a rule would exclude any possibility of apportioning the cost of such public improvement by any fixed rule, whether based on area or frontage or ad valorem.
Accordingly, the point was soon made before Supreme Court of the United States that no assessment for the cost of local public improvements could be made according to valuation, or superficial area, or frontage, because (as pointed out by the dissenting Justices in the cases hereinafter cited) in such cases the abutting property would then have to bear the whole cost even ifsuch cost equals the full or actual market value of the land.
But in a series of nine cases the majority of the Supreme Court held that the apportionment of the entire cost of a street pavement upon the abutting lots according to their frontage and without inquiry as to benefits will not constitute a taking of private property without due process of law. French v. Barber Asphalt Co.,
And that rule has been followed by this court ever since as being the settled jurisprudence of this state and of the Supreme Court of the United States. Kelly v. Chadwick,
Under that jurisprudence, the judgment appealed from is correct.