Alaska State Housing Authority v. Contento

432 P.2d 117, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 150
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 2, 1967
Docket729, 745
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 432 P.2d 117 (Alaska State Housing Authority v. Contento) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alaska State Housing Authority v. Contento, 432 P.2d 117, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 150 (Ala. 1967).

Opinion

NESBETT, Chief Justice.

The appellees John and Eleanor Con-tento were the owners of the Family Shoe Store, located in a building in Fairbanks which had been purchased by appellant Alaska State Housing Authority in connection with its downtown urban renewal project. According to appellant’s testimony, the appellees were dilatory in removing their merchandise from the premises, and because of this appellant’s demolition contractor was in the process of demolishing one portion of the building while ap-pellees were still engaged in moving their merchandise to new premises next door. Strained relations existed between the parties and continued to the time of trial.

We shall consider first the issue raised in appeal file number 729.

In this suit by the appellees to recover $19,000 as the cost of relocating their business, the jury was instructed by the court to find for the appellees in such amount as it “shall find was reasonably expended by plaintiffs (appellees) in relocating their business.” Appellant objected to this instruction, contending that 42 U.S.C. § 1456(f) (2) (1958) limited the amount which could be paid to a maximum of $3,-000. The jury returned a verdict for $7,-000.

The single question raised by Alaska State Housing Authority’s appeal is whether the trial court erred in instructing the jury that appellee could be awarded the amount “reasonably expended” by him in relocating his shoe store without at the same time instructing that the amount awarded could not in any event exceed $3,-000.

Determination of the question must turn-on a construction of certain provisions of Title I of the Housing Act of 1949 as amended, pertaining to slum clearance and urban renewal, when read in relation to certain provisions of Alaska’s urban renewal statutes.

A part of the congressional policy declared in the Housing Act of 1949 was that of “the elimination of sub-standard and other inadequate housing through the clearance of slums and blighted areas”, to be accomplished insofar as possible by private enterprise assisted by the government and, as stated in the act, “appropriate local public bodies shall be encouraged and assisted to undertake positive programs of encouraging and assisting the development of well-planned, integrated residential neighborhoods, the development and redevelopment of communities”. 1 No specific provision was made in the original act for the making of relocation payments, although Section 105(c) of Title I did provide that contracts (with governmental units participating in an urban renewal project) should require that “[tjhere be a feasible method for the temporary relocation of families displaced from the project areas * * *”. 2

*119 Subsequent to enactment of the Housing Act of 1949 the' Alaska Legislature in 1951 enacted its Slum Clearance and Redevelopment Law 3 which stated in part that it was the legislature’s intent “to take full advantage of title 1 of the Housing Act of 1949”. 4

The issue, as briefed by appellant, centers around the wording contained in subsection 1456(f) (2) of the Housing Act of 1949. That section generally defines the powers and duties of the federal administrator and provides for the budget and maintenance of accounts and the audit of accounts. As of May 1, 1961, when the facts of this case arose, subsection (f) (2) provided that business relocation payments shall not exceed $3,000. 5

On the other hand, AS 18.55.520, the Alaska statute which defined the powers and duties of the Alaska Housing Authority, stated in subsection (H) (8) that one of its duties should be:

to prepare plans and provide reasonable assistance for the relocation of families displaced from a redevelopment project area * * *. (Emphasis added.)

Appellant’s argument is that the federal act is national in scope and where it speaks on the issue of business relocation allowances ⅛ should control because the Alaska act was enacted to take full advantage of the federal act and makes no specific provision for paying business relocation costs.

In support of its argument appellant ASHA cites 42 U.S.C. § 1443 which provides that the federal act should control over inconsistent provisions in state acts, 6 and refers to the several restrictive conditions imposed as conditions to federal participation contained in sections 1451 and 1453. ' However,' appellant seems to rely principally upon the fact that because the federal act provides for proportional federal and state financial participation, with the one exception: that being section 1456 (f) (1) providing that the state was not required to provide any part of any amount allowed as a relocation payment, the federal act should control because it provided in 1456(f) (2) that the maximum amount allowable for relocation of a business .should be $3,000.

Appellee has not filed a brief responding to the above issue. Appellant’s supplemental brief is incomplete and of limited usefulness since it has not cited and given the court the benefit of discussion of all amendments to the Housing Act of 1949.

In order to place the issue in full perspective all pertinent amendments of the Housing Act of 1949 will first be’reviewed.

As has been mentioned, the original act made no provision for any relocation payments although Section 105(c) of Title I required that contracts provide a feasible method for the temporary relocation of families. 7

In 1954 the act was amended to provide .that the Administrator had the final authority to determine whether the relocation requirements of Section 105(c) of Title I had been met and that this authority could not be delegated or transferred to any other official. 8

In 1956 Congress added subsection (f) to Section 1456 of Title 42 United States Code which provided in (f) (1) for the first time that relocation payments could be made and that no part of the amount of such relocation payments was required to be contributed by the participating local *120 governmental unit. 9 Subsection (f) (2) stated in part that the-payments:

shall not exceed $100 in the case of an individual or family, or $2,000 in the case of a business concern.

In 1957 subsection (f) (2) was amended to provide that relocation payments:

shall not exceed $100 in the case of an individual or family, or $2,500 in the case of a business concern. 10

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432 P.2d 117, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alaska-state-housing-authority-v-contento-alaska-1967.