Albrecht v. United States

329 U.S. 599, 67 S. Ct. 606, 91 L. Ed. 532, 1947 U.S. LEXIS 2861
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 3, 1947
DocketNO. 148
StatusPublished
Cited by99 cases

This text of 329 U.S. 599 (Albrecht v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albrecht v. United States, 329 U.S. 599, 67 S. Ct. 606, 91 L. Ed. 532, 1947 U.S. LEXIS 2861 (1947).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Black

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The question here is whether the Government is obligated to pay interest in connection with the following land-purchase arrangements and condemnation proceedings. The Government made separate contracts with the petitioners to buy certain lands from them to be used for a public purpose. The contracts stipulated a purchase price to be paid at an indefinite future time when certain conditions had been fulfilled.1 They also granted the Government the right to immediate possession. Later the Government questioned the validity of the contracts and attempted to rescind them on the ground that by reason of fraud and other things the contract prices were grossly excessive and represented far more than the “just compensation” required by the Fifth Amendment. It filed condemnation proceedings in District Courts under 40 Stat. 241, as amended, 50 U. S. C. § 171, asking the Courts to fix “just compensation” after hearing evidence on that subject. It also filed a declaration of taking under 46 [601]*601Stat. 1421, 40 U. S. C. § 258a, at the same time depositing in the Courts sums of money, substantially less than the contract prices, which it estimated to be the true “just compensation” for the property taken. The Courts then entered orders divesting the property owners of all title and vesting it in the Government. A companion case in which a District Court held an identical contract valid was appealed and eventually reached this Court. Prior to and pending this appeal these petitioners vigorously asserted the validity of the terms of the contracts which fixed the agreed prices for transfer of possession and title to their properties. Several years later this Court upheld the validity of the identical contract in the companion case.2 Thereupon the Government, complying with that decision, paid the full contract purchase prices into the District Courts. It prayed that the landowners’ compensation be fixed as the contract price without interest. Petitioners asserted that they had a right to interest from the time of the “taking,” guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment’s provision for “just compensation.” The Government contended that the “just compensation” provision was not applicable, and that petitioners had no right to interest because their purchase contracts did not provide for it. One District Court decided this question in favor of the Government, 60 F. Supp. 741, but two decided against it. 61 F. Supp. 199.3 The Circuit Court of Ap[602]*602peals held for the Government. 155 F. 2d 73, 77. In a case involving somewhat similar facts, United States v. Baugh, 149 F. 2d 190, the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit had decided against the Government. Because of the apparent conflict presented and because the question is of widespread importance, we granted certio-rari. The facts and issues, so far as we deem them relevant to disposition of all the cases, are identical, and so we consider all of them together.

We agree with the Circuit Court of Appeals that the Government is not obligated to pay interest in these cases. It is true that in cases submitted to them for determination of “just compensation,” courts have evolved a rule whereby an element of compensation designated as interest is sometimes allowed. Under this rule, and in the absence of an agreement of the parties fixing compensation, courts first fix the fair market value of property as of the time it is taken. The property owner, against whom there is no counterclaim, is always entitled to payment of this much. But where payment of that fair market value is deferred, it has been held that something more than fair market value is required to make the property owner whole, to afford him “just compensation.” This additional element of compensation has been measured in terms of reasonable interest. Thus, “just compensation” in the constitutional sense has been held, absent a settlement between the parties, to be fair market value at the time of taking plus “interest” from that date to the date of payment.4

But the method used by courts to determine “just compensation” in an adversary proceeding where the parties [603]*603have failed previously to agree on its amount is not the exclusive method for determining that question. The Fifth Amendment does not prohibit landowners and the Government from agreeing between themselves as to what is just compensation for property taken. See Danforth v. United States, 308 U. S. 271. Nor does it bar them from embodying that agreement in a contract, as was done here. And certainly where a party to such a contract stands upon its terms to enforce them for his own advantage, he cannot at the same time successfully disavow those terms so far as he conceives them to be to his disadvantage. That is precisely the position of the petitioners here. They made contracts for the transfer and possession of lands at prices concerning which they have never complained. At the end of prolonged litigation, the Government was barred from showing that compensations fixed by the contracts were not just, but were excessive. Having thus bound the Government to the contract prices as the measure of “just compensation,” which prices, to say the least, generously meet the Fifth Amendment’s “just compensation” requirement, they now seek to escape the burdens of these identical contract provisions. They invoke the Fifth Amendment in pursuit of something more than the compensation for which their contracts provide — contracts which they are not willing to abandon.

The answer to their contention is that in this posture of the cases these transactions have passed out of the range of the Fifth Amendment. For the reasoning on which interest is added to value as a part of “just compensation” in court condemnation proceedings is not applicable to this situation. That reasoning is that when a court determines just compensation, it first fixes bare value at the time of the taking and adds a sum to compensate for deferred payment of bare value so as to make the property owner whole as required by the Fifth Amendment. We [604]*604do not think this formula fits contractual arrangements for compensation. Exactly what factors the parties consider, in addition to bare value, cannot easily be ascertained. This very group of transactions illustrates that there may be many such additional factors. For example, all the contracts here provided for immediate Government possession, though none contemplated immediate payments. We cannot know what amounts were added in the bargains to the bare market values as estimated, though unarticulated, allowances for the anticipated delays in payment. And other factors, which need not be enumerated, entered into the contract prices. These things demonstrate the inadvisability of applying a constitutional rule as to interest, specially designed to enable courts to calculate “just compensation,” to an entirely different situation in which parties, supposedly with due regard to their own interests, bargain between themselves as to compensation.

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Bluebook (online)
329 U.S. 599, 67 S. Ct. 606, 91 L. Ed. 532, 1947 U.S. LEXIS 2861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albrecht-v-united-states-scotus-1947.