City of Detroit v. GORNO STEEL AND PROCESSING CO.

403 N.W.2d 538, 157 Mich. App. 294
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 21, 1987
DocketDocket 80286, 80712
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 403 N.W.2d 538 (City of Detroit v. GORNO STEEL AND PROCESSING CO.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Detroit v. GORNO STEEL AND PROCESSING CO., 403 N.W.2d 538, 157 Mich. App. 294 (Mich. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

J. H. Gillis, J.

On November 24, 1980, plaintiff, City of Detroit, commenced condemnation proceedings against approximately 5.5 acres of land (now identified as Parcels 644 and 644FA) located at 6565 Mt. Elliott Avenue in Detroit as part of the Poletown Project. On July 20, 1984, after approximately five weeks of trial, a jury rendered a verdict of $4,352,050 for defendants, the owners of the land and buildings thereon. On July 31, 1984, defendants filed motions for a new trial, judgment notwithstanding the verdict and additur, which were denied on September 11, 1984. Defendants now appeal as of right from the judgment entered *297 on the jury verdict and the denial of their post-trial motions.

Defendants were a steel processing and pickling business incorporated in Michigan, with Joseph Gorno, Sr., being the sole shareholder and chief executive officer. Defendants employed over one hundred workers, and overall ran a rather successful operation, producing an annual income of approximately $950,000. The sizeable parcels of land involved in these proceedings contained a sixty-year-old building in generally good condition which contained nearly one 'hundred thousand square feet of working area.

Prior to 1970, defendant Gorno Steel & Processing Company was only involved in the processing of steel. Quality Steel Pickling & Processing, Inc., was located next to Gorno, but was owned by Chromalloy Corporation, a large metal fabrication and jet engine manufacturing operation. In 1970, Gorno purchased the Quality Steel operation from Chromalloy, but leased the land and building from Chromalloy for $75,000 per year. The lease contained an option for Gorno to purchase the property at any time for $1,100,000. While the rent increased to $100,000 per year in 1975, Gorno never exercised the option.

In mid-1980, Chromalloy contacted defendants to discuss the possibility of defendants’ purchasing the Quality Steel real estate and building. Chromalloy commissioned Valtec Associates to do a "quick and dirty” appraisal of the property. After an analysis of the appraisal’s $450,000 valuation and some negotiation, the property was sold to defendants for $500,000, plus fifty percent of all possible condemnation proceeds in excess of $550,000. This led to an eventual final price of $562,500, and the sale was completed on October 31, 1980. On that same day, plaintiff sent to defendants a *298 condemnation offer of $1,175,000 for their real estate and building.

In January, 1981, plaintiff provided defendants with an additional offer of $1,800,000 for all movable fixtures located on their property. After the Michigan Supreme Court at first enjoined the Poletown Project and then eventually upheld it in March, 1981, plaintiff sent a notice to vacate the premises by July 8, 1981. After a hearing was held on the matter, the date by which defendants were asked to vacate was moved back to January 15, 1982. Defendants closed down their operations on that date and temporarily moved across the street to the facilities of a competitor to complete their existing contractual obligations. In July, 1982, Joseph Gorno, Sr., died, and by September, 1982, defendants had ceased doing any business in this state.

Before trial on the instant action was begun, the parties stipulated to the necessity of the condemnation of the property in question. In one of many pretrial motions, defendants asked that all reference to the Valtec appraisal be excluded from trial, on grounds that the appraiser was not available for cross-examination and that the appraisal was generally unreliable. The trial court granted the motion, but with the caveat that further discussion of the matter would be allowed outside the jury’s presence if warranted by the development of the facts at trial. Defendants also requested that all evidence of the Chromalloy sale in 1980 be excluded, but the motion was denied since the trial court found the sale to be an arms-length transaction.

The focus of the dispute between the parties is the difference in their evaluation of the total value of the assets affected by the condemnation. During opening arguments, defendants proposed a figure *299 of approximately $8,500,000, while plaintiff argued that the total value of the assets was just over $3,000,000.

In support of their position, defendants offered the testimony of Joseph Makowski, a plant manager at Interstate Metal Pickling of Toledo, Ohio, and former plant supervisor for defendants. Mr. Makowski testified that the property condemned by plaintiff was uniquely suited for steel processing and pickling, and had many advantages which would be nearly impossible to duplicate. Among these was its nearly five acres of storage space, its proximity to the majority of defendants’ customers and to the freeway and rail systems, and the building’s high ceiling and excellent water supply, which made it ideal for steel pickling (a process which removes scaling and rusting from steel). Makowski concluded that finding a suitable replacement would be very difficult.

In an effort to disprove the plaintiff’s contention that defendants had resumed operations in Ohio under the Interstate Metal Pickling name, defendants questioned Makowski extensively regarding the Interstate operations. Makowski stated that Joseph Gorno, Jr., was a high-level officer of the defendant corporation, and was currently the president of Interstate, but was not the owner. However, Makowski could not explain why Interstate was previously called J. A. Gorno, Jr. Steel Processing, Inc., and before that its Ohio articles of incorporation revealed its name as Gorno Steel Processing. Makowski also indicated that Interstate was much smaller than were the defendants, that it performed only pickling operations rather than processing and pickling, and that its five thousand tons of output per month was much less than the defendants’ thirty-five thousand tons per month pickling operation. This was allegedly due *300 to the fact that the Interstate building held only eighteen thousand square feet of working area, housed only two cranes rather than the eight contained in the condemned building, and employed only fifteen workers. Makowski finally stated that although Interstate now possesses the equipment used by defendants to perform a unique pickling process for Ford Motor Company, and now performs that process for Ford, it had no past association with the defendants.

Defendants then presented the testimony of various experts whose appraisals had formed the basis for defendants’ valuation of the property. William C. Banta testified that his appraisal of the fixtures included some 190 items inexplicably left out of the city’s appraisal and which resulted in a $349,-095 difference in the fixture valuation. Forest B. Lindsey testified that his property appraisal was based on the assumption that a facility of equal function would have to be built, and such a site would now require 7.3 acres, rather than the 5.5 acres defendants had occupied, due to building ordinances which did not exist when defendants’ building was constructed. Mr. Lindsey stated that if a cost estimate was made for adapting an existing building, the cost would be roughly the same.

James A.

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Bluebook (online)
403 N.W.2d 538, 157 Mich. App. 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-detroit-v-gorno-steel-and-processing-co-michctapp-1987.