City of Norwood v. Forest Converting Co.

476 N.E.2d 695, 16 Ohio App. 3d 411, 16 Ohio B. 481, 1984 Ohio App. LEXIS 12409
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 16, 1984
DocketC-830298
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 476 N.E.2d 695 (City of Norwood v. Forest Converting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio 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 Norwood v. Forest Converting Co., 476 N.E.2d 695, 16 Ohio App. 3d 411, 16 Ohio B. 481, 1984 Ohio App. LEXIS 12409 (Ohio Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This cause came on to be heard upon an appeal from the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton County, Ohio.

The city of Norwood (Norwood) herein appeals from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton County, Ohio, against it. The judgment awarded defendants-appellees (Forest Converting Company et al.) $170,000 for Norwood’s appropriation of part of Forest Converting’s property. 1 The genesis of the present action is Nor-wood’s decision to attempt to alleviate traffic jams on Forest Avenue caused by trains using the railroad tracks crossing the roadway. Prior to Norwood’s appropriation of Forest Converting’s property, the railroad tracks were on the same level as the roadway. In order to prevent trams’ use of the tracks from impeding automobile traffic on Forest Avenue, the post-appropriation plans resulted in a portion of Forest Avenue being graded down approximately thirty feet so that the roadway tunnelled under the railroad tracks. Concrete retaining walls were built on either side of the new Forest Avenue underpass.

Forest Converting owns a twenty-two thousand square foot triangular shaped lot — the eastern side of which abuts Forest Avenue. The building on the Forest Converting property occupies almost all the land available. Before Norwood began to make the aforementioned improvements to Forest Avenue, the Forest Converting property and building were at street level. The access to the only loading dock for the building is by way of Forest Avenue. When Forest Avenue and the loading dock were at approximately the same level, there was relatively easy ingress to and egress from the dock. However, a part of Forest Avenue which was graded down abuts the Forest Converting property. With the change in the grade of the roadway and the addition of a thirty-foot concrete retaining wall to support the land on either side of Forest Avenue, the access to Forest Converting’s loading dock and to its property has been severely limited.

In addition, Norwood, pursuant to its city council’s resolution, sought to appropriate a temporary easement on the *413 subject property in order to facilitate the changes to Forest Avenue. “The * * * easement is a temporary easement for the purpose of constructing portion of a sidewalk, private drive and a temporary fire exit, said easement terminates upon completion and acceptance of construction.”

Subsequent to passage of the Nor-wood City Council’s resolution to appropriate the aforementioned interests in Forest Converting’s property, Nor-wood and Forest Converting attempted to reach agreement on the amount due Forest Converting for appropriation of said interests. When a stalemate developed, Norwood (pursuant to R.C. 163.01 et seq.) commenced the instant action by filing its complaint against Forest Converting. In its complaint Norwood sought the following relief:

“That the Court cause said property to be appropriated to the public use of the City of Norwood in accordance with law, that a jury be impanelled to determine the compensation due Defendants, and that upon deposit of said amount the Court shall order possession of the property be awarded to the Plaintiff, City of Norwood, according to law.”

At trial Norwood presented the testimony of two expert witnesses, who respectively determined that Forest Converting was entitled to $26,893 and $31,400 for Norwood’s appropriation of the property and the resulting damages. Forest Converting’s two expert witnesses, on the other hand, testified respectively that Norwood should pay Forest Converting $170,441 and approximately $200,000 in damages. The jury returned a verdict for $170,000 in Forest Converting’s favor and the trial court entered judgment in conformity therewith. Norwood appeals from the judgment against it, complaining that the court below committed reversible error in five respects.

The first three assignments of error concern elements of loss, which Nor-wood claims the trial court incorrectly allowed Forest Converting’s expert witnesses to include in their appraisals of the damages due. Norwood argues that the following three elements of loss (which correspond to the first three assignments of error) are not compen-sable in this appropriation action: (1) cracks and physical damage to Forest Converting’s building caused by construction of the underpass; (2) loss of public parking spaces on Forest Avenue caused by the change in grade of the street and the construction of the concrete retaining wall; and (3) Forest Converting’s loss of use of parking spaces on a third party’s property, which property is not a subject of this appropriation action.

I

The determination of whether the cracks and physical damages to the building are compensable rests on our analysis of what interest(s), if any, Nor-wood appropriated from Forest Converting, and how the award of damages is calculated once it has been determined that an interest in property has been appropriated.

When all of one’s property is appropriated, the rule is simple — the property owner is entitled to receive the fair market value of his entire property interest. However, when there is only a partial taking of one’s property, a more complicated formula is used to determine the remedy. The rule in Ohio has long been that “[w]hen there is no taking [of property] altogether or pro tanto, damages consequential to the taking of other property in the neighborhood, or to the construction of the improvement, are not recoverable; under such circumstances, loss suffered by the owner is damnum, absque injuria. ” Smith v. Erie Rd. Co. (1938), 134 Ohio St. 135 [11 O.O. 571], paragraph two of the syllabus (em *414 phasis added). 2 Therefore, when no property is taken, the property owner is not entitled to any recovery in an appropriation action. We emphasize that this rule applies to an appropriation action.

Conversely, “consequential damages, which would be damnum absque injuria in the absence of a taking, may be compensable [as] damages to the residue [i.e., the property not taken] in the event of a taking of a 'portion of an owner’s property.” Columbus v. Farm Bureau Cooperative Assn. (1971), 27 Ohio App. 2d 197, 202 [56 O.O.2d 382] (emphasis added). If Norwood in making its improvements to Forest Avenue took a property interest of Forest Converting, which it did, the doctrine of dam-num absque injuria is inapplicable and Forest Converting is entitled to recover consequential damages. Cracks and other physical harm to Forest Converting’s building fall within the ambit of consequential damages.

Norwood took property interests of Forest Converting in two ways. Nor-wood’s appropriation of a temporary easement on Forest Converting’s property constituted one form of taking, and its change in the grade of Forest Avenue, which rendered the buildings thereon substantially less convenient of access, constituted the other form of taking.

We initially focus upon the temporary easement. 3

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Bluebook (online)
476 N.E.2d 695, 16 Ohio App. 3d 411, 16 Ohio B. 481, 1984 Ohio App. LEXIS 12409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-norwood-v-forest-converting-co-ohioctapp-1984.