Clark v. Cox

56 A.2d 512, 134 Conn. 226, 1947 Conn. LEXIS 196
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 3, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 56 A.2d 512 (Clark v. Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Cox, 56 A.2d 512, 134 Conn. 226, 1947 Conn. LEXIS 196 (Colo. 1947).

Opinion

Brown, J.

On July 14, 1944, the defendant state highway commissioner took certain portions of the plaintiffs’ farm in Woodbridge for the layout and construction of a trunk line highway and assessed the benefits and damages therefor, pursuant to § 1528 of the General Statutes as amended. The plaintiffs applied to the Superior Court for a reassessment. The defendant by his answer simply admitted the taking set forth in the complaint and denied the allegations of damage. Upon the sole issue so presented as to the amount of the plaintiffs’ damage, in due course the action was referred to a state referee and he by his report reassessed the damage at $16,558.20. The plaintiffs moved for judgment in accord with the report together with interest from July 14,1944. On January 11, 1947, the court rendered judgment accepting the report and adjudging $16,558.20 to be the amount due the plaintiffs for the taking, ruling that there was no basis for the allowance of interest thereon from July 14,1944, the date of taking, to the date of judgment. The plaintiffs have appealed. As the court pointed out, there is no finding in the referee’s report that the plaintiffs had been physically dispossessed of the land between July 14,1944, and the date of judgment, and it is undisputed that they had not been dispossessed.

The question determinative of the appeal is whether, where the defendant has taken the plaintiffs’ land *228 pursuant to § 1528 and there is nothing in the record to show that the plaintiffs have been physically dispossessed, they are entitled to receive interest from the date of taking until the date of judgment as an element of the just compensation guaranteed by article first, § 11, of the Connecticut constitution and the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States. See Chicago B. & Q. R. Co. v. Chicago, 166 U. S. 226, 241, 17 S. Ct. 581, 41 L. Ed. 979. The action which the defendant took to acquire the easement for highway purposes in the plaintiffs’ land involved an exercise of the state’s power of eminent domain pursuant to the method prescribed by statute. Section 1528 among its other provisions authorizes the highway commissioner to take any land he may find necessary for the layout of a trunk line highway, provides that the state shall pay all damages resulting and requires the commissioner to file an assessment of damages and benefits with the clerk of the Superior Court in the county in which the land is located. It adds that, “at any time after such assessment shall have been made by said highway commissioner, the physical construction of such layout ... or other improvement may be made.” While § 199f of the 1941 Supplement provides for an application for a reassessment, it concludes with this provision: “The pendency of any such application for reassessment shall not prevent or delay the layout ... or other improvement of any such highway.”

Under this procedure the taking of the land is complete when the assessment is filed with the clerk of the Superior Court. Kratochvil v. Cox, 129 Conn. 246, 251, 27 A. 2d 382; Munson v. MacDonald, 113 Conn. 651, 657, 155 A. 910. This is so even though there be no physical taking, for, in the absence of *229 specific provision otherwise in the statute, “when the taking for public use is by administrative order if ‘the formal act of some responsible body is required to effect a taking, the filing of such order definitely fixes the time and extent of the taking;’ when such formal act is not required, ‘the first actual authorized physical interference with the property affected marks the punctum temporis of the taking.’ 2 Nichols, Eminent Domain (2d Ed.) p. 1152.” Kaufman v. Valente, 115 Conn. 428, 433, 162 A. 693. Therefore, “taking” means the accomplishment of the legal step whereby the landowner’s right of possession is terminated. Accordingly, the taking of the plaintiffs’ land occurred on July 14, 1944, the date when the defendant’s assessment was filed.

Since this taking was an exercise of the state’s power of eminent domain, the plaintiffs’ constitutional guaranties entitle them to just compensation as of the time of the taking. “Where land is taken by eminent domain the principal sum becomes due and payable when the land is taken.” Woodward v. New Haven, 107 Conn. 439, 441, 140 A. 814. It is the value of the land as of that time which constitutes the basis of just compensation. In consequence of the delay in the payment of that sum to the plaintiffs and the termination of their right of possession by the filing of the assessment, they had, from July 14, 1944, until January 17, 1947, neither the legal right to the possession or use of their property nor the use of the money to which they were entitled for its taking. Just compensation must necessarily include compensation for the loss so sustained during this interval, for, as we have said, “It matters not whether the property . . . taken be regarded as the land condemned, or the amount of assessed damages withheld for the condemnor’s use. ... In either as *230 pect of the matter and in either event, the result will be the appropriation of private property without just compensation.” Reiley v. Waterbury, 95 Conn. 226, 230, 111 A. 188. The loss suffered during the interval referred to is as much an element of just compensation as is the value of the land itself as of the date of the taking.

No decision by this court calls for a different conclusion. The question whether compensation in the form of interest for this element of loss sustained by the owner should be awarded has been presented to this court under two different types of eminent domain statute. Under the first, where the condemnor was not entitled to possession until payment of damages was made or, in the event of an appeal, the amount of damages was finally determined, interest was not allowed. Bishop v. New Haven, 82 Conn. 51, 72 A. 646; Fox v. South Norwalk, 85 Conn. 237, 244, 82 A. 642; Keller v. Bridgeport, 101 Conn. 669, 127 A. 508; Beiley v. Waterbury, supra; Woodward v. New Haven, supra. Under the second, where, as in the instant case, the condemnor had the right of immediate possession upon performing certain acts, regardless of whether payment was postponed or the valuation was uncertain because of an appeal, interest was allowed in the case of Shannahan v. Waterbury, 63 Conn. 420, 28 A. 611. See Novogroski v. MacDonald, 4 Conn. Sup. 474. These decisions show that, under either type of statute, the time when the condemnor’s right to possession accrued sets the time for the running of interest on the value, as determined, of the property taken. In other words, when interest has been denied it has not been because interest can be no part of just compensation but because the owner still had the right of posses *231 sion and no payment for the property to be taken had yet become due.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 A.2d 512, 134 Conn. 226, 1947 Conn. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-cox-conn-1947.