Commissioner, Trans. v. Leonard-Leonore, No. Cv01-008 53 54 S (Jan. 7, 2003)

2003 Conn. Super. Ct. 996
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 2003
DocketNo. CV01-008 53 54 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2003 Conn. Super. Ct. 996 (Commissioner, Trans. v. Leonard-Leonore, No. Cv01-008 53 54 S (Jan. 7, 2003)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commissioner, Trans. v. Leonard-Leonore, No. Cv01-008 53 54 S (Jan. 7, 2003), 2003 Conn. Super. Ct. 996 (Colo. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
This litigation arises out of the state's right of eminent domain as exercised through the Commissioner of Transportation. On June 15, 2001, the Commissioner filed a Notice of Condemnation together with an Assessment of Damages in the amount of one thousand ($1000) dollars for the acquisition of a forty-four one hundredths (0.44) acre of land which is a wedged-shaped, unimproved parcel situated in the town of Kent and is a portion of a larger three (3) acre "tract." The tip or end of the wedge points to the north; the southerly portion, which is the base of the wedge, is bounded by submerged wetlands owned by the defendant; the easterly boundary is formed by the junction of the condemned piece and an active state-owned railroad, and the westerly and the northerly point of the wedge abut undeveloped state land which leads up a slope to South Kent Road (State Route 827).

The wedge-shaped piece in issue occupies all of the dry land in the three (3) acre parcel, all of which is non-contiguous with other land of the defendant, which other land is generally known as Camp Leonard-Leonore, a corporate entity located in the town of Kent. Club Getaway is situated on the defendant's property and offers activities such as biking, hiking, swimming, boating and tennis, together with living accommodations for patrons.1

The subject three (3) acres was obtained by the defendant along with four other parcels from Trustees of the Property of the Penn Central Transportation Company in 1975.

For the last twenty years, the Fink brothers, individually or corporately, have leased the taken parcel to the town of Kent for the storage of sand and gravel, the temporary storage of town highway trucks and other heavy equipment.2 The subject parcel is a landlocked parcel.

According to the defendant, the topographical characteristics of the CT Page 997 taken parcel cause it to be particularly suited for use as a repository for sand and gravel. The state argues that since the land had no meaningful use, the lease has been nothing more than an accommodation to the town of Kent.3

The defendant characterizes this use as a special use and asserts that one John Nelson, an individual contractor who currently owns property in Kent on which sand, gravel and earth products are stored, was interested in purchasing this particular piece. By a somewhat tenuous nexus, this interest of Nelson "and others" is said to create a market for this particular piece of property. He ultimately blurted out during his testimony that he would pay eighty thousand ($80,000) dollars for the property, the transaction would be a cash transaction after stating that he was ready, willing and able to purchase the property. As a result of the court's observation of the witness and the content of his testimony, the court is not inclined to accord it any great value in terms of credibility.

Each of the parties offered an expert appraiser whose testimony was an attempt to frame the value of the parcel taken. Neither was particularly accurate or impressive. Despite that finding, the court does consider that the defendant's expert appears a bit more credible than the state's expert, whose knowledge of the issues in this particular case as well as values, acreage and topography certainly was virtually useless in terms of support for the state. This finding does not, however, impress an imprimatur on the defendant's expert.

The defendant's expert testified that the defendant was wrong in asserting that the property was landlocked. He claimed that it had access over a gravel path which had been discontinued as a town road in 1935. That gravel path leads to state highway(s). He did not know what a highway driveway permit was. He conceded that one may not obtain title by adverse possession against the state, but he also asserted that a landowner could obtain an access easement by prescription over that land. This is a rather novel concept, to say the least. Both the defendant and its expert claim the value of the property to be within the ninety thousand to one hundred thousand dollar ($90,000-$100,000) range. The expert placed great weight upon one comparable located in close proximity to the subject parcel. It was also used for the same purpose. The property sold for sixty-seven thousand five hundred ($67,500) dollars in 1986, some fourteen (14) to fifteen (15) years earlier; and interpolating for the passage of time, the price was adjusted to a current figure of eighty-eight thousand five hundred ninety-four ($88,594) dollars. The adjustments made by the expert were made despite the fact that he did not increase the-sales price from 1987 to 1995. He CT Page 998 did, however, increase the sales price by 5 percent for the three years from 1995 to 1998. He then adjusted the value for appreciation of 25 percent from January 1, 1999 to the present. This figure is the product of what seems to be some magical process and leaves much to be desired in terms of assistance to the court.

There has been mention of the recognition of the lack of persuasion by the defendant's expert. of significant importance was his response to a question of valuing this parcel as a stand alone parcel of unbuildable raw land. This question was never answered and perceived apparently by the witness as an excellent example of avoidance.

An environmental professional dug three test pits on the property. He discovered concentrations of petroleum hydrocarbon, semi-volatile organic compounds, and lead contamination, each of which registered in excess of the regulatory safety standards established by the Commissioner of Environmental Protection in the remediation standard regulations for GA areas; that is, areas in which the underground water is presumed drinkable. This court is satisfied that there certainly is a need for remediation and there was some testimony about that process occurring. Regretfully, the expert who testified about the contamination of the property was never asked and never volunteered any opinion or estimate of the cost of such remediation. Therefore, while it exists, sufficient evidence to utilize it in the determining of the value of the property is sadly lacking. To reiterate, the values found by the state's expert of one thousand ($1000) dollars for the taken parcel and ninety-four thousand ($94,000) dollars as the value which would be due to the defendant in accordance with its expert's testimony, require the court to value the property in accordance with the admissible evidence that it heard and its viewing of the premises.

The defendant in this appeal claims to be aggrieved by the award as assessed by the state, and seeks an award in the amount of the difference between the Commissioner's value and the defendant's own value. The Commissioner's value of one thousand ($1000) dollars is contrasted with the defendant's value of ninety-four thousand ($94,000) dollars. The defendant claims the ninety-three thousand ($93,000) dollar difference as due and owing to it as the measure of the value of this particular piece of property. "Aggrievement is established if "there is a possibility, as distinguished from a certainty, that some legally protected interest . . . has been adversely affected.'" State Medical Society v. Board ofExaminers in Podiatry, 203 Conn. 295, 300 (1987). Being an owner of property establishes that said owner has a specific personal and legal interest in the subject matter of the decision. " Huck v. Inland Wetlandsand Watercourses Agency,

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Bluebook (online)
2003 Conn. Super. Ct. 996, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioner-trans-v-leonard-leonore-no-cv01-008-53-54-s-jan-7-connsuperct-2003.