Cors v. United States

96 F. Supp. 460, 119 Ct. Cl. 296, 1951 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 34
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedApril 3, 1951
DocketNo. 46796
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 96 F. Supp. 460 (Cors v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cors v. United States, 96 F. Supp. 460, 119 Ct. Cl. 296, 1951 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 34 (cc 1951).

Opinions

Whitakjsr, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

In our opinion in this case (110 C. Cls. 66, 77, et seq.) we held that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the market value of his tug which defendant requisitioned, without any deduction therefrom on account of the defendant’s need which necessitated the taking. The Supreme Court reversed us and remanded the case, with directions to us to determine how much of the enhancement in market value was due to the Government’s need which necessitated the taking.

[302]*302We referred the- casé to a -Commissioner of this court to< take additional evidence and to report the facts with respect to the amount of enhancement in the market value of plaintiff’s vessel'that resulted from the causes which necessitated the taking. After hearing such additional evidence, the Commissioner has made a report in which he found that the evidence of the amount of the enhancement due to the Government’s need was “so conjectural and speculative that it is impossible to determine the amount by which the market value of plaintiff’s vessel was enhanced as a result of the causes necessitating the taking, or to estimate the amount of such enhancement with reasonable accuracy.” He found, however, that whatever this amount was, it was negligible.

We think these findings of the Commissioner are correct, and we have adopted them as the findings of the court.

In its opinion (337 U. S. 325) the Supreme Court said, on page 334:

The government’s need, of vessels which has necessitated the taking is its need for the precise ship taken, for the type or class of ship taken, or for ships which perform the same or related functions. The government’s need for cargo vessels may affect indirectly the price level of many commodities. .It may, for example, affect the price of rowboats. But if the government takes a rowboat,- the enhancement to be excluded is that which results from the government’s activities in the particular market. It is the government’s demand in that market that is the measure of the “causes necessitating the taking or use” in this situation.

In view of this holding of the Supreme Court evidence was introduced which showed that there were five different classes of.'tugboats in the New York Harbor, that is to say, the tugboáts in the harbor were designed to perform five different kinds of services. There were transport tugs, shaft-ings tugs, towing tugs operating within the harbor limits, towing tugs operating from the harbor to points outside, and railroad tugs used to tow car floats, etc. Plaintiff’s tug was a shifting tug. Of the 525 tugs operating in the New York Harbor, there were 80 tugs capable of éngaging, in shifting operations.

[303]*303Prior to October 1942 the defendant had either purchased or requisitioned 41 tugboats, but of these only four were shifting tugs. This is five percent of all the shifting tugs in the harbor. The requisition of so small a percentage of the total tugs of this type had but little effect on the market. The total of 41 tugs of all types purchased or requisitioned by the defendant was approximately eight percent of all the tugboats operating in the harbor, and this had but little effect on the market price of tugs.. The Government’s need for this particular tug was not to carry on shifting operations; it needed it and used it as a steam plant to heat oil for use in combat ships. Certainly this need which necessitated its taking could have had no effect on the market value of this tug. The predominant cause of the enhancement in value of these tugs was the large increase in harbor traffic.

In our former findings we said:

After May 27,1941, and’particularly after December 7,1941, the date of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the rise in market values was due to the Government’s need for vessels, which necessitated-the taking-of many vessels, and to the great increase in shipping and in harbor traffic which occurred during the period of the war. These conditions combined to create a demand for and a shortage of tugs.

Further testimony shows this finding to have been somewhat inaccurate. On the former trial of this case the testimony relative to the causes which brought about the increase in value of tugs was of a general, more or less indefinite nature. No testimony was introduced to show the actual number of tugs acquired by the defendant or its effect on the market. On the subsequent trial of the case, however, the parties introduced specific and accurate testimony as to the number of tugs operating in the harbor, the type of tugs,-and the number acquired by the defendant during the period September 8,1939, to October 15,1942.

The Government did not take many tugboats, as we. said in our former.findings; it only acquired eight percent of all the.tugboats operating.in New York Harbor, and it only acquired five percent of the particular type, of/tug involved in. this case. Our-former findings were incorrect in attribut[304]*304ing any substantial part of the increase in the market value of tugs to the Government’s need which, we said, necessitated the taking of many of them. As it turns out, only a very small percentage was taken.

To repeat, the increase in the value of tugs was due almost entirely to the great increase in shipping and harbor traffic which occurred during the period of the war. But the defendant says that the increase in harbor traffic was due largely to the Government’s activities under the Lend-Lease program and in the prosecution of the war, and that the enhancement due to these activities is to be excluded.

It is true that the increase in shipping and harbor traffic was due, in large measure, to the Government’s activities and that the owners of tugs operating in New York Harbor were benefited by this increased business, just as thousands of persons throughout the country enjoyed increased business in connection with the production, processing, and distribution of the vast quantities of food and material that had to be supplied to the Government prior to and during the war. But we do not agree that any enhancement in the value of plaintiff’s tug that resulted from this general and'widespread increase in business which flowed from the Government’s far-flung activities in wartime should be eliminated. The Act (53 Stat. 1255) requires only the elimination of the ■enhancement in value brought about “by the causes necessitating the taking or use.” A showing of an increase in value from a general improvement in business conditions, including the tugboat business, is not proof that the enhancement in value of plaintiff’s tug was caused by the Government’s need which necessitated the taking of plaintiff’s tug or of other tugs of the same type or tugs which could perform the same or related functions. Rule 4 of the report of the Advisory Board on Just Compensation, quoted with apparent approval by the Supreme Court, provides that enhancement due to a general rise in prices or earnings, whenever occurring, should not be deducted. Under this rule increase in value due to improved business conditions in the New York Harbor, and, in fact, all over the country, is not to be deducted.

Indeed, the increase in business in the New York Harbor [305]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 F. Supp. 460, 119 Ct. Cl. 296, 1951 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cors-v-united-states-cc-1951.