Jacksonville Expressway Authority v. Bennett

20 Fla. Supp. 86
CourtCircuit Court of the 4th Judicial Circuit of Florida, Duval County
DecidedJune 21, 1962
DocketNo. 27153-L
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Fla. Supp. 86 (Jacksonville Expressway Authority v. Bennett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Circuit Court of the 4th Judicial Circuit of Florida, Duval County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacksonville Expressway Authority v. Bennett, 20 Fla. Supp. 86 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1962).

Opinion

WILLIAM H. MANESS, Circuit Judge.

This cause has been argued twice, and briefed by counsel, on three questions which have been raised by pleadings filed since the mandate of the District Court of Appeal, First District, was returned and filed in this court on July 26,1961, to-wit —

(1) Whether or not the petitioner should be permitted to amend its petition for condemnation and declaration of taking so as to reduce its estimate of just compensation as to parcels 2, 2-A and 2-B from a total of $72,750 to a total of $51,300.

(2) Whether or not the petitioner should be permitted to amend its petition for condemnation and declaration of taking so as to relinquish and divest itself of the limited access rights which were acquired with the fee simple title to parcels 2-A and 2-B under the original petition, declaration and order of taking, as well as the amended petition, declaration and subsequent proceedings.

(3) Whether or not this court can and should permit Grace Gertrude Broward, the owner of pareéis 2, 2-A and 2-B, to with[88]*88draw and accept the amount fixed in the petitioner’s estimate of just compensation “ . . . for . . . just compensation” in accordance with her motion therefor (as suggested in the dissenting opinion by Justice Drew, concurred in by Justice O’Connell, in Bennett vs. Jacksonville Expressway Authority, 131 So.2d 740 at 745).

Review of the record herein shows that this condemnation proceeding began December 19, 1958. The petitioner became vested with the fee simple title to the land sought to be acquired, including limited access rights to portions thereof, on January 20, 1959, and has constructed a vital link of the Jacksonville Expressway thereon. The owners of all parcels involved have been paid full and just compensation, either by voluntary agreement or jury verdict, except Grace Gertrude Broward, the owner of parcels 2, 2-A and 2-B. For reasons previously detailed (15 Fla. Supp. 9), subsequent to a jury verdict as to said parcels, a new trial of the issue of what is full and just compensation to the owner of said parcels was granted by this court. Although the District Court of Appeal, First District, disagreed (124 So.2d 307), the order granting such new trial was affirmed (131 So.2d 740) by a holding of the Supreme Court that this court did not abuse its discretion by granting said owner a new trial under all the circumstances. Therefore, for the purpose of this order, the cause is presented to this court at this time in substantially the same posture as if the first trial had never occurred; except, and this must not be overlooked, that the order of this court denying to the owner the right to depose the petitioner’s expert real estate appraisers is now known to be erroneous under later decisions of our Supreme Court.

Now, the owner is saying in effect, “I’ll take the sum of money which the petitioner states is its estimate of just compensation for just compensation”; but, the petitioner is saying, “we are not willing to pay that amount now and we want to reduce our estimate of just compensation, even though it was made in good faith, to an estimate based on a valid appraisal; and, furthermore, we do not want all the rights we have already acquired in parcels 2-A and 2-B and insist on giving up our limited access rights over 2-A and 2-B before we are required to pay for them”.

It may be that the owner was slow in electing to accept the petitioner’s estimate of just compensation, but this should be no legal impediment if such right exists, particularly where, as here, the court denied the owner’s right (now clearly established by Shell v. State Road Department, 135 So.2d 857) to discover the details of the petitioner’s testimony as to just compensation prior to the actual trial of that issue. At this date, the owner knows [89]*89no more than she was entitled to know prior to the first trial; but, based on that knowledge, tardily gained, she is ready and willing to accept the petitioner’s estimate of just compensation.

Under such circumstances, can the petitioner be heard to object? This court says, no! It was the petitioner who elected to proceed under chapter 74 of the Florida Statutes, take the owner’s land before the value thereof had been determined and devote it to its own uses; it was the petitioner who, with its unfettered ability to make its own estimate of just compensation, using one or a hundred appraisers, arrived at the sum of $72,750 as its estimate of just compensation made in good faith as required by the constitution and laws of the state of Florida, as construed in the case of State v. Wingfield, 101 So.2d 184; and, it was the petitioner who made no move to amend or change this sum until it had actually put on testimony at the first trial some $21,250 below its said estimate. Furthermore, as contended by counsel for the owner, it is apparent that relying on petitioner’s estimate of just compensation being made in good faith in the stated amount, the owner passed up the opportunity to exercise the procedural rights on which the very constitutionality of chapter 74 depends and no longer can this court perform its judicial function effectively as prescribed in the Wingfield case, supra. (See State Road Department v. Forehand, 56 So.2d 901.) Having remained silent when it should have spoken, the law will not now permit petitioner to speak and assert a different position. (See Davis v. Evans, 132 So.2d 476).

Counsel for petitioner cites and relies on the italicized language of Justice Hobson in Shell v. State Road Department, supra, to-wit —

“It must be borne in mind that in a condemnation proceeding the property of the land owner is subject to taking by the condemnor without the owner’s consent. The condemnee is a party through no fault or volition of his own. Our Declaration of Rights, Section 12, Constitution of the State of Florida, makes it incumbent upon the condemnor to award “just” compensation for the taking. In view of this constitutional mandate, the awarding of compensation which is “just” should be the care of the condemning authority as well as that of the party whose land is being taken.
“Unlike litigation between private parties condemnation by any governmental authority should not be a matter of ‘dog eat dog’ or ‘win at any cost’. Such attitude and procedure would be decidedly unfair to the property owner. He would be at a disadvantage in every instance for the reason that the government has unlimited resources created by its inexhausti[90]*90ble power of taxation. Moreover it should be remembered that the condemnee is himself a taxpayer and as such contributes to the government’s ‘unlimited resources’,”

But this language more accurately describes the position the owner finds herself in as she faces a second trial with an adversary who owns a toll expressway on land taken from her and now wants to change substantially its previous position on which the court and owner relied in the entry of the order of taking which divested the owner of her possession.

Petitioner’s counsel lays great stress on the necessity of the proposed amendment to correct an alleged error, and asserts in his brief “ . . . the details of which are completely and fully known by this Court”. Judge Wigginton likewise seems to assume the existence of an innocent, obvious and understandable error in his critique of the opinion of the Supreme Court upholding the order of this court granting a new trial. (See Bainbridge y.

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Related

Shell v. State Road Department
135 So. 2d 857 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1961)
State Road Dept. v. Forehand
56 So. 2d 901 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1952)
Houston Texas Gas & Oil Corporation v. Hoeffner
132 So. 2d 38 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1961)
Davis v. Evans
132 So. 2d 476 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1961)
Bennett v. Jacksonville Expressway Authority
131 So. 2d 740 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1961)
State ex rel. State Road Department v. Wingfield
101 So. 2d 184 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1958)
Jacksonville Expressway Authority v. Bennett
124 So. 2d 307 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1960)
Bainbridge v. State Road Department of Florida
139 So. 2d 714 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1962)
Jacksonville Expressway Authority v. Bennett
15 Fla. Supp. 9 (Duval County Circuit Court, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
20 Fla. Supp. 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacksonville-expressway-authority-v-bennett-flacirct4duv-1962.