North Adams Apartments Ltd. Partnership v. City of North Adams

26 Mass. L. Rptr. 90
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedJune 22, 2009
DocketNo. 070243
StatusPublished

This text of 26 Mass. L. Rptr. 90 (North Adams Apartments Ltd. Partnership v. City of North Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North Adams Apartments Ltd. Partnership v. City of North Adams, 26 Mass. L. Rptr. 90 (Mass. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Agostini, John A., J.

INTRODUCTION

The plaintiff, North Adams Apartments Limited Partnership (NAALP), brought this action against the city of North Adams alleging that it owned easement [91]*91rights and sewer infrastructure on land owned by the City of North Adams which was taken by eminent domain on December 13, 2005. The plaintiff contested the amount of the pro tanto offer of $10,000.00 for the rights and property taken by the defendant.

The case was called for a jury-waived trial in April 2009, and was completed on April 13. During the course of trial, 7 witnesses testified and 15 exhibits were introduced. Based upon the evidence presented at trial, the Court makes the following findings of fact.2

FINDINGS OF FACT

A. Background

The plaintiff is a Massachusetts Limited Partnership with principal place of business in the City of North Adams, Massachusetts. Michael Deep is the managing partner of this enterprise. With respect to this litigation, NAALP is the owner of two parcels of land on West Shaft Road in North Adams. In 1989, the plaintiff was developing an apartment project on West Shaft Road, identified as Tunnel Brook Apartments, and was considering its alternatives with respect to a sewage disposal system. NAALP entered into negotiations with North Adams to determine if the City would be willing to allow the project to use the municipal sewer system. In order to accomplish this goal, the City would have to agree to permit the plaintiff to extend the present sewer lines north on West Shaft Road and to accept its effluence into the municipal sewage disposal system.

After a period of negotiations, the plaintiff and defendant entered into a written contractual relationship entitled Easement and Agreement The Agreement was signed on August 19, 1991, and recorded in the Northern Berkshire Registry of Deeds, in book 832, page 921. In the Agreement the Ciiy granted NAALP an easement on and under a portion of the public way known as West Shaft Road for the purpose of constructing a sanitary sewer system. NAALP was responsible for both the construction and maintenance of the sewer system in accordance with the specifications provided by the City, and would remain the owner of the components of the system. Under this easement, NAALP was permitted to discharge ordinary household waste into the municipal sewer system, subject to the limitations imposed by the permit issued by the Department of Environmental Protection. The Agreement further allowed the City to terminate this agreement at any time and for any reason.

In 1991, NAALP constructed the sewer line extension within the easement in West Shaft Road, including a pumping station, at a cost of $136,540.00.3 The plaintiff actually extended the line beyond the 35-unit Tunnel Brook Apartments which is located 1,800 feet north of the prior sewer line termination point. The sewer line was extended a total of 3,200 feet (plus or minus) to a parcel of land owned by the plaintiff that was undeveloped but was the future site of a 21-lot single-family residential development to be known as Deep Woods.

On December 6, 2005, the City Council voted unanimously to approve the eminent domain taking of the plaintiffs easement, as well as the sewage transportation system, including all of the equipment, pumping station and pipes that comprise the system. The pro tanto award as set forth in the Order of Taking was $10,000, pursuant to G.L.c. 79, sec. 7B.

On August 23, 2007, the plaintiff filed a complaint in the Berkshire Superior Court, pursuant to G.L.c. 79, sec. 1 et seq., asserting that the pro tanto award was less than the fair market value of the system and seeking additional compensation for the eminent domain taking of the easement and the sewage transportation system. North Adams denied the allegations contending that the sewage system, with its future liabilities, had no value and the $10,000.00 payment was for nuisance value. The parties waived their rights to a jury trial.

B. Valuation

As with all eminent domain cases, this dispute centers on the fair market value of the easement and the physical property comprising the sewage transportation system. The City contends that the property and rights of the plaintiff taken by eminent domain have no value and simply awarded $10,000.00 as a nuisance figure. On the contrary, the plaintiff asserts that the value of easement rights and the infrastructure of the sewage system is between $235,000.00 and $271,370.00. Both parties produced experts in support of their respective positions.

The expert for the plaintiff was Roger P. Durkin, a certified general appraiser. I find that Mr. Durkin is qualified to render opinions of fair market value with respect to easements and related property rights in eminent domain cases. Mr. Durkin testified that there was no market for the sewer line. In other words, there are no buyers of sewer lines that would allow an appraiser to evaluate comparable sales to determine a fair market value. In order to arrive at the fair market value for the plaintiffs loss of the easement and sewer infrastructure, Durkin considered two appraisal methods: (1) Depreciated Reproduction Cost (DRC) and (2) Income Capitalization Approach (ICA). Very simply, the DRC method of valuation is to determine first the reproduction cost of the structure that is being considered and then subtracting the depreciation. The ICA method of valuation seeks to determine the future monetary returns from the ownership of a property, reduced to present value, to identify a fair market value at the time of the taking.

Durkin determined that the DRC method would yield avalué of $271,370.00. He determined this figure by calculating the cost to build an identical system as of December 13, 2005. This entailed retrieving information concerning excavation cost as well as prices [92]*92for the materials that would be needed to reproduce such a sewage disposal system. In addition to receiving information from contractors, Durkin also utilized the cost data from R.S. Means, a standard construction reference guide for the cost of construction materials. Finally, Durkin determine the life of the components and calculated a depreciation schedule.

The plaintiff supported the testimony of its expert appraiser with the testimony of James Scalise, an excavation contractor. Mr. Scalise provided the court with the estimated costs of reproducing the sewage system as of 2005, the time of the taking. He opined that if the work was done for a private enterprise the cost would be $214,000.00. If the work was done for a municipalily, and subject to prevailing wage laws, the project would cost $256,700.00. I find his testimony to be credible and reasonably consistent with the cost determined by Durkin.

As an alternative, Durkin employed the ICA method of valuation in determine the value of the property taken by the City. In utilizing the ICA method, Durkin determined that there are approximately 22 separate lots that have feasible accessibility to the sewer system on West Shaft Road.4 Durkin attempted to determine the amount a landowner would pay to connect to the sewer system. In this regard, he noted that one resident in 2006 connected to the sewer system at a cost of approximately $20,000. He eventually concluded that a landowner would pay $20,000 for sewer hookup.5

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Mass. L. Rptr. 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-adams-apartments-ltd-partnership-v-city-of-north-adams-masssuperct-2009.