Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority Appeal

257 A.2d 520, 435 Pa. 370, 1969 Pa. LEXIS 732
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 9, 1969
DocketAppeal, No. 257
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 257 A.2d 520 (Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority Appeal, 257 A.2d 520, 435 Pa. 370, 1969 Pa. LEXIS 732 (Pa. 1969).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Cohen,

Appellant, Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority, condemned appellees’ land upon which Acme and First Pennsylvania Bank held parking easements. Subsequently, private negotiations led to a settlement of the claims of easement holders. Acme and First Pennsylvania did not come on the record as claimants when the board of view was appointed to determine compensation for the condemnation, or in the appeal to the court of common pleas. During the course of the trial the appellant informed the trial judge, who was sitting as both judge and jury, that the easement holders had been compensated by the authority for their interests and that the award to appellees should be diminished by the value of those easements. The trial court accepted testimony as to the value of the fee encumbered by the easements and unencumbered. The court valued the unencumbered fee as $196,000, which it awarded to appellees holding that “since there are no claimants other than the DiAmbrosios, the award of necessity must go to them solely.” Appellant appeals the failure of the trial court to apportion the $196,000 damages between the fee and the easement interests.

These facts generate the following issue: When a condemnor compensates the holders of easement interests in the condemned property, who then do not appear as claimants in the proceedings to determine the amount of compensation due, should the trial judge apportion the total valuation between the fee owner and the condemnor who has extinguished the claims of the easement holders? No provision of the Eminent [372]*372Domain Code of 1964, P. L. 84, 26 P.S. §1-101 et seq. is directly applicable. However, the intent of Section 507 although not its specific language, 26 P.S. §1-5071 and the judicial concepts of equity and fairness should have led the trial judge to apportion the damages between the fee interests and the interests satisfied by the condemnor.

The trial judge, when sitting as a judge and jury, must determine fair market value by evaluating the impact of all the interests in the property and then apportion the award among the holders of those interests. Eminent Domain Code, §507, 26 P.S. §1-507. However, if a claim is settled by the condemnor, the condemnor should not be required to pay to the remaining interests the value of the interests that the condemnor has satisfied. The court below refused to credit appellant with the value of the satisfied interests since the appellees were the only claimants on the record. Although appellees were the sole parties claiming as condemnees, they did not have a claim for the full value of the property. Nor need the connemnor come on the record as a claimant to have the value of the interests it satisfied deducted from the award for the total fee. It must, however, prove the existence and the value of the satisfied interests. Since the trial court had notice of the existence of the easement and the satisfaction of the claim based thereon, [373]*373the court should have awarded the sole on-the-record claimants only the apportioned value of their claim.

Judgment vacated and record remanded to the lower court with instructions to apportion the award.

Mr. Justice Jones took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.

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Related

In re Condemnation by the Commonwealth
422 A.2d 711 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1980)
DiAmbrosio v. Redevelopment Authority
277 A.2d 862 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1971)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 A.2d 520, 435 Pa. 370, 1969 Pa. LEXIS 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-redevelopment-authority-appeal-pa-1969.