Reservation Eleven Associates, a Limited Partnership v. District of Columbia

420 F.2d 153, 136 U.S. App. D.C. 311, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 11657
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJuly 2, 1969
Docket22142_1
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 420 F.2d 153 (Reservation Eleven Associates, a Limited Partnership v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reservation Eleven Associates, a Limited Partnership v. District of Columbia, 420 F.2d 153, 136 U.S. App. D.C. 311, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 11657 (D.C. Cir. 1969).

Opinion

LEVENTHAL, Circuit Judge:

This appeal arises over the elements of valuation a jury was allowed to consider in a condemnation proceeding. The appellant, landowner, offered to prove at trial that it had been the practice of the District Commissioners to close alleys upon application, and that the “fair value” of the appellant’s land should have been established by a method that treated the alleys as closed, or likely to be closed. The trial judge rejected the proffer. He felt that the Commissioners of the District of Columbia had the discretion to refuse a request to close an alley, and there was no showing the refusals in this case were arbitrary. He concluded that the issue of future closings as tendered by the proffer was too conjectural and the possibility too remote for submission to the jury. We affirm the court’s order ratifying and confirming the jury verdict and award.

On December 22, 1965, the District of Columbia by eminent domain took the city block of property, known as Reservation 11, between 2nd and 3rd Streets, Northwest, Washington, D. C., facing Constitution Avenue. This block was cut into five smaller sections by two alleys running east-west, and one alley running part way across the block in a north-south direction. In October of *155 1959, applications were made to close some of this alley space. In November of 1961, another application was made to close all the alley space and to unify the five portions into one single tract. The District of Columbia opposed the closing because the center leg of the inner city freeway, under the plans then being considered, was to go through Reservation 11. The applications were never acted upon.

In the condemnation ease, appellant asserted that the failure to close the alleys was arbitrary and that on valuation of its land either the alleys should be treated as closed, or the jury should consider the probability that, absent plans of government for the project, the alleys would have been closed. The jury was not allowed to consider either of these theories in setting the value, and appellant claims error.

1. General principles in condemnation cases.

The measure of compensation that must be paid in an eminent domain suit is the fair market value of the property being' condemned at a time just prior to the taking. 1 Fair market value is:

the price which a willing seller, who is not obliged to sell, would be willing to accept and the price which a willing buyer, who is not obliged to buy, would be willing to pay for the property. This * * * assumes that the buyer is knowledgeable and that the seller is knowledgeable. * * * of all of the present or potential elements of value involved * * *. Fair market value * * * is based upon the probabilities as they appear to the willing buyer and the willing seller. 2

In a condemnation proceeding, the jury’s valuation should take into account the highest and most profitable use of the property. 3 Thus if the alleys in this case had been closed, permitting erection of a larger building on the unified block, the value of this more profitable use should be considered. Even if the alleys were not yet closed, but were likely to be closed in the discernible future, absent the condemnation, the jury should take into account the more profitable use that would thereby be made possible. In such a case the value is not set as if the land were already used in the more profitable way, but rather the value should factor in the degree of probability of such future use and its effect on market price. In other words, the jury determines the amount a willing buyer would pay for the “probability” that the needed steps can be taken to allow the more profitable use. If, however, this “probability” of a more profitable use is so remote that it is not likely to affect the market value, the matter should not be submitted to a jury, for that would leave them adrift in a sea of speculation and conjecture. The trial judge, without deciding questions of credibility, has a duty to prevent such speculation by the jury in determining the likelihood of future change and its effect on market value. 4

2. The Commissioners’ failure to close.

Under the pertinent statutes the Commissioners had discretion whether or not to close an alley. 5 The Commis *156 sioners’ refusal to close the alleys because of the possibility that they might be needed for the freeway was not an arbitrary abuse of discretion. The alleys in question are “original alleys” and are therefore the property of the United States. It was reasonable for the Commissioners to decline to give away or exchange government property that was likely to be needed in the discernible future.

There is no showing that appellant pursued these refusals before the Commissioners and appellant do not press this matter on appeal.

3. Probability of the alley closing.

The appellant argues that the probability of the alley closings should have been submitted to the jury. It asserts that this issue of probability should not be affected by the government’s past resistance to such closings because that resistance was designed to hold down the market value of the adjacent land and reduce the cost of their contemplated future taking.

Precedents cited by appellant indicate that a government may not use its regulatory authority (e.g. zoning) to deny consent to a landowner’s proposed use of his land, merely because it wants to preserve the land for a still different use and to take the land for that purpose at a cheap price. 6 The city must consider the landowner’s application for use of his land on its own merits, in the exercise of its regulatory authority, and cannot artificially use another governmental power to reduce the just value cost payable on the exercise of its power to take private property through eminent domain.

The case before us involves entirely different considerations for the city was being asked, in effect, to give away or exchange its own land. The landowner proffered proof that the “practice of the District Commissioners has for many years been to agree to alley closings where application is made and there is no opposition from contiguous landowners.”

The memorandum of the District Judge noted that this case would be like the zoning cases (see note 6) if “it should prove to be the fact that the alleys would be likely to be closed but for the first public announcement of a definitive decision to put the freeway across the property.” But the 1959 and 1961 applications for closing the alleys, according to the proffer, were opposed by the Highway Department not because its plan then was settled or approved, but merely because there was a possibility the freeway would involve this property. Given the discretion of the District to close the alleys, and the unique characteristics of the property involved, the Judge concluded that:

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Bluebook (online)
420 F.2d 153, 136 U.S. App. D.C. 311, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 11657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reservation-eleven-associates-a-limited-partnership-v-district-of-cadc-1969.