State Highway Commissioner v. Watt

132 N.W.2d 113, 374 Mich. 300, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 324
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1965
DocketCalendar 16, Docket 50,092
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 132 N.W.2d 113 (State Highway Commissioner v. Watt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Highway Commissioner v. Watt, 132 N.W.2d 113, 374 Mich. 300, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 324 (Mich. 1965).

Opinions

Kelly, J.

(dissenting). Three commissioners appointed by the trial court reported that appellants [301]*301should receive $15,650 as compensation for petitioner taking appellants’ property for highway purposes.

The trial court refused to confirm the award and .appellants “urge” this Court to “find that the lower court committed error in refusing to confirm the award and that his order be reversed, with an order ■confirming the award.”

Appellants’ property, consisting of approximately 20 acres, is located south of Cadillac, Michigan, and extends 660 feet north and south and 1,320 feet east and west.

For highway purposes and in furtherance of the Ur and Bapids-Petoslcey project, the State is taking approximately 1.3 acres by talcing 87 feet of the 660 feet north and south boundary line on the east si$e of the property.

Old US-131 runs along the westerly line of the property and cuts across the northwest corner. The relocated new US-131 swings the highway east of the property.

There was constructed on this property a residence near the northwest corner, a 7-unit motel of which 3 units were not quite complete, together with 2 old buildings which were to have been converted into 2 more motel units near the southwest corner. There is a new dwelling house near the northeast corner, of good construction and modern in all respects, and sometimes rented as a motel unit.

Two expert witnesses testified for the owners, one placing a $73,100 before value and a $48,100 after value, and the other a $70,000 before value and a $43,000 after value. Both of these witnesses took into account the fact that the motel was situated on a main, well-traveled tourist highway, with a high business potential and, also, that there would be meager business prospects after traffic diversion to the new road.

[302]*302■ The State’s expert witness testified to • a $62,000' ■before, value and a $61,900 after value, and did not. consider diversion of traffic as a compensable item.

The trial court refused to confirm the $15,650* award, stating that the commissioners had largely-based their award on a business potential loss due-to a diversion of traffic and stating that as this was-improper the recovery must be limited to the value-of the land taken.

Appellants and appellee do not dispute that the-law is well established to the effect that a motel owner cannot claim damages caused by a diversion of traffic, having no property or vested right in the traffic which flows over the highway, and that when a property owner improves property fronting on a highway he takes a calculated risk that the authorities may find it necessary in improving the highway system to build new facilities that will divert the traffic from passing in front of his property.

It is agreed by both appellants- and appellee that the sole and novel question presented is: In computing the damage done to the owner of property abutting on a highway by the partial taking of his property in a condemnation proceeding, can the resultant diversion of traffic be considered as an element decreasing the value of his remaining property?

’ Appellee calls our attention to the States in which it has been held that the owner of property abutting on a highway is not entitled to damages for diversion of traffic where there has been a partial taking of his property.1

[303]*303Appellants counter by listing 6 cases from 3 States (Alabama, Nebraska, and Kansas) holding that if there is a partial taking the owner is entitled -to damages for diversion of traffic.2

Appellee endeavors to discount the weight of the Alabama and Nebraska cases by pointing out that ■the eminent domain clause of our 1908 Constitution (art 13, § 1) provides: “Private property shall not be taken by the public * * * without * * * just compensation therefor heing first made or secured in such manner as shall be prescribed by law,” whereas the Alabama constitution adds after the word “taken” the words “injured, or destroyed,” and the Nebraska constitution reads in this regard ■“shall be taken or damaged.”

Throughout the years this State has adhered to the principle that “taking” must be given a broad construction and not a construction in a narrow sense, and in Pearsall v. Board of Supervisors of Eaton County, 74 Mich 558, 561, 562 (4 LRA 193), this Court held:

“ ‘The constitutional provision is adopted for the protection of and security to the rights of the individual as against the government,’ and the term ‘taking’ should not be used in an unreasonable or narrow sense. It should not be limited to the absolute conversion of property, and applied to land only; but it should include cases where the value is destroyed by the action of the government, or serious injury is inflicted to the property itself, or exclusion of the owner from its enjoyment, or from any of the appurtenances thereto. In either of these [304]*304cases it is a taking* within the meaning of the provision of the Constitution. * * *
“ ‘A partial destruction or diminution in value is. a taking*.’ (Citing authorities.)

“If the public take any action which becomes necessary to subserve public use, and valuable rights of an individual are thereby interfered with, and damaged or destroyed, he is entitled to the compensation which the Constitution gives therefor, and such damage or destruction must be regarded as a. ‘taking.’ ”

In In re Slum Clearance, 332 Mich 485, 492, we-stated:

“ ‘The Constitution expressly forbids any appropriation of private property without “just compensation.” There is no power in the legislature-to create any exception to this rule, and nothing* is just compensation which does not make good all the pecuniary loss or outlay occasioned to the owner by the appropriation of his property.’ ”

We also quote from In re John C. Lodge Highway, 340 Mich 254, 262, wherein we reiterated:

“ ‘ “Nothing can be fairly termed just compensation which does not put the party injured in as good a condition as he would have been if the injury had not occurred.” In re Widening of Bagley Avenue, 248 Mich 1, 5.’ ”

The facts presented in this appeal are unusual, and that is probably the reason why similar facts in condemnation proceedings in re the construction of highways have not previously been before this Court.

Appellants state: “In Riddle v. State Highway Commission (1959), 184 Kan 603 (339 P2d 301) we have a case almost exactly in point on the facts, and exactly in point as to law.”

[305]*305In the Riddle Case there was a taking from the owners of a motel a parcel of property for the construction of a limited access highway, resulting in a diversion of traffic to the rear of their property so that the motel could not he seen except for the top of the roof, although the old road remained unchanged and the motel could still be reached by going 600 feet to the east or at a crossover 1-1/2 miles to the west.

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Bluebook (online)
132 N.W.2d 113, 374 Mich. 300, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-highway-commissioner-v-watt-mich-1965.