State v. 16.50, 10.04629, 3.34, 1.84, 5.97741, 3.94 & 7.49319 Acres of Land

200 A.2d 241, 57 Del. 352, 7 Storey 352, 1964 Del. Super. LEXIS 77
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedApril 27, 1964
DocketNo. 1171; No. 1041; No. 1038
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 200 A.2d 241 (State v. 16.50, 10.04629, 3.34, 1.84, 5.97741, 3.94 & 7.49319 Acres of Land) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. 16.50, 10.04629, 3.34, 1.84, 5.97741, 3.94 & 7.49319 Acres of Land, 200 A.2d 241, 57 Del. 352, 7 Storey 352, 1964 Del. Super. LEXIS 77 (Del. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

McNeilly, Judge.

The instant proceedings arise out of three condemnation actions involving three contiguous tracts of land in New Castle County. The Plaintiff sometime prior toi the year 1960 planned a super highway system for the northern portion of New Castle County, Delaware. This super highway system was to radiate from an interchange complex to be located on a swampy area lying to the South and West of the Delaware State Hospital at Farnhurst. Part of this generally swampy area has been known for generations as “Conrad’s Marsh”. The State entered into negotiations with the Defendants in the various actions which are before the Court because these Defendants claim ix> own various portions of this marsh known as “Conrad’s Marsh”. The Defendants are the Newport Land and Improvement Company, Conrad Marsh Company, - whose correct name is “Conrad’s Company”, and individuals by the name of Walter and Pearl Erhart.

On September 6, 1960 option contracts for the purchase of the various parcels involved were executed between the State and the various named Defendants. Prior to the execution of these option contracts, however, a condemnation action was filed on August 22, 1960 against [355]*355Conrad Marsh Company for that particular tract but no condemnation actions were filed as to the other tracts until August 22, 1962 with respect to the Erhart tract and August 21, 1962 with respect to the Newport Land and Improvement Company tract. The option contracts which were executed on September 6, 1960 gave the State the option to purchase the three tracts involved within one year from the date thereof. In each case the putative land owners granted to the State the right of immediate entry. In the Conrad’s Company or Conrad Marsh Company contract in which the Conrad Company with the seller the following language was inserted:

“Sellers do hereby grant to the State, without reservation, the right of immediate entry”.

In the Newport Land and Improvement Company case, the contract stated the following provision:

“Seller does hereby grant to the State the right of immediate entry upon these premises for engineering and construction work”.

In the Erhart case, the contract stated:

“Seller does hereby grant to the State the right of immediate entry upon these premises for engineering and construction work”.

In addition, all three contracts contained the following preliminary language:

“WHEREAS, the said Highway Department of the State of Delaware proposes to lay out and construct as a State Highway the road shown on the plan and designated as Contract No. FAI-1 (23 & 24) between Basin Rd. Interchange, and Pennsylvania Railroad”.

[356]*356Following the execution of the option contracts Plaintiff engaged the services of a title searcher and during the year 1961 was advised by him that he was unable to establish good fee simple title to the tracts involved in the Defendants. In the meantime and also during the year 1961 but subsequent to the expiration of the time stated in the option contracts the Plaintiff went forward and commenced the construction of the interchange in question on this land. The Defendants were advised of the difficulties encountered in establishing a good fee simple title. On August 1, 1961 and thereafter there were communications between Plaintiff and Defendants but no effort was made by the State to acquire a formal extension of the option agreements which it permitted to expire on September 6, 1961. Finally on August 21st and 22nd of 1962, as previously stated, the additional condemnations were instituted. On May 24, 1963 applications for an entry of an order of possession nunc pro tune in each of the three actions were made by the Plaintiff. The applications were for an order of possession nunc pro tune September 6, 1961 which was the date on which the option contracts expired.

On May 29, 1963 the Defendants filed answers and counter-claims in these various actions. The answers set forth affirmative defenses both with respect to the condemnation action and with respect to the application for the entry of an order of possession. The affirmative defenses recited that the activities of the plaintiff on the land claimed to be owned by the Defendants were without right and were in violation of Defendants’ constitutional rights, citing Article 1, Sec. 8, of the Delaware Constitution, Del. C. and the Fifth Amendment and the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution. The answers then went on to assert counter-claims for damages caused by the activities of the Plaintiff on Defendants’ [357]*357property, following the expiration of the option contracts, in taking out from said tracts quantities of sand, muck and gravel without permission or consent of the Defendants and without paying the Defendants therefor. The Defendants again cited the same Sections of the Federal and State Constitutions which had been cited in the affirmative defense and prayed that damages be awarded them.

It might also be added that in the Conrad Marsh Company answer it was asserted that the taking of a certain portion of the property claimed by the Conrad Marsh Company was not for a public purpose.

For the reasons hereinafter set forth this, assertion is a moot question since possession of the entire premises, including this portion, is in the Plaintiff and necessity is therefore irrelevant.

As to the affirmative defenses, the Plaintiff has filed motions to strike and as to the counter-claims Plaintiff has filed a motion for Summary Judgment. The basic questions, therefore, to be decided have to do with whether or not an order of possession nunc pro tune September 6, 1961 is proper, and, if Defendant is entitled to damages, the measure of such damages.

Defendants contend that the entry of an order of possession nunc pro tune September 6, 1961 will constitute the taking of Defendant’s property without due process of law and without paying just compensation in violation of the Constitutions of the United States and the State of Delaware. On the other hand, Plaintiff contends th'at the entry of an order of possession nunc pro tune September 6, 1961 will guarantee the owners Of subject property the compensation required by the Delaware and United States Constitutions and that in any event Defendants have no standing to assert objections to the entry of [358]*358the orders sought by the Plaintiff since they have been joined in the instant actions not as owners but merely as persons claiming an interest in subject property.

It is axiomatic in Delaware law that a party to an action has no standing to challenge the constitutionality of a statute or action taken thereunder when it is not shown that a right of the complainant is affected thereby. In the often cited opinion in Conrad v. State, 2 Terry 107, 41 Del. 107, 16 A.2d 121, 126 (1940), Judge Rodney defined the rule as follows:

“Now few principles could be clearer or the authorities more uniform than those which state that a court will not listen to an objection made to the constitutionality of an act by a party whose rights it does not affect, and who has therefore no interest in defeating it.”

■ [3] The Defendants here were dealth with by the Plaintiff as the owners and possessors of the land in question.

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599 A.2d 759 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1990)
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272 A.2d 702 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1970)

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Bluebook (online)
200 A.2d 241, 57 Del. 352, 7 Storey 352, 1964 Del. Super. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-1650-1004629-334-184-597741-394-749319-acres-of-land-delsuperct-1964.