Thornton v. Cox

16 Conn. Super. Ct. 150, 16 Conn. Supp. 150, 1949 Conn. Super. LEXIS 31
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedApril 19, 1949
DocketFile 76733
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 Conn. Super. Ct. 150 (Thornton v. Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thornton v. Cox, 16 Conn. Super. Ct. 150, 16 Conn. Supp. 150, 1949 Conn. Super. LEXIS 31 (Colo. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

MELLITZ, J.

The property here involved and taken for the layout and construction of the Wilbur Cross Parkway is a part of land owned by the plaintiffs upon which they have conducted *151 an extensive sand and gravel business for a number of years. Another parcel of land owned by the plaintiffs allegedly has •been completely isolated as a result of the taking. The referee has found that before the taking the plaintiffs owned in both parcels 24.69 acres of land which contained good sand and gravel deposits and that as a result of the taking there was left to the plaintiffs 7.86 acres. The highway commissioner assessed the damages for the taking as $13,800. The referee concluded that the plaintiffs sustained damages aggregating $336,679.95; and in an alternative finding he computed the damages as $519,411.15.

The principal attack upon the report of the referee is centered upon the method employed by him to ascertain the amount of the damages.

The finding recites that in one acre of land having a depth •of sixty-five feet there are 104,866.32 cubic yards of materials; that the minimum value of the sand and gravel deposit as it lay in the bank unmoved and untouched was 25 cents a cubic yard; that each sand and gravel acre was therefore of the value of $26,216.58; and that the fair market value of the sand and gravel in the land taken and in the parcel isolated was $427,592.42. The referee then found that in view of the history of the operations of the plaintiffs in conducting their business it would have taken twenty-one years to extract the deposits of sand and gravel owned by the plaintiffs; and, in order to find the value of the sand and gravel at the time of the taking, he applied a discount rate of 4 per cent, compounded annually, and found the present worth of the sand and gravel in the land taken and in the parcel isolated to be $244,861.85. The referee further found that the loam on the isolated parcel had a value of $1 a cubic yard as it lay on the ground, and he fixed the fair market value of the loam on this parcel as $10,970.64. To these sums he added $80,847.46 for consequential damages to the plant and equipment, making the total damage found $336,679.95. The alternative finding of the damage as $519,411.15 was without application of the discount rate.

It is evident that in pursuing this method to ascertain the damages the referee was acting under a misconception as to the proper application of the rule involved in determining the damages where land taken by eminent domain contains valuable mineral or other deposits.

*152 Where land taken contains minerals or other valuable de^ posits, the measure of compensation is the market value of the land with the minerals or other deposits in it, and not the value of the deposits considered separately as merchandise. Hollister v. Cox, 131 Conn. 523, 526. The fact that the land contains valuable deposits is to be considered as an element in determine ing its market value, just as consideration is to be given to every other relevant factor which may have a bearing on the market value; but it is the market value of the land that remains the test.

Accordingly, the referee properly could consider, together with all the other relevant evidence bearing on the question of value, the evidence before him shedding light on the extent to which the value of the land was enhanced by the presence in land of the deposits of sand and gravel. This does not mean that it was permissible for him to compute the value of the sand and gravel estimated to be contained in the land and treat the amount so computed as the amount of the damage sustained by the taking. Of this method of ascertaining the damage, Orgel on Valuation under Eminent Domain (p. 544) says: “But more often the owner contends that the proper way to arrive at the market value of the property is to estimate the amount of stone in situ and to multiply this amount by a fixed price per unit. This method is uniformly rejected.”

The harm in this method of ascertaining the damage is found by the authorities to lie in the fact that it is based on assumptions as to annual productivity over a long period of years, fixed future sale prices of the product, and numerous contingencies, uncertainties and speculative elements. Hollister v. Cox, supra; Sparkill Realty Corporation v. State, 268 N. Y. 192; Searle v. Lackawanna & B. R. Co. 33 Pa. 57.

It was not permissible for the referee to treat the sand and gravel extractable from the plaintiffs’ land as so much sand and gravel and base his determination of the fair market value of the land upon a computation of the value of the sand and gravel extractable from it. The fact that the land contains a valuable deposit of sand and gravel which may enhance its value is an element to be taken into consideration in fixing its fair market value, and for this reason testimony as to the quantity and value of the sand and gravel estimated to be contained in the land may be received in evidence. As was said in Seattle & M. R. Co. v. Roeder, 30 Wash. 244, 263, “This land has a special value as *153 stone-producing land. The owners, therefore, are entitled to compensation according to its value as such .... While the profits or price or value of the minerals, if the minerals themselves are taken out, may not be considered, yet the value and extent and quality of the stone ... as it exists upon the land may be considered. Lewis, Eminent Domain, § 486. If the extent and quality and value of the stone as it lies on the land may not be considered, there would be no way by which the value of the land with the stone could be shown. All legitimate evidence tending to establish the value of the land with the mineral in it is permissible.”

It is clear from the findings of the referee in paragraph 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 89, 107, 115, 117, 118, 134, 135, 137, 138, 139, 141, 142, and 143, that his conclusions as to the damages sustained by the plaintiffs for the taking of their land, exclusive of consequential damage to installations, were based soley upon his computations of the value of the extractable sand and gravel as so much sand and gravel, to the exclusion of all other evidence before him as to the fair market value of the land as land containing deposits of sand and gravel.

The danger from the speculativeness and misuse of evidence as to the estimated quantity and value of deposits extractable from the land has led some authorities to exclude testimony as to such estimates. Orgel, Op. Cit., p. 544; Searle v. Lackawanna & B. R. Co., supra. In Los Angeles v. Deacon, 119 Cal. App. 491, it was held that after a witness has given an opinion as to the market value of the land he may be asked questions on cross-examination relative to the quantity and value of the deposits in it to test the value of his opinion as to market value and not as a basis for computing market value. However, as pointed out in Campbell v. New Haven, 101 Conn.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Conn. Super. Ct. 150, 16 Conn. Supp. 150, 1949 Conn. Super. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thornton-v-cox-connsuperct-1949.