Town of Middlebury v. McDonald, No. Cv99-0151765s (Aug. 29, 2002)

2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 11234
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedAugust 29, 2002
DocketNo. CV99-0151765S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 11234 (Town of Middlebury v. McDonald, No. Cv99-0151765s (Aug. 29, 2002)) 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
Town of Middlebury v. McDonald, No. Cv99-0151765s (Aug. 29, 2002), 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 11234 (Colo. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
On March 15, 1999, the Middlebury Board of Selectmen voted to acquire a permanent easement over the defendant's property for the purpose of completing the Middlebury Greenway. The Greenway Program was a Federal Rails to Trails Program in which both state and federal funding was available to the Town of Middlebury for development of a pedestrian trail running through the Town along the prior trolley line easement area. The defendant rejected a voluntary easement and sought compensation for his property. On March 19, 1999, the Town filed a Statement of Compensation condemning the subject property and deposited with the clerk of the court the sum of $3,730 based upon the appraisal of its expert, Roy L. O'Neil.1

The defendant has appealed the Statement of Compensation condemnation, other than highway, claiming that the compensation awarded him by the Town is inadequate.

The subject property consists of approximately four acres with a frontage of about 425 feet along Middlebury Road. The property is undeveloped, is predominately wooded and has substantial amounts of ledge and rock outcropping. The lot has a severe sloping grade upwards from Middlebury Road toward the back of the lot. The Greenway Easement area contains 0.3611 acres or about 15,728 square feet. Middlebury Road is a heavily traveled state road also known as Route 64. Directly across from the subject parcel is a public school. The subject property is in an R-40 residential zone, requiring a minimum lot area of 40,000 square feet. There are other homes in the immediate area of modest size. Public utilities are available along the frontage of the site.

The subject property has been in defendant's family since about 1900. Prior to the Town's taking an easement over any property at all, it hired a project manager to complete preliminary design work. In early 1997, after that work was completed, the Town held a public meeting to discuss the Greenway Program and the easements that would be necessary to CT Page 11235 complete the trail. The defendant and/or his brother did attend that meeting but made no comment nor did either request any modification in the Greenway design as it affected their property. In the course of the public meeting, the property owners in attendance were advised that the easements would not prohibit them from using their property and that the Town would work with them to facilitate driveway crossings and locating and grading of the Greenway. After that meeting some property owners contacted the project manager and requested modifications at the location where the Greenway encroached on their property and changes were made to accommodate their concerns. The defendant never contacted the Project Manager. Neither, to that point, did the defendant ever contact Town officials to indicate any plans with respect to developing his four-acre parcel.

In February, 1997, defendant's brother, John, met with Edward St. John, the First Selectman, to discuss other properties owned by the McDonald family in Middlebury. The subject lot was not discussed. Mr. St. John never stated nor did he indicate that the Greenway Project would prevent development of the property on Middlebury Road. It was not until the defendant appealed the condemnation that the defendant indicated any plan to develop the property in question. After the defendant rejected a voluntary easement, the defendant met with Mr. Montville, Administrative Assistant to the First Selectman, and requested that either the Town purchase outright the parcel on Middlebury Road or provide benefits on other properties owned by the McDonalds in Middlebury.

On April 20, 1999, the Court executed the Certificate of Taking, returned it to the Town's attorney whereupon it was recorded in Volume 160, Page 938 of the Middlebury Lane Records.

The defendant did produce evidence through James Meyers of Meyers Associates, P.C., an engineer land surveyor and planner, that in January, 1997, Meyers and he along with his brother, walked the subject property to see if it had any development potential. A survey map was completed by the Meyers firm three years later, February 21, 2000, after commencement of the condemnation proceedings.

The defendant claims that the Certificate of Taking vested title to the Town in Fee Simple and does not provide that the defendant can pass and repass over the Greenway or lower its elevation, effectively rendering his property worthless and entitling him to a far greater sum of money than was deposited with the Clerk of Court. The defendant claims that the taking for the Greenway has left him with no access to Route 64. The Greenway is presently in use and a split rail fence has been erected along its entire northerly boundary on the defendant's property to CT Page 11236 prevent pedestrians from falling to the road.

In the trial, the defendant argued that the Town of Middlebury took full title to the property, not merely an easement. When the defendant took his appeal, however, he annexed Schedule "A"2 describing the land taken as an easement.

Section 48-6 of our statutes allows a Town to take land when it has "voted to purchase the same . . . within the corporate limits . . . and if such municipal corporation cannot agree with any owner upon the amount to be paid for any real property thus taken, it shall proceed in the manner provided by Section 48-12 . . ." The plaintiff Town sought an easement for the Greenway. All pleadings in the case concern an easement only. The legal description of the property in question as recorded, describes an easement. All experts who testified as to value and the amount of compensation which defendant should receive based their opinions on an easement only. The Middlebury Board of Selectman voted to acquire a permanent easement. This court concludes that the defendant's contention that the plaintiff acquired full and absolute title in fee simple to his property on Middlebury Road is untenable. The taking for the Greenway is a non-highway taking. Section 13a-73 of the statutes has no applicability to the case at bar. In addition, our Supreme Court dealt with a similar ambiguity between "fee interest" and "right of way" or a "fee interest in a right of way". Double I Limited Partnership v. Plan Zoning Commission, 218 Conn. 65 (1991).

"The defendants argue that the commission could reasonably have interpreted the term `right-of-way' to mean an easement, as did the trial court, and that the reference to a fee interest' was meant to assure that the easement was not held for a limited term. . . . we agree with the trial court that the commission could reasonably have concluded that the defendant . . . [did have] a `fee interest in a right of way.'" Id at 75-76.

The only real issue in this case is the value of the permanent easement over the defendant's property. The plaintiff admitted at trial that based upon the testimony of its own appraiser the appraised value should have been adjusted for time and the defendant should have received $4,200 rather than $3,730 which was deposited with the court and reflected the original valuation.

"Where part of a parcel of land or an easement in it is taken by eminent domain, the general rule is that the damages are the difference between the market value of the whole tract as it was before the taking CT Page 11237 and its market value after the taking." Northeastern Gas TransmissionCo. v.

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Bluebook (online)
2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 11234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-middlebury-v-mcdonald-no-cv99-0151765s-aug-29-2002-connsuperct-2002.