United States v. 10.0 Acres, Etc., and 33.4 Acres, Etc., Gesford P. Wright and Marie R. Wright

533 F.2d 1092
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 7, 1976
Docket74-1286
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 533 F.2d 1092 (United States v. 10.0 Acres, Etc., and 33.4 Acres, Etc., Gesford P. Wright and Marie R. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. 10.0 Acres, Etc., and 33.4 Acres, Etc., Gesford P. Wright and Marie R. Wright, 533 F.2d 1092 (9th Cir. 1976).

Opinions

GOODWIN, Circuit Judge:

This is an appeal from a directed verdict denying compensation for appellants’ interest in a private road condemned and opened [1093]*1093to the public by the United States Forest Service.

Gesford P. Wright and Marie R. Wright contend that the district court erroneously denied them the opportunity to present evidence of compensable loss.

The road in which the Wrights owned an interest was taken by the United States to provide public access to the Mendocino National Forest. Before the condemnation, the road served two tracts of land owned by appellants and an adjoining tract owned by a timber company (Fibreboard Paper Products Corporation). The road crossed five parcels of private property, a section owned by the United States (one mile), and then crossed Fibreboard land for another four miles.

Fibreboard, the Wrights, and one Whitely purchased exclusive easements (for themselves and their permittees) across the five privately owned parcels, and obtained a use permit to cross the federally owned lands. They then constructed a road which, with existing roads, created access to their properties. Locked gates were placed before the five private parcels, after the five parcels, at the access road to appellants’ property, and at the end of the Fibreboard tract.

Each of the deeds granting appellants an easement describes the easement as exclusive. None reserves in the grantors the right to convey similar easements to others. In two of the deeds, the grantors retained the right “to the use of said right of way in connection with the use of Grantor’s own lands adjoining said right of way.” This right is available “to the extent reasonably required by the normal and convenient use of [Grantor’s] lands, provided that the exercise by Grantees of their rights hereunder shall not thereby be interfered with * Under another deed, the right of access retained by the grantor is declared personal and nonassignable and is limited to the grantors, their employees, and family. Another deed reserves the right to use the right-of-way in common with the grantees “provided that the use of the right of way by Grantees is not thereby interfered with.” Finally, in yet another deed, the grantees acquire:

“ * * * [Exclusive possession of the surface of the whole right of way, provided Grantors shall be entitled, to the extent reasonably required by the normal and convenient use of their lands and provided that the exercise by Grantees of their rights hereunder shall not thereby be interfered with, to cross and to permit their livestock to cross from their lands on one side of the right of way to their lands on the other over any portion of the right of way.”

When the United States condemned all private portions of the deeded road and made the road public, all gates were removed, except the gates between appellants’ property and the now public road. The appellants’ lands do not abut the subject road at any point.

At trial, appellants asserted that their one-third interest in the road had a cash market value. They offered their evidence of value: (1) by showing the cost of replacing the road at the time of the taking; (2) by showing the capitalized value of anticipated income from tolls charged for the use of the road by loggers; (3) by opinion evidence of the market value of the road; and (4) by establishing the difference between the market value of their dominant land before and after the exclusive easement was extinguished — with and without the exclusive quality of the access and the right to maintain locked gates.

The district court properly rejected the first and third theories because there is no need to replace or relocate any road. Appellants had the use of a road before the taking; and after the taking they still have the use of a road.

With respect to the second theory, appellants concede that they had no proof of lost toll income. They had never used the road for income purposes and had no specific plan to do so.

The more difficult question is whether the court should have permitted the expert to express an opinion on the “before and [1094]*1094after” value of appellants’ noncontiguous but dominant estate, when the government took the servient estate.

In United States v. Welch, 217 U.S. 333, 30 S.Ct. 527, 54 L.Ed. 787 (1910), the owner of a tract of land claimed a compensable taking when his private right-of-way across the lands of others was flooded as a result of the government’s construction of a dam. The court held that the right-of-way was an easement, which in turn was an interest in land, and that the taking thereof entitled its owner to compensation. The court valued the loss of the easement by reference to its value to the dominant estate. In Welch, the before-and-after valuation of the dominant estate was employed to calculate the loss in the context of a complete physical destruction of the easement.

In the case at bar, as in Welch, there is a taking of the servient estate and a loss to the dominant. Unlike Welch, the road and the right to use it are still intact, but the road’s exclusivity has been destroyed. It is the market value of the loss of exclusivity which appellants sought to prove.

The United States asserts that exclusivity is a noncompensable interest, citing United States v. Pope & Talbot, Inc., 293 F.2d 822 (9th Cir. 1961). Pope & Talbot denied recovery in condemnation for the increased risk of fire to claimant’s properties threatened by the projected opening of adjoining federal lands to the public. Neither the condemnation itself nor the projected use of the lands taken from Pope & Talbot increased this hazard. The hazard, if one existed, lay in the potential carelessness of the general public.

In denying recovery, the court stated:

“We can sympathize with appellee in its resentment against public intrusion upon the solitude which it has heretofore enjoyed. It has, however, no right to insist that the United States so use its forest lands as to protect appellee against such intrusion. Nor can it complain that the use made of the lands taken from it has increased the attractiveness of the government’s forest lands. For this element of depreciation there can * * * be no recovery.” 293 F.2d at 826.

The court in Pope & Talbot does not declare that loss of privacy is never compensable; but it does indicate that the law does not ordinarily provide a remedy against the government for depreciation in land value caused by changes incident to civilization. Here, however, appellants complain that the government has taken away their interest in a tract of land (the easement), destroying the exclusivity of use for which appellants paid the underlying fee owner. The value of this power to exclude others is reflected in the before- and-after valuation of the dominant estate. See United States v. Welch, 217 U.S. 333, 339, 30 S.Ct. 527, 54 L.Ed. 787 (1910). That the value of the right to exclude others may be equivalent to damage done to the dominant estate does not alter the fact that the compensation is not for the damage to the dominant estate but rather for loss of the exclusive easement itself.

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533 F.2d 1092, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-100-acres-etc-and-334-acres-etc-gesford-p-wright-ca9-1976.