GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge:
The Government here pursues an appeal from a judgment based upon a jury determination of value in this action to condemn a sixty-two acre tract along the perimeter of the Sam Rayburn Dam and Reservoir in Jasper County, Texas. At issue is whether the trial judge properly found the landowner entitled to compensation for the value which had accrued by the time of the taking to this perimeter acreage because of its proximity to the project. Two possible bases support the inclusion of this element. First, the Government owes such compensation if, on its prior acquisition of a piece of this tract from which it now seeks a second bite, it deducted from the value of the land first taken the value by which the remainder was enhanced. Alternatively, the Government must pay this enhancement value if the sixty-two acres in question are outside the scope of the original project.
The passage of time alone has not solved either of our problems. More than three decades after the Rayburn project was authorized, we return to the trial court these dual tribulations. We find it necessary to remand the first question to allow the Government the opportunity to prove that such a deduction never occurred. We also decline at this time to decide the close question concerning the scope of the project, a question neither fully briefed before us nor resolved factually or legally by the trial judge. A decision in favor of the landowner on either question will support the judgment below; the Government must prevail on both the remanded questions to invalidate the jury’s determination of value.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
The trial court wrote no opinion in connection with this jury trial, but the record discloses a chronology which we will briefly narrate. This case is most difficult because we adjudicate in several time frames and under different environmental circumstances. We must take a retrospective picture of an undulating area whose value swells and subsides in counterpoise to a project of uncertain scope. Our transit requires convex and concave lenses. We must look forward and backward from different vantage points. Even if we are given the historical markers and monuments, we must explore for the answer along an analytical contour that provides no straight line to decision.
Congress authorized the Rayburn project in 1945.
In 1953, the Department of the Interior and the Army Corps of Engineers adopted a joint policy governing land acquisitions for reservoirs.
See
19 Fed.Reg. 381 (January 21, 1954). Pursuant to this “Eisenhower policy”, the government would acquire land for dam projects in fee simple up to the five year flood line — the level the water will reach on an average of once every five years.
From 1958 to 1961, the Corps of Engineers moved to implement this policy in acquiring the land necessary for the Rayburn project. In May, 1958, the Chief of Engineers approved a calculation that the five year flood line lay on the contour 171 feet above mean sea level. The 1959 and 1961 design memoranda approved by the Chief set out more precisely the land to be taken; the Government publicly disclosed its intent to acquire fees up to the 171 foot line and flowage easements up to 179 feet at a hearing in Jasper County on December 13, 1960. During this period, the government staked out by tangent surveying the lines of acquisition as drawn in the design memoranda.
Defendant landowner’s predecessor in title owned a tract of over 1,800 acres which reached into the project area. In 1961, agents of the Secretary of the Army negotiated a purchase in fee of so much of this property as was included in what was then drawn and staked as the 171 foot contour. At the same time appellant purchased a flowage easement on this tract up to the 179 foot line.
In 1965 it became obvious to the Government that it had committed errors in demarking the 1971 foot line. One developer’s independent survey of his own contour line revealed inaccuracies; moreover, impoundment of the reservoir having commenced, the water rose in 1965 to a level that made clear the need for adjusting the Corps’ original line.
Available funds supported only a partial resurvey in 1966. Where practicable, the Government traded tracts it had mistakenly placed below the 171 foot line for equivalent properties erroneously marked above it. This barter would not accomplish all necessary adjustments; Congress in 1969 at last authorized funds for detailed resurveying and consequent acquisitions. By June 1969, the Corps had restaked the perimeter area to reflect what is hopefully a sufficient accurate approximation of the needed 171 foot contour. This case involves the condemnation of lands covered by this adjustment.
In January 1971, defendant American Lakes and Land Company, Inc., purchased that portion of the original 1,800 acre tract that had not been acquired by the Government in 1961. In July 1971, the Government filed this complaint, along with a declaration of taking, seeking to condemn approximately sixty-two acres of land within the 171 foot line as resurveyed in 1969.
The Government sought by pretrial motion to exclude evidence of any enhancement of the value of the property which was due to the project for which it was being condemned. At a hearing on this motion March 22, 1974, both parties offered evidence and arguments pertaining to the question of whether the sixty-two acres were probably within the scope of the Rayburn project from-the time the Government
became committed to it. If so, the land is subject to condemnation without reference to any enhancement from the project under the well-established rule of
United States v. Miller,
1943, 317 U.S. 369, 63 S.Ct. 276, 87 L.Ed. 336.
See United States v. Reynolds,
1970, 397 U.S. 14, 90 S.Ct. 803, 25 L.Ed.2d 12. In denying the Government’s motion at the conclusion of this hearing, the judge did not explicitly find that the land in question was not within the scope of the project; rather he followed an estoppel theory that the landowner now concedes the record cannot support and held that the defendant was entitled to compensation for any such enhancement.
The parties then proceeded to trial on the merits.
The jury valued the property prior to the taking at $4,013,000 and after the taking at $3,892,000, resulting in a difference of $121,000, in accordance with which judgment was entered. The Government appealed.
At issue in this appeal is whether the “just compensation” which the Fifth Amendment requires the federal Government to pay for condemned property includes the value which had accrued to this sixty-two acres by 1971 because of its proximity to the Rayburn project.
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GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge:
The Government here pursues an appeal from a judgment based upon a jury determination of value in this action to condemn a sixty-two acre tract along the perimeter of the Sam Rayburn Dam and Reservoir in Jasper County, Texas. At issue is whether the trial judge properly found the landowner entitled to compensation for the value which had accrued by the time of the taking to this perimeter acreage because of its proximity to the project. Two possible bases support the inclusion of this element. First, the Government owes such compensation if, on its prior acquisition of a piece of this tract from which it now seeks a second bite, it deducted from the value of the land first taken the value by which the remainder was enhanced. Alternatively, the Government must pay this enhancement value if the sixty-two acres in question are outside the scope of the original project.
The passage of time alone has not solved either of our problems. More than three decades after the Rayburn project was authorized, we return to the trial court these dual tribulations. We find it necessary to remand the first question to allow the Government the opportunity to prove that such a deduction never occurred. We also decline at this time to decide the close question concerning the scope of the project, a question neither fully briefed before us nor resolved factually or legally by the trial judge. A decision in favor of the landowner on either question will support the judgment below; the Government must prevail on both the remanded questions to invalidate the jury’s determination of value.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
The trial court wrote no opinion in connection with this jury trial, but the record discloses a chronology which we will briefly narrate. This case is most difficult because we adjudicate in several time frames and under different environmental circumstances. We must take a retrospective picture of an undulating area whose value swells and subsides in counterpoise to a project of uncertain scope. Our transit requires convex and concave lenses. We must look forward and backward from different vantage points. Even if we are given the historical markers and monuments, we must explore for the answer along an analytical contour that provides no straight line to decision.
Congress authorized the Rayburn project in 1945.
In 1953, the Department of the Interior and the Army Corps of Engineers adopted a joint policy governing land acquisitions for reservoirs.
See
19 Fed.Reg. 381 (January 21, 1954). Pursuant to this “Eisenhower policy”, the government would acquire land for dam projects in fee simple up to the five year flood line — the level the water will reach on an average of once every five years.
From 1958 to 1961, the Corps of Engineers moved to implement this policy in acquiring the land necessary for the Rayburn project. In May, 1958, the Chief of Engineers approved a calculation that the five year flood line lay on the contour 171 feet above mean sea level. The 1959 and 1961 design memoranda approved by the Chief set out more precisely the land to be taken; the Government publicly disclosed its intent to acquire fees up to the 171 foot line and flowage easements up to 179 feet at a hearing in Jasper County on December 13, 1960. During this period, the government staked out by tangent surveying the lines of acquisition as drawn in the design memoranda.
Defendant landowner’s predecessor in title owned a tract of over 1,800 acres which reached into the project area. In 1961, agents of the Secretary of the Army negotiated a purchase in fee of so much of this property as was included in what was then drawn and staked as the 171 foot contour. At the same time appellant purchased a flowage easement on this tract up to the 179 foot line.
In 1965 it became obvious to the Government that it had committed errors in demarking the 1971 foot line. One developer’s independent survey of his own contour line revealed inaccuracies; moreover, impoundment of the reservoir having commenced, the water rose in 1965 to a level that made clear the need for adjusting the Corps’ original line.
Available funds supported only a partial resurvey in 1966. Where practicable, the Government traded tracts it had mistakenly placed below the 171 foot line for equivalent properties erroneously marked above it. This barter would not accomplish all necessary adjustments; Congress in 1969 at last authorized funds for detailed resurveying and consequent acquisitions. By June 1969, the Corps had restaked the perimeter area to reflect what is hopefully a sufficient accurate approximation of the needed 171 foot contour. This case involves the condemnation of lands covered by this adjustment.
In January 1971, defendant American Lakes and Land Company, Inc., purchased that portion of the original 1,800 acre tract that had not been acquired by the Government in 1961. In July 1971, the Government filed this complaint, along with a declaration of taking, seeking to condemn approximately sixty-two acres of land within the 171 foot line as resurveyed in 1969.
The Government sought by pretrial motion to exclude evidence of any enhancement of the value of the property which was due to the project for which it was being condemned. At a hearing on this motion March 22, 1974, both parties offered evidence and arguments pertaining to the question of whether the sixty-two acres were probably within the scope of the Rayburn project from-the time the Government
became committed to it. If so, the land is subject to condemnation without reference to any enhancement from the project under the well-established rule of
United States v. Miller,
1943, 317 U.S. 369, 63 S.Ct. 276, 87 L.Ed. 336.
See United States v. Reynolds,
1970, 397 U.S. 14, 90 S.Ct. 803, 25 L.Ed.2d 12. In denying the Government’s motion at the conclusion of this hearing, the judge did not explicitly find that the land in question was not within the scope of the project; rather he followed an estoppel theory that the landowner now concedes the record cannot support and held that the defendant was entitled to compensation for any such enhancement.
The parties then proceeded to trial on the merits.
The jury valued the property prior to the taking at $4,013,000 and after the taking at $3,892,000, resulting in a difference of $121,000, in accordance with which judgment was entered. The Government appealed.
At issue in this appeal is whether the “just compensation” which the Fifth Amendment requires the federal Government to pay for condemned property includes the value which had accrued to this sixty-two acres by 1971 because of its proximity to the Rayburn project. The judge below ruled that the landowner should be compensated for this increment of value, which we will refer to as “enhancement”;
we now proceed to consider two possible bases for affirming this ruling. First is the theory the landowner urges on appeal, which rests on the fact that the 1971 taking was the Government’s second bite out of the tract of land American Lakes now possesses. Second is the argument the landowner made and the Government challenged at the pre-trial hearing, but on which the trial court never ruled — that the sixty-two acres were outside the original scope of the Rayburn project. Regrettably we find that both questions require further development below.
II. The Second Taking from a Single Tract
The landowner’s “second taking” argument rests upon a single assumption— that the Government, in its 1961 purchase of part of the same tract from which it now seeks an additional sixty-two acres, offset against the value of the property then acquired the enhancement to the remainder which resulted from its proximity to the Rayburn reservoir project. Given that the Government paid less than the market value of the property acquired in 1961 by deducting this enhancement to the remainder, appellee protests that exclusion of enhancement in this subsequent taking will result in less than full compensation for the sum of the acquisitions.
Assuming for the moment that such an offset did occur in 1961, American Lakes’ conclusion is correct. A brief hypothetical will illustrate the point. Consider a ten acre tract worth $100 per acre in 1961 without reference to any proposed public
project. Condemnation of the whole would cost the Government $1,000.
Suppose the Government takes five acres for a project which enhances the remainder of the tract $50 per acre, paying the $500 value of the acreage taken less $250 enhancement to the remainder, or $250. In 1971 it then condemns the remaining five acres. Excluding any changes in value over time for purposes of the hypothetical, if the Government pays the market value as enhanced, or $750, total compensation to the land owner will be the $1,000 that condemnation of all ten acres at once would have cost. If, however, the Government can pay without reference to enhancement, the remainder would only cost it only $500, for a total outlay of $750 for the ten acres. Clearly, if the landowner is to receive the “full monetary equivalent of the property taken” as required by the Fifth Amendment,
United States v. Reynolds, supra,
397 U.S. at 16, 90 S.Ct. at 805, 25 L.Ed.2d at 15, any enhancement which has once been offset in a partial taking must be compensated for upon a subsequent taking from the remainder.
The problem with the landowner’s theory as applied to the instant case is thus not its conclusion, but its initial assumption. Once the district judge rested his pre-trial decision to admit evidence of enhancement on an entirely different theory,
neither party had reason to offer any evidence at the pre-trial hearing or at the trial as to whether or not any enhancement was actually offset in the 1961 acquisition from defendant’s predecessor in title.
The landowner would fill this evidentiary gap with a
presumption
that the Government offset enhancement to the remainder in the original partial taking. He would ground this presumption on the statutory authorization for the Secretary of the Army to negotiate purchases of property sought by the Government for public works projects at prices which reflect a “just and reasonable consideration.”
See
33 U.S.C. § 596.
This phrase, according to the landowner, incorporates the requirement of 33 U.S.C. § 595 that, in partial takings by condemnation proceedings, compensation is to be reduced in the amount of the project’s enhancement of the remainder.
It is true that this court has recently stated that 33 U.S.C. § 595 gave the force of statute to a long standing principle that enhancement of the remainder must be offset in partial condemnations.
See United States v. Trout,
5 Cir. 1967, 386 F.2d 216. The Court spoke generally:
[T]he correct measure of value in a case involving condemnation of part of a tract is the fair market value of the entire tract immediately before the taking less the fair market value of the remainder immediately afterwards.
Id.
at 219.
This measure of valuation in partial takings by judicial proceedings, to which the Government can always resort, when combined with the Government’s natural desire and duty to deplete the public purse no further than necessary in carrying out its projects does give rise to a presumption that the Secretary fully offsets enhancement to the remainder in negotiating the purchase of part of a tract under 33 U.S.C. § 596. In the context of a negotiated purchase, however, one cannot be certain that the offset took place, and the presumption should not be irrebuttable. Defendant, standing in the shoes of his predecessor, cannot complain of the Government’s refusal to pay compensation for enhancement •that it never deducted. Just as we cannot permit a single payment for a double taking, we cannot countenance a double payment for a single taking. The Government should therefore have an opportunity to rebut the presumption of full offset.
Indeed, the landowner conceded at oral argument that the presumption he would have us invoke is not irrebuttable. He complained, instead, that the Government had made no effort below to rebut the presumption. The judge below, however, decided to allow evidence of enhancement upon a theory entirely different from the analysis-
urged here by the landowner.
That theory in no way involved, much less rested on, the validity of a presumption that the Government had fully offset enhancement at the prior acquisition, so the Government had no reason to attempt to rebut such a presumption. We can affirm the judgment below on the basis of the prior offset theory only if enhancement was deducted in the 1961 purchase. The presumption urged by the landowner initiates the fact finder on the road to truth. It does not provide him a terminus. The Government must be permitted to re-run the 1961 acquisition in order to expose whether or not enhancement was a quid pro quo in the transaction.
In sum, we agree with defendant American Lakes that any enhancement assessed against the remainder in the 1961 purchase must be compensated
pro tanto
upon the taking of the sixty-two remainder acres now before us. Moreover, we presume with defendant that the Government, free to institute condemnation proceedings in which the offset requirement of section 595 would be enforced and anxious to limit its expenditures to the minimum, insisted upon the deduction of full enhancement value upon its partial acquisition in 1961. The Government thus must bear the burden on remand of demonstrating that anything less than what was then the present value of the enhancement which would accrue to the remainder was actually offset in 1961. If it fails, the measure of compensation followed below, reflecting such enhancement up to the date of taking, was correct; nonetheless, appellant is entitled to an opportunity to meet the burden we have recognized.
III. The Scope of the Project
Whether or not the Government should prove able to rebut the presumption that it fully offset enhancement in 1961, there may be an independent basis for affirming the judgment below. This question remains: were the sixty-two acres being taken here within the scope of the Rayburn project at the time the Government originally became committed to it? If this taking is but another reel in the motion picture released in the early 60’s, the Government may pay without reference to enhancement; however, if it is a new Corps production, enhancement is owing, and the judgment below was proper.
See United States
v. Reynolds, supra; United States v. Miller, supra; Louisiana, Through the Sabine River Authority v. Lindsey,
5 Cir. 1975, 524 F.2d 934;
United States v. 2,353.28 Acres of Land,
5 Cir. 1969, 414 F.2d 965.
Pellucidity does not normally attend application of the scope of the project concept; the history of the project before us and the peculiar postures of the parties to this litigation present particularly mind-boggling problems. Both parties focused on this question at the pre-trial hearing on the Government’s motion to exclude evidence of enhancement, but the judge in denying the motion did not make an explicit finding that the acreage was outside the scope of the Rayburn project.
The Government’s initial brief to this court addressed only this “scope” issue; the landowner, however, has responded throughout this appeal solely with the prior offset theory discussed in part II,
supra.
Nevertheless, we do not find that appellee has completely abandoned the issue. Because the court below reached no explicit conclusion on the scope of the project which is an issue for the trial judge rather than the jury,
see United States v. Reynolds, supra,
397 U.S. at 20, 90 S.Ct. at 807;
Wardy v. United States,
5 Cir. 1968, 402 F.2d 762, and because ambiguities in the testimony at the pre-trial hearing lie unresolved, we remand this issue also to the district court. We hope to facilitate the proceedings on remand, however, by explicating our understanding of the legal standards triggered by this question.
The Supreme Court’s statement of the “scope of the project” test in
United States v. Miller, supra,
317 U.S. at 377, 63 S.Ct. at 281, 87 L.Ed. at 344, retains vitality today:
The question then is whether the respondent’s lands were probably within the scope of the project from the time the Government was committed to it. If they were not, but were merely adjacent lands, the subsequent enlargement of the project to include them ought not to deprive the respondents of the value added in the meantime by the proximity of the improvement. If, on the other hand, they were, the Government ought not to pay any increase in value arising from the known fact that the lands probably would be condemned. The owners ought not to gain by speculating on probable increase in value due to the Government’s activities.
Applying the
Miller
test to decide whether a particular acquisition was within reasonable prescience or departed to a totally new vista calls for discriminating judgment.
See United States v. Reynolds, supra,
397 U.S. at 21, 90 S.Ct. at 807, 25 L.Ed.2d at 18. This court recently explained in light of
Reynolds
that project scope is not to be narrowly interpreted.
See Louisiana, Through the Sabine River Authority v. Lindsey,
5 Cir. 1975, 524 F.2d 934.
While noting, however, the Supreme Court announcement that the land ultimately taken need not have been actually specified in the original project plans to come within its scope, this court did maintain that “[i]t must also be evident to the public that a given tract might be taken for the project.” 524 F.2d at 942. The test must have latitudinal and longitudinal tolerances. We cannot straitjacket the government in defining scope of the project, but on the other hand, we cannot permit global meanderings to enclave areas not reasonably to have been conceived as included at its inception.
Examples of the application of “discriminating judgment” in the case reports yield no ready conclusion in the instant appeal, at least in its present state. Most instructive perhaps is
United States v. Crance,
8 Cir. 1965, 341 F.2d 161.
There the Government purchased seven acres of defendant’s
land in 1958 for inundation by a reservoir project. Though project plans contemplated recreational areas from the outset, both a 1956 preliminary design memorandum and a 1960 proposal of sites approved by the Chief of Engineers did not include any of the remainder of defendant’s tract. After a 1960 public hearing announcing the proposal, however, the Government in response to suggestions from area citizens decided to acquire thirty-five acres of defendant’s property for recreational purposes. The court found on these facts that the additional acreage was within the scope of the project and subject to condemnation without regard to enhancement, pursuant to this very broad principle;
The significant factor here is that this project contemplated recreational areas from its very inception and certainly the property lying beyond the perimeter of the reservoir would probably be incorporated for recreational purposes if the land acquired for the reservoir alone was not also sufficient for recreational utilization. Since the Crance property abutted the reservoir line, it was within the sphere of probable acquisition for recreational use.
341 F.2d at 165.
Crance
implied that until reservoir lines are finalized, a process it recognizes as laden with uncertainties and problems of its own, all property adjoining the proposed reservoir line is subject to being taken for recreational purposes without reference to enhancement.
The court reached this conclusion although Government policy on recreational areas called only for the use of tracts 20-40 acres in size located every five miles around the lake. While the certainty of acquisition of recreational property in connection with the reservoir is somewhat greater than the acquisition of perimeter acreage to adjust for errors in surveying the reservoir line,
the degree of uncertainty as to the acquisition of any particular tract resulting from the
Crance
standard suggests that finding these sixty-two acres spread along the edge of the Rayburn project to be within its scope would burdeii landholders with no significant increase in insecurity.
Cases finding property outside the scope of Government projects have involved clearer public statements that final lines have been drawn or less foreseeable types of changes than are present in the instant case. In
United States v. 2353.28 Acres of Land,
5 Cir. 1969, 414 F.2d 965, an official of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration had previously testified that the land condemned for Cape Canaveral would not extend, for safety and security reasons, beyond a waterway to the north.
He stated that the project would not interfere with this waterway. Confidential reports contained the only evidence of extension beyond the waterway. In that context, we held the taking of defendant’s property five miles north of the waterway to be beyond the scope of the project.
This court was aided in that case by
United States v. 172.80 Acres of Land,
3 Cir. 1965, 350 F.2d 957. There the Government had drawn a reservoir line, and it subsequently took land from the defendant above that line. The cause of the change was not as predictable as a mistake in surveying, however, Rather, the new Kennedy Administration had liberalized Government policy concerning the extent of public development and use of reservoir areas. Finding that the landowner could not reasonably anticipate condemnation of the property above the line, the court found him entitled to the enhancement of value due to the reservoir.
Application of the scope of the project test to the case at bar requires the assessment of three factors: the foreseeability of any change in the reservoir line and of this particular tract’s falling within the ambit of such a change; the length of time between the original acquisition and this taking; and the Government representations concerning the finality of the original 171 foot line. First, that some adjustment for error of a reservoir line as originally drawn and staked may be necessary seems a reasonable probability, certainly as contrasted to a change in policy imposed by a new administration. Once some adjustment is viewed as reasonably foreseeable, the taking of this particular acreage was certainly a greater probability than the acquisition of the tracts involved in
Crance
or
First Pyramid, supra.
The sixty-two acres here all lie on the strip between the 171 foot line as originally staked and the 179 foot flowage easement line.
At first blush, the most disturbing factor in suggesting that this taking was within the original scope of the project is the length of time that passed before the Government acted. The reservoir, however, lay dry in 1961. When impoundment began is not clear from the record, but in 1965 the water level evidenced the mistake. Publicly announced Government policy mandates the taking of property for reservoirs up to the five year flood line.
See
19 Fed.Reg. 381 (January 21, 1954). That the need for adjustments may not reveal itself for five years is therefore likely. This policy is but a reminder that these projects are not of the stop watch variety and that gradualism in acquisition is oft times fact and not fiction.
The delay from 1965 to 1971 could itself take the acreage outside the scope of the project only if it constituted a representation to the landowner that the original 171 foot line on his property did not need adjustment. The resurveying which was commenced in 1966 and the contemporaneous practice of bartering equivalent tracts above and below the mistaken line would seem to preclude such a finding. However, the trial court on remand is free to consider whether, although the adjustment of the reservoir line would otherwise be within the original scope of the project, Government action or inaction after the need for such adjustment became clear made it no longer evident to the public that the taking here might be forthcoming. The scope of the project is not thonged to time. Many years and many men have traversed the Rayburn Reservoir since the project began, however,
and time can be a factor in removing the mote of potential acquisition from the eyes of area landowners.
With respect to Government disclosures at the commencement of the project, the record below is ambiguous. Although on any reading the indications that the original 171 foot line would be final were more equivocal than the NASA statements concerning the acquisition of Canaveral, testimony at the pre-trial hearing left unclear whether landowners in 1961 had any indication that the line as drawn was subject to adjustment. Sufficiently definite representations by the Government that the line originally drawn was final could lead to a finding that the acreage here was outside the project’s scope regardless of the general probability of mistakes in surveying. Alternatively, statements making it clear to the public that the line might need adjustment could bring the land within the project’s scope without need for us to resort to the probability standard announced in
Cranee.
In sum, given the likelihood of some mistakes in surveying and the probability that this perimeter acreage would be subject to adjustment for any such mistake, we would be inclined to find these sixty-two acres within the scope of the project, as we interpret the admittedly-ineonclusive prior applications of that test. We recognize that such a holding would burden a landowner adjacent to a reservoir project with some uncertainty, interfering with the accurate valuation of his property until the reservoir lines are finalized.
The alternative, however, would not be certain protection for the landowner. A narrow reading of the “scope” test might well result in public works legislation authorizing the selection of particular tracts from a broadly drawn area which would protect against such eventualities as the adjustment involved here. Tracts selected from which this area up to the completion of the project would fall within its scope.
See Miller
v.
United States, supra; Shoemaker v. United States,
1893, 147 U.S. 282, 13 S.Ct. 361, 37 L.Ed. 170. The uncertainty to the landowner and the artificial devaluation of his property would be at least as great under such a Government approach to condemnation as under our interpretation of the scope test. Government parsimony in this area is not to be penalized.
The posture of this appeal, however, renders such a holding unnecessary. Ambiguities persist as to the Government’s representations to area landowners in 1961 and to the impact of Government activity between 1965 and 1971 on the public understanding of the need for further acquisitions. Resolution of those ambiguities might support findings that these sixty-two acres were either inside or outside the scope of the Rayburn project, without reference to a Cranee-type assessment of the probability of this acquisition based on the general likelihood of mistakes in surveying and the proximity of this acreage to the reservoir line. Therefore we will remand to allow the district court to resolve the factual ambiguities insofar as is possible and, employing its first hand knowledge of the
facts, to apply the scope test we have outlined.
Conclusion
To summarize: Two independent bases will support the judgment below. If the landowner can prevail on either the prior offset theory or the scope of the project question, the inclusion of enhancement value in the compensation awarded was proper. For the reasons stated above, we must remand on both issues. Although the theories are independent, fairness to the litigants and the efficient use of judicial resources counsel that the trial court on remand dispose of both in such proceedings as it finds appropriate. We have endeavored to lay down some geodetic rules for those proceedings in the hope that the mark will not be missed. The judgment below is VACATED AND REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.