United States v. City of New York

165 F.2d 526, 1 A.L.R. 2d 870, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 1935
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 15, 1948
Docket73, Docket 20721
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 165 F.2d 526 (United States v. City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second 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. City of New York, 165 F.2d 526, 1 A.L.R. 2d 870, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 1935 (2d Cir. 1948).

Opinion

L. HAND, Circuit Judge.

The United States appeals from awards made to the City of New York and various other claimants for the condemnation of a tract of land next to the Brooklyn Navy Yard, known as the “Wallabout Market,” upon the ground that the awards were too large. The Brooklyn Eastern District Terminal appeals from the award to it on the ground that it is too small; some of the individual claimants appeal because their claims for fixtures were not allowed in an earlier judgment. The tract of land was of more than fifty-three acres in area on both sides of Washington Street, Brooklyn; the western parcel being on the waterfront, much the greater part of it under water. Those parts of both parcels which were dry had been “improved”: That is to say, streets and sidewalks had been opened and paved; bulkheads had been built on the waterfront; sewers and watermains had been laid. It was occupied for business purposes, being for the most part covered with buildings: some of them owned by the City; some by private persons. Upon the land under water six piers had been built out from the bulkheads; and one of these was used as a “freight terminal” under a contract between the City and the Brooklyn Eastern District Terminal. The United States deposited $4,000,000 in payment for *528 the whole area — later increased by $261,230 —and asked for the liquidation of all claims. The judge appointed three commissioners, whose personnel changed several times during the hearings, and who sat for more than two years taking evidence. Their report was in five sections: the first liquidated the City’s claim at $4,431,687; the second, the claims of private owners for buildings, leaseholds and fixtures at $841,031; the third, the claim of the Kings County Refrigerating Co. at $8,150; the fourth suspended an allowance on the claims of two railroads; and the fifth liquidated the claim of the Terminal at $178,746. Because of objections by the United States the judge sent back the report for corrections — chiefly to apply the “Unit Rule” so-called — and the Commissioners did make a number of corrections in a “Supplemental Report” filed on August 29, 1946. With some minor changes the judge confirmed this report and entered judgment accordingly; as will appear, it is not necessary to consider the later judgment which professed to modify the first.

The Commissioners made their award to the City — which we quote in the margin 1 —in twelve separate items; and the first objection of the United States is that in so doing they violated what it calls the “Unit Rule” which forbids the separate appraisal of land and improvements upon it. “Just compensation” is a federal question, as to which the state decisions are not authoritative; 2 and for argument we shall assume that this includes, not only ascertaining those interests which must be paid for — excluding, for example, “consequential damages” — but how their value shall be measured in dollars. Although the “Unit Rule” would seem to be in the shadow-land between substance and procedure, and as to the last we look to the state law, 3 we shall not try to assign any place to it, because we are not aware of any ascertainable difference upon the point between the state and the federal decisions. Indeed, we think that it is an undue simplification to extract from the books any “Unit Rule” whatever, in the sense of general authoritative directions. What has happened, so far as we can see, is that, as different situations have arisen, the courts have dealt with them as the specific facts demanded. One of these situations has been when a parcel or plot of land has been improved, and when — as is substantially always the case — it is impossible to separate the improvements so as to transfer them independently. In such situations the only exchangeable property is the union of “site” and improvements; and this, being indissoluble for purposes of transfer, must be valued as one. The argument runs that, because of this it is erroneous as matter of law ever to add together a supposititious “site” value and a supposititious improvement value. The argument, so put, is undoubtedly a highly important caution, when the attempt is made to appraise improved land by a process of cumulation; but we question whether it has any further office than to keep before the tribunal the only relevant objective: the exchange value of the newly emerged unit. It is true, when an area has been subdivided into plots that the very fact that these have been made separately saleable, will ordinarily make it desirable to appraise the whole by separate valuations of each plot; but even that is not, so far as we can see, an inexorable condition. Be that as it may, it certainly does not follow, because “site” and improvements have been inextricably welded, that *529 it is never possible to come at their joint value by attributing one factor to “site” and another to improvements. Value, especially when we are dealing with non-fungibles, is in application as impalpable a concept as can be, and we should be unwilling to circumscribe the approach to it to the opinions of experts. All that we can gather from the books is that the tribunal must be strictly on guard that it has to do with an indivisible object of transfer. 4

Upon this appeal we must accept without inquiry the appraisal of the Commissioners, so far as concerns the sufficiency of the evidence to support the awards. 5 That does not, however, permit us to overlook errors which the record shows that they have fallen into in their application of legal principles: and in the case at bar such errors do appear. The first item: “Land and Land Under Water,” included the whole area, although the witnesses put different overall footage values upon the dry and wet land. The Commissioners apparently used a general footage value for the dry land, because they made separate assessments for the buildings only in each “Damage Parcel.” This appears to us impermissible; each plot had its own value as much as each building; each should have been separately assessed. However, even though we were to ignore this, there was a fatal error in the way in which the overall “site” value for the dry area was computed. The Commissioners assumed a value for the “raw land” — that is, without any improvements — and then added the value contributed by the improvements. There was no conceivable method by which the value of the “raw land” could be appraised either as a whole, or in plots. The parcel as a whole was part of a thickly settled industrial community; it had not been “raw land” for decades, and any valuation of if in its original state was inevitably factitious. Indeed, the City’s own witnesses did not make that absurd attempt; they expressly said that they were valuing the area upon the assumption that it had already been improved; though it was not clear just what improvements they were assuming to exist. Thus the award was inevitably,wrongly computed. On the one hand, if we knew which of the succeeding items were presupposed to have been added in calculating the first item, there would be proj tanto a duplication. On the other hand, if we accepted all the later items we should, have to leave the first item standing as the assessment of an imaginary object, incapable of assessment.

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Bluebook (online)
165 F.2d 526, 1 A.L.R. 2d 870, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 1935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-city-of-new-york-ca2-1948.