United States v. Fort Smith River Development Corporation

349 F.2d 522, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4735, 1967 A.M.C. 1413
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 3, 1965
Docket17876_1
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 349 F.2d 522 (United States v. Fort Smith River Development Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth 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. Fort Smith River Development Corporation, 349 F.2d 522, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4735, 1967 A.M.C. 1413 (8th Cir. 1965).

Opinion

RIDGE, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered in a condemnation proceeding duly commenced pursuant to the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, under authority of the “River and Harbor Improvement Act,” (Chap. 12 Title 33, U.S.C.A.) the “Flood Control Act,” (Chap. 15, Title 33, U.S. C.A.) and other applicable Acts of the Congress. Trial of the issue of damages was before the Court below, sitting without a jury. Compensation in the amount of $21,246.00, plus interest from the date of taking, was allowed for a perpetual easement over a part of “Morris Island” lying in the Arkansas River, within the city limits of Fort Smith, Arkansas. The opinion of the District Court so adjudicating is reported at 230 F.Supp. 973. 1

“Morris Island” is approximately one and one-half miles long. Prior to the date of “taking”, it contained about 160 acres of land. It lies adjacent to the right, or east, bank of the Arkansas River, at a point where the river runs north and south through Fort Smith, Arkansas. The easement condemned included all the area of “Morris Island” riverward, from a line running the entire length thereof. The taking was approximately 97 acres, leaving a remainder of approximately 63 acres. On the land side of “Morris Island” there was a slough or shallow waterway which enters the river near the south end thereof. 2 Access to “Morris Island” is over a public road which crosses the slough on a causeway or low water bridge.

The Court below found the partial taking of land here to be related to “general work of bank stabilization, channel rectification, control of floods, and the improvement of navigation on the Arkansas River.” As a part of such project, it found a trench 8,400 feet long was cut through “Morris Island” of such depth and width as to enable the construction of a rock revetment, which was done “in an effort to stabilize the right or east bank of the river * * *.” As a consequence, 36.86 acres of the easement area, riverward, was left to the ravages of the river current. After the casting thereof into the river, there were approximately 60.49 acres of the easement area remaining, which, of course, included the area upon which the revetment was built. The remaining land in the easement was variously stated to be 250 to 300 feet wide, which lies adjacent to the remainder containing approximately 62.36 acres. The taking was “subject * * * to existing easements for public roads and highways, public utilities, railroads and pipelines; reserving to the landowners, their heirs, executors, administrators, successors, and assigns, the right to use the surface of (the easement) land as access to their adjoining land.” (Par. added.)

At the trial of this case, the Government took the position that this “river stabilization” work conferred a “special and direct” benefit upon the land remaining in “Morris Island”; thus making it more adaptable for industrial use by reason of the “project”; which, it asserted, increased the value of the remainder so that it was worth more after the taking than the value of the whole of “Morris Island” before that event.

Only one expert witness testified for each of the parties as to land values in this case. The Government’s expert witness testified that prior to the taking here the highest and best use of all the land in “Morris Island” was for “agriculture”, with a market value of $12,000.00, which was $500.00 less than appellant *524 had paid therefor at the time of purchase in 1957. 3 Because of the project here considered, it was that witness’s opinion that the highest and best use of the remainder was “industrial”. On the other hand, appellees’ evidence of highest and best use before and after the taking “was for agricultural purposes and the gain it had already sustained by it lying within its proximity to the manufacturing district of Fort Smith, as well as it being zoned 1-3 Industrial Zone.” Hence, ap-pellees’ expert witness as to value excluded the “project” of “bank stabilization, channel rectification, control of floods and navigation on the Arkansas River” entirely from his estimate of before and after values.

From the opinion of the District Court, it is apparent that it considered “the general work of bank stabilization, channel rectification, control of floods and for improvement of navigation of the Arkansas River * * * ” to be the cause and purpose for the taking here, but when it came to consider the question of general or special benefits to the remainder it limited its consideration thereof, singularly, to “navigation on the Arkansas River,” and from that vista ruled that such was the sole objective of the project and cause for the “partial condemnation” of “Morris Island.” From that limited view of the proof adduced, it found “the benefit, if any, to the remaining land” to be “a general benefit” arising “from the fulfillment of (a) public project,” which was general to all riparian land on the Arkansas River, particularly in and near Fort Smith, Arkansas. As a consequence, it concluded that “no special or direct benefit arose from the relation of the land in question to (this) public improvement,” and such appears to be the singular premise for allowance of damages as it did in this partial condemnation proceeding.

Generally stated, it is the Government’s contention that “the district court, in ascertaining compensation” as it did in this “partial taking case, erred in rejecting enhancement to the remainder due to the project.” Its argument before us is premised thus:

“In the instant case, even though the owners would have received no award according to the testimony of the Government’s expert witness, they are now in a better position financially than they would have been had there been no project. To pay them the value of the land taken, plus so-called severance damages calculated on an artificial basis, in addition to the benefits they have received, is far more than just compensation, unfair to the public and, hence, to be avoided.” (Applnt’s br., pp. 10-11.)

It is clear from the opinion of the District Court, ante, that it only considered the testimony of the witnesses for both parties from the vista that they were in agreement “that the highest and best use for the land at the time of taking was for agricultural purposes.” (1. c. 984 of 230 F.Supp. ante.) The only inference to be made from the record is that it declared as a matter of law from that premise that “no special or direct benefit arose from the relation of the land in question to the public improvement” as made in the “Declaration of Taking” and “since the remainder of the land (did) not receive any special * * * benefits” it determined “the amount of compensation to be awarded to the landowner” as it did. In so doing, we believe that Court inadvertently misconceived the issues as raised and joined in this partial condemnation proceeding.

From the facts appearing in the record, doubt cannot exist as to the causa causans for the commencement of this partial condemnation proceeding. As the District Court specifically found, the purpose thereof was “general work of bank stabilization, channel rectification, control of floods, and for the improvement of navigation on the Arkansas *525 River.” (ante, 1. c.

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Bluebook (online)
349 F.2d 522, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4735, 1967 A.M.C. 1413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-fort-smith-river-development-corporation-ca8-1965.