United States v. Pennsylvania-Dixie Cement Corporation

178 F.2d 195, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 2502
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 8, 1949
Docket10836
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 178 F.2d 195 (United States v. Pennsylvania-Dixie Cement Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Pennsylvania-Dixie Cement Corporation, 178 F.2d 195, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 2502 (6th Cir. 1949).

Opinion

MARTIN, Circuit Judge.

On an unusual factual situation, the issue here is whether the district court adopted a lawfully justifiable method of measuring just compensation for the taking by eminent domain of the interest of the appellee corporation in a tract of land in Sullivan County, Tennessee. On June 24, 1940, the appellee entered into a contract in writing with Brick Realty Corporation, owner in fee of the land subsequently condemned by the United States, by virtue of which appellee was granted the exclusive right for a period of ten years to enter upon a described three acres of the land and to remove therefrom sand in such quantities as it might desire.

For nearly thirty years before this contract was made, the appellee had been a manufacturer of Portland cement at Kings-port, Tennessee. The Brick Realty Corporation was a manufacturer of brick. The two companies owned adjoining properties along the Holston River upon which were large deposits of sand, partly on the property of one and partly on the property of the other. The sand bank was about a half mile from the plant of appellee; and, while there were quantities of sand in the general neighborhood, such deposits were so remotely located that the cost of hauling by truck for more than a short distance was prohibitive.

When the government took possession of the land in the latter part of 1942, appellee had already removed from the sand deposit in controversy 12,724 tons for use in the manufacture of cement. Admittedly, 12,313 tons then remained.

With its local supply of sand cut off, appellee began to purchase its requirements from suppliers in Forest City, North Carolina, and Erwin, Tennessee, at a price of $1.50 a ton, f. o. b. its plant. This was the. lowest price obtainable.

In its first memorandum opinion, the court declared that, in determining value in cases “where comparable sales or sales of comparable ‘ quantities similarly situated cannot be found to establish market value,” it must “adopt other methods of arriving at a value such as the cost of duplication of the thing taken and comparisons of such costs with the actual cost of appropriating to use the thing lost at the place where the taking occurred.” Considering the element of uncertainty in the “conclusions of some of the witnesses”, the court adjudged the value of the sand in place at the time taken to be $7,000.

The appellee moved for an amendment of the judgment to an increased, value, or in the alternative for a new trial. The court received additional testimony limited to the question of the cost of delivering sand from the deposit on the condemned *197 land to the cement plant of the appellee. In its opinion, filed following consideration of the additional testimony, the court said: “The sand deposit covered about three acres and was included within the boundaries of the condemned tract. The record shows that the government entered upon the condemned land about October 1, 1942, although its petition and declaration of taking were not filed until November 20, 1944. At the time the cement company was excluded from further operations on the land, there remained in the deposit 12,313 tons of recoverable and usable sand. Prior to the taking, the cement company had been removing sand from the deposit and hauling it to its Kingsport cement plant, a distance of approximately one mile, most of the way over a public road. After the taking, it was necessary for the cement company to buy sand in replacement of that which was lost by the taking. This replacement sand cost the cement company $1.50 per ton,. delivered at its plant. As it owned the sand on the condemned land, it could have used that sand, saving the difference between the cost of delivering it and the cost of buying its equivalent. An undetermined figure represented the cost of making the cement company’s own sand available at its plant. That cost, subtracted from the replacement cost, represents the damage to the cement company caused by the taking of the condemned tract.” The court said that considering the elements of cost, including operating labor, repair labor, operating supplies, repair materials, deferred operating costs chargeable to labor and materials, and items of overhead expense, the proof showed that the cost to the cement company for making its own sand available at its plant averaged 34.85 cents per ton. When this figure is subtracted from the replacement cost of $1.50 and the difference multiplied by the 12,313 tons of condemned sand, the result is found to be $14,178.42, for which amount judgment was awarded to appellee.

The Brick Realty Corporation, as owner of the fee interest in the entire tract of 12.75 acres, more or less, was awarded $4,995 as just compensation for its interest in the condemned land. The United States has appealed from the final judgment of the district court, and insists that the market value of the interest of appellee in the sand on the particular tract in controversy constituted just compensation therefor. The appellee’s rejoinder is that, 'where condemned property has no general market value as it insists is true in the instant case, the actuai value to the owner is the only measure of just compensation; and that the trial court adopted a correct basis of evaluation.

Undoubtedly, the particular sand bank in controversy was of especial value to appellee on account of its propinquity to its plant. But the government contends that peculiar value which property has to a particular owner is not the true standard of evaluation in condemnation cases t that market value, assuming fair negotiations between an owner willing to sell and a purchaser desiring to buy, is the true criterion in determining just compensation.

There was some testimony adduced by the government that the cash market value of the sand, assuming a willing buyer and a willing seller, would be $4,160. To the contrary, the appellee introduced evidence that there was no general market in the vicinity for sand banks like the one in controversy.

Viewing the evidence in entirety, it appears to us that the case was not tried on either side, or by the district judge, in such manner as to present a satisfactory record as to market value. Only one witness for the government, a civil engineer, expressed an opinion as to market value. Another witness, a land appraiser, based his opinion upon that of the first witness who had testified: “I made calls on different sand people and different property owners. * * * I got the price of sand from people below the plant, and on up above the river. I also got prices from sand dealers of what they were paying for sand, and not one of these people I called on but what had been offered money for sand located on his property. One I recall in particular was a man named Berry, *198 and that is about the same sand you will find down below there, he said he had that sand on his place, and would sell it for thirty cents a yard. * * * You can buy that sand up and down the river any place for thirty to forty cents.” For appellee, two witnesses testified that no similar sand banks in the neighborhood had been sold; and -another witness, a division superintendent of appellee, testified that there “is so little demand for sand for making raw mixture for a cement plant it is difficult to say what the market value might be. There is not sufficient demand for sand of this quality; no other cement plant uses it but ours, and it is hard to state the market value of this poor grade of sand.”

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Bluebook (online)
178 F.2d 195, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 2502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-pennsylvania-dixie-cement-corporation-ca6-1949.