Utah Road Commission v. Hansen

383 P.2d 917, 14 Utah 2d 305, 1963 Utah LEXIS 211
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 12, 1963
Docket9679
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 383 P.2d 917 (Utah Road Commission v. Hansen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Utah Road Commission v. Hansen, 383 P.2d 917, 14 Utah 2d 305, 1963 Utah LEXIS 211 (Utah 1963).

Opinion

CROCKETT, Justice.

Action in eminent domain to condemn and acquire 1.84 acres of an 18.06 acre tract of land owned by the defendants Hansen on the north side of 21st South- Street between 6th and 7th West in Salt Lake City for use in widening and improving that arterial highway.

The right to acquire the property by condemnation was not questioned. The trial went forward with the defendants irr *307 effect as plaintiffs with the burden of establishing their damages. 1 From a jury-verdict awarding defendants $21,500 for the land taken and $3,400 as severance damages to the remaining land they appeal, claiming the award to be inadequate.

The Hansens have for some years operated an auto wrecking business known as the Sandy Metal Works on this tract of land. The portion taken runs the full block 'between 6th and 7th West alongside 21st South Street. It is considerably wider •along the eastern half to accommodate an access road, which will run westward from 6th West parallel to 21st South and then turn south into 21st South about half way 'between 6th and 7th West Streets. The boundary ‘between defendants’ remaining property and the access road is designated as a right-of-way line, while the boundary west of the access road is designated as a limited access line with no proposed access to 21st South.

The objective of the proceeding, clearly understood and pursued by both sides in presenting their evidence, was to determine the fáir market value of the land taken at the time the action was commenced. Evidence was adduced as to its present use and the reasonable prospects for its utilization in the future. The valuation was acknowledged to be upon- the basis of the highest and best use to which the land could be put. The location and juxtaposition to other properties and to the highway and the access thereto were also shown. Upon the basis of this whole evidence the trial court submitted the issue of value upon the familiar and universally accepted “willing buyer-seller” test; stating that the term “market value” is the price which the land would bring between a seller who desired, but was not compelled, to sell, and a buyer who desired, but was not compelled, to buy. The issue of severance damages was also correctly tried and submitted to the jury under a proper instruction that the owner was not limited to the value of the land taken, but was entitled to “severance damages,” that'is, the difference in value of the remaining tract before and after the taking.

In attacking the insufficiency of the damages awarded, the defendants contend that the trial court erred in refusing to permit them to prove and evaluate three separate elements of damage: the cost of removing from the premises several hundred salvage automobiles and a considerable quantity of parts; losses allegedly suffered because of forced premature sale of approximately 180 of these automobiles; and damages resulting due to loss of access from the western half of the remaining portion of their property to 21st South Street.

*308 In regard to the cost of removal of the automobiles and the alleged loss because of forced sale, these observations are pertinent:

It will he noted that our statute 2 providing for the taking of property by eminent domain and the awarding of damages therefor upon which this action rests speaks in terms of real property and the damages to be awarded for its taking, hut contains no express wording construable as allowing recovery for the cost of removing or disposing of personal property from the premises condemned. The question of its disposition has been before the courts many times and the majority view seems to be that, inasmuch as the condemnor takes only the realty, and acquires no interest in the personalty, it is the responsibility of the condemnee as owner to take care of his personal property if he desires to preserve it; and that consequently the expenses in connection with its removal 3 or sale are not proper to be considered as a separate element of damages to be charged against the condemnor for the taking of real property. 4 Defendants aver, however, that the particular wording of Article I, Sec. 22 of the Utah Constitution that: “Private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation” requires a result different than the majority view just referred to, and urge that under State Constitutions which contain the words “or damaged” as does ours, the opposite or minority view is reached. Our research does not confirm the accuracy of their contention.

In Ballantyne Company v. City of Omaha 5 the Nebraska court was faced with the same argument now before this court. Article I, Section 21 of the Nebraska Constitution reads: “The property of no person shall be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation therefor.” The Nebraska court held that the addition of the words “or damaged” did not change the law as previously established in Nebraska to the effect that costs of removing personal property were not compensable. Other jurisdictions with constitutional provisions similar to those of Utah and Nebraska have also followed the majority view. 6

In support of this conclusion it should be noted that the clause upon which the de *309 fendants rely, that private property should not he “taken or damaged for public use” without just compensation, was in fact applied to the real estate which was taken, and the defendants have been fully compensated for it. But the cars and salvage were not themselves “taken or damaged” in any way. Defendants are in no different position than if they had voluntarily sold the condemned land for its fair market value, as the condemnation presupposes they have done. If they had thus sold their property, they obviously could not have continued to store personal property upon it, or to make any other use of it. The fact that they had personal property on the premises, of whatever nature and amount, is merely an incidental fact which they must reckon with and take care of their interests therein just as if they had made an ordinary sale of their real estate. The obligation of the State is limited to the payment of the fair value of the property taken, plus resulting damages to the remainder, and the cost of removal of personal property is not an item of damage to be separately evaluated and paid for.

To bolster their position defendants assert that they were “ordered” by the court to remove the automobiles and parts from the property, and that consequently it should have granted them damages for doing so. This contention may have had at least some plausibility if the court had so ordered and had had the authority to do so. But scrutiny reveals that defendants have misinterpreted the order issued. It was in the alternative for the defendants to show cause why they had not removed the property or to declare whether they had abandoned it. The purpose of this action under eminent domain was simply to condemn and take the real property and that was the judgment entered.

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Bluebook (online)
383 P.2d 917, 14 Utah 2d 305, 1963 Utah LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/utah-road-commission-v-hansen-utah-1963.