Wilmot v. State of New York
Wilmot v. State of New York
Opinion of the Court
We affirm the order of the Appellate Division which sustained the award made by the Court of Claims.
In 1958, claimants purchased some 49 acres of land in the Town of Henrietta, just south of the City of Rochester, for development as a regional shopping center. In 1967 they learned that the projected route of the Genesee Expressway would go through their property and that the State contemplated appropriating for that purpose an 11-acre strip of land which would bisect the 49-acre tract, thereby rendering it unsuited for development as a regional shopping center. With the appropria
The actual date of the taking by the State was June 13, 1967, when the State appropriated 11 acres in the middle of the original 49-acre tract. The claimant was then left with two noncontiguous parcels of the original trace — the 24-acre westerly parcel which was subject to the option agreement with Lenrieh Associates, and an approximately 14-acre parcel on the east.
The specified conditions having been met to the purchaser’s satisfaction, Lenrieh Associates exercised its rights to purchase the 24-acre westerly parcel and title was closed on October 12, 1967.
Claimants then instituted the present action to recover damages for the taking of the 11 acres by the State, and for consequential damages to the remaining easterly 14-acre parcel.
The Court of Claims found that the highest and best use of claimants’ property was as a regional shopping center, predicating such finding on the character and potentiality of the original 49-acre tract. On this basis the Court of Claims found a per-acre value of $24,000 for the land appropriated and, using the same figure for pretaking value and an after-taking figure of $15,000 computed consequential damages at $9,000 per acre for the claimants’ remaining easterly 14 acres.
We agree with the Court of Claims. Confronted as that court found them to be with imminent appropriation of a central portion of their land, the claimants in good faith took steps to mitigate their damages by the disposition of the 24-acre westerly parcel. In consequence of this action the State was relieved of all claims for compensation with respect to these .24 acres. Obviously this land was not itself appropriated by the State. The State’s exposure to claims for consequential damage with respect to this parcel, however, was entirely eliminated in consequence of the sale to Lenrich Associates. The present claimants would no longer be owners and were thus foreclosed from asserting any such claim. Lenrich Associates, the new owners to be, on the other hand, had no predicate for any such claim because the State was taking no part of their property. Accordingly, no part of the award made by the Court of Claims includes any compensation by way of either direct or consequential damages, attributable to the 24-acre parcel later conveyed to Lenrich Associates.
The claimants should not be prejudiced because they took steps in the face of imminent appropriation prudently to mitigate damages. ‘ ‘ As Judge Seldeh observed years ago,. there rests on a party seeking damage ‘ the active duty of making reasonable exertions to render the injury as light as possible ’ (Hamilton v. McPherson, 28 N Y 72, 77). * * * the party seeking damages is under the duty to make a ‘ reasonable effort ’ to avoid consequences of the act complained of [People’s Gas & Elec. Co. v. State of New York (189 App. Div. 421, 424)]. It is, indeed, a rule of broad acceptance that ‘ No recovery may be
Had the claimants made no effort to dispose of the westerly 24-acre parcel prior to the taking, there would be no question but what the highest and best Use would have been predicated on the original 49-acre parcel.
“ The constitutional requirement of just compensation requires that the property owner be indemnified so that he may be put in the same relative position, insofar as this is possible, as if the taking had not occurred ” (City of Buffalo v. Clement Co., 28 N Y 2d 241, at p. 258, citations omitted).
In our view, the courts below were justified in concluding on these facts that the prospective sale to Lenrich Associates was in time
The order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
. For purposes of this opinion we use rounded figures and have simplified other factual title aspects. Portions of the lands appropriated were subject to water easements. The issue raised on this appeal is unaffected by these details, which in each instance appear appropriately to have been taken into account by the Court of Claims in its computations.
. The State also asserts that even on the basis of a 49-acre tract the evidence was insufficient to justify a finding that the highest and best use was as a “ regional shopping center ” rather than for “ industrial, commercial and service uses.” It suffices to note that the record discloses conflicting testimony. We find no sufficient basis to disturb the finding of the Court of Claims here as to highest and best use.
. Actually there was an interval of but a single day. The last of the claimants’ acknowledgments on the June 1 agreement was taken on June 12 and the taking by the State occurred on June 13.
Dissenting Opinion
In this eminent domain case, claimants have been awarded damages of $346,204 in consequence of the State’s appropriation of land for a highway. I do not think that the award is legally sustainable and, accordingly, dissent.
As a general rule, damages in a condemnation proceeding are to be assessed and compensation determined at the time of the taking. (Arlen of Nanuet v. State of New York, 26 N Y 2d 346, 356; 19 N. Y. Jur., Eminent Domain, § 143.) For purposes of determining compensation, the date of the taking is ordinarily the date that title vests in the condemnor unless a prior de facto taking is made out. (City of Buffalo v. Clement Co., 28 N Y 2d 241, 253-254.) Additionally, certain affirmative value-depressing acts on the part of the condemnor, although not rising to a de facto taking, may require that evidence of value prior to such acts be received in determining just compensation (“ condemnation blight ” theory). (City of Buffalo v. Clement Co., supra, at p. 254.)
Neither the de facto taking theory nor the “condemnation blight ” theory was argued below or is appropriate on these facts. There simply was no physical invasion or imposition of some direct legal restraint sufficient to make out a de facto taking in advance of actual condemnation. (City of Buffalo v. Clement
Nor am I persuaded by the argument that in selling the 24-acre parcel to Lenrich prior to the taking, claimants mitigated the scope of potential consequential damages. The argument continues that claimants, thus, ought not be denied compensation computed on the basis of the highest and best use of the entire tract as a regional shopping center. I would note, however, that had claimants retained the 24-acre parcel, severance or consequential damages could have been allowed only if its value were decreased by the taking. (See, e.g., Gilmore v. State of New York, 208 Misc. 427, 435; 19 N. Y. Jur., Eminent Domain, § 141.) Here the evidence is that its value was increased, rather than decreased. Furthermore, if it were found that the 24-acre parcel did, in fact, benefit from the projected improvement, the State would be entitled to a setoff against the consequential damages to the entire residue. (Matter of City of New York [Exterior St.], 285 N. Y. 455; Dennis v. State of New York, 24 A D 2d 924; Brand v. State of New York, 46 Misc 2d 645, mod. and affd. 26 A D 2d 747, affd. 19 N Y 2d 634; see, generally, 19 N. Y. Jur., Eminent Domain, §§ 252-256; see, also, Ann., Eminent Domain: Deduction of Benefits in Determining Compensation or Damages in Proceedings Involving Opening, Widening, or Otherwise Altering Highways, 13 ALR 3d 1149, 1160, 1165, 1187.)
In sum, the method of computing damages employed in the instant case results in an award in excess of claimant’s actual loss and works an injustice on the public which ultimately must pay the award. I recognize, however, that under the existing rules of damages the threat of imminent condemnation may have a chilling effect on the alienability of property. That is to say, an individual faced with imminent condemnation depriving him of the intended use of his land may hesitate to dispose of marketable portions thereof (thereby destroying its highest and best use), lest he deprive himself of the most advantageous compensation available in condemnation. I would agree, therefore, that, in an appropriate case, an individual who, faced with
Chief Judge Full and Judges Burke and Wachtler concur with Judge Jones; Judge Jasen dissents and votes to reverse in a separate opinion; Judges Breitel and Gabrielli taking no part.
Order affirmed, with costs.
. There was testimony that a minimum of 49-50 acres is required for a regional shopping center.
. The Court of Claims characterized the agreement of June 1, 1967, as a sale even though the deed passed later. At any rate, by virtue of the agreement, and on the date of the actual taking, Lenrich was-the equitable owner of the westerly 24 acres. (Matter of City of New York [Jefferson Houses—Lombardi], 306 N. Y. 278, 282.)
Reference
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- James P. Wilmot, Sr. Et Al., Respondents, v. State of New York, Appellant
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