The rather careless and haphazard manner in procuring rights of way, together with the lack of clarity and accurateness in the preparation of right of way agreements by the Commission through the years, has been a source of much litigation.
The court below held that the Commission obtained by purchase from Pernelia C. Browning on 7 April 1949, a right of way 50 feet from the center of Highway 52 as it existed in 1949, and that because of the procurement of such right of way the plaintiff herein is barred from recovering any damages in connection therewith.
We concur in the ruling of the court below only as to the one-half undivided interest owned by Pernelia C. Browning at the time she executed such right of way agreement.
The purchase of an easement from one co-tenant does not carry with it an easement in the interest of the other co-tenant.
Hill v. Mining Co.,
There is no question about the right of the Commission to procure by dedication, purchase, prescription or condemnation such rights of way as it may deem necessary for highway purposes.
In this case, it is not contended that the Commission obtained the right of way in controversy by dedication, prescription or condemnation. On the one hand, it claims the right of way by purchase from one of the co-tenants involved, and on the other, on the ground that there was a taking in connection with the 1949 widening and resurfacing project which necessitated that any claim for damages be asserted within six months of the date of the completion of that project.
The facts in this case are substantially different from those in the case of
Kaperonis v. Highway Commission,
In the instant case, there is no evidence on the record tending to show that the Commission ever authorized the procurement of a 100-foot right of way in connection with the widening and repaving project in 1949, as there was in the Kaperonis case. There is evidence that the plans and specifications called for a 100-foot right of way. Even so, there is no 'evidence tending to show that the plans and specifications for the 1949 project were available to the plaintiff or anyone else, other than the contractors and the Highway officials and employees. There ds evidence tending to show that a map was posted in the courthouse in Forsyth County, which map showed a 100-foot right of way thereon. But there is no evidence as to who posted the map, when it was posted, or how long it remained posted, except the evidence with respect thereto by one of the Commission’s engineers who testified that he saw the map while it was posted sometime in 1949.
In the case of
Penn v. Carolina Virginia Coastal Corp.,
“Moreover, ‘what is a taking of property within the due process clause of the Federal and State constitutions,’ the text writers say, ‘is not always clear, but so far as general rules are permissible of declaration on the subject, it may be said that there is a taking when the act involves an actual interference with, or disturbance of property rights, resulting in injuries which are not merely consequential or incidental.’
Ibid., § 144, page 772: “It is the general rule that a mere plotting or planning in anticipation of a public improvement is not a taking or damaging of the property affected. Thus, the recording of a map showing proposed highways, without any provision for compensation to the landowners until future proceedings of condemnation are taken to ob *136 tain the land, does not constitute a taking of the land, or interfere with the owner’s use and enjoyment thereof. No damages are collectible until a legal opening occurs by the actual taking of the land. When the appropriation takes place, any impairment of value from such preliminary steps becomes merged, it is said, in the damages then payable. * * *”
In the case of
Martin v. United States,
“* * * The statute did, indeed, provide for the filing of a map with provision that title should vest in the Commission upon such filing; but this must be construed along with the other language of the section which clearly contemplated that such filing should be in addition to and not in lieu of the existing procedures required for condemnation, its purpose being to facilitate conveyance to the United States of title properly acquired by ‘purchase, donation, or condemnation.’ That such entry upon the property as would amount to a taking by the government was contemplated as a prerequisite to a valid condemnation, *137 even if the map were filed as provided by the statute, is shown by the requirement that actions to recover compensation for land taken must be brought within six months, if notice of the completion of the project has been posted at the courthouse door of the county and at the end of the project, otherwise within twelve months of the completion of the project. General Statutes 136-19. The completion of the project is, in ordinary cases, a clear taking of the owner’s property and notice to him of the taking. This is not true, however, where the project consists of the mere paving of an existing public highway. Such paving, where the rights of the public are unquestioned, would be no assertion of rights over adjacent land or notice to the owners that such rights were being asserted.”
A property owner has a constitutional right to just compensation for the taking of his property for a public purpose, and such property owner is entitled to a reasonable notice and a reasonable opportunity to be heard on the question of damages for the taking. Under the evidence presented by the Commission in the court below, we hold that no reasonable notice was given to the plaintiff herein of a taking of her property until July or August 1962 when the Commission first exercised dominion over the property.
Hedrick v. Graham,
In the last cited case, after pointing out that the right to authorize the power of eminent domain and the mode of the exercise thereof is wholly legislative,
Parker, J.,
speaking for the Court, said: “* * * However, as both the Federal and our State Constitutions protect all persons from being deprived of their property for public use without the payment of just compensation and a reasonable notice and a reasonable opportunity to be heard, proceedings to condemn property must not violate these guaranties.
Dohany v. Rogers,
Likewise, in the case of
Jennings v. Highway Commission,
In
Highway Commission v. Young,
The judgment below is affirmed as to the one-half interest in the property involved which Pernelia C. Browning devised to the plaintiff, but reversed as to the one-half interest in the property involved which the plaintiff purchased in 1944.
Affirmed in part
Reversed in part and
Remanded for further proceedings.
