OPINION
¶ 1 The sole issue presented in this eminent domain case is whether the trial court correctly allowed the jury to include in the condemnation award, in addition to the value of the condemned land and building, the costs which the landowners incurred to move property owned by others which was located there. We hold, under the circumstances of this case, that the additional award was proper.
¶ 2 Appellant City of Oklahoma City [City] commenced this action in 1995 to acquire a piece of property near the “Brick-town” section of the city for use in one part of the several public projects collectively known as the Metropolitan Area Projects or more familiarly by its acronym “MAPS.” Located on the property was a warehouse where Appellees W.E. and Imogene Hamilton operated two small businesses, one a moving and storage business. Appellees had property stored in the warehouse which belonged to third parties, and some belonging to them.
¶ 3 Commissioners were appointed and fixed the value of the land and warehouse at $62,000. Both Appellees and City demanded a jury trial. The jury was instructed that it could award as “just compensation” for taking of Appellees’ property “the amount ... which the owners are entitled to receive by reason of the appropriation of the property *249 ... together with the reasonable value of the expenses necessary to move all of the personal property.” The jury fixed the value of the Appellees’ building and land at $85,000 and decided that Appellees were entitled to recover just over $60,000 for “moving expenses.” From judgment entered on the verdict, City appeals.
¶ 4 City argues the trial court judgment should be reversed because: (1) the state constitution, Okla. Const., art. II, § 24, limited Appellees’ recovery to value of the land and the building situated there; (2) adding moving costs to a condemnation award would violate Okla. Const., ait. X, § 17; (3) loss of business income is not allowed; (4) the trial court lacked jurisdiction to award moving expenses in addition to the value of the land and building; and (5) there is no statutory authority for such an award. City also seeks a corresponding reduction in the prevailing party attorney fees awarded to Appellees.
¶ 5 Upon review of judgment entered after a jury verdict for damages resulting from condemnation of private property for public use, the appellate court will not substitute its own conclusions for those reached by the jury. The verdict must not be disturbed if it is supported by competent evidence.
Oklahoma City Urban Renewal Auth. v. Lindauer,
¶ 6 In
Blincoe v. Choctaw, Oklahoma & Western R. Co.,
“That the owner ‘by reason of such railroad’ has been put to the expense of removing the stock of lumber then on hand is not disputed; neither can it be denied that the cost of such removal was made necessary by the condemnation of the real estate, and is an injury and damage to the owner to the extent of the cost of such removal. In other words, this ruling would permit the railroad to take the owner’s land and thereby compel him to bear whatever expense may be consequent upon preserving the personal property, and yet be remediless therefor. If this shall be held to be the law, then the constitutional provision, ‘nor shall private property be taken for public use without just compensation,’ becomes almost as much a sword as a shield to the private citizen, for the compulsory addition to the cost of the personal property of the citizen is as much a taking as the absorption of the real estate itself.”
Id.,
¶ 7 Fifteen years after
Blincoe,
in
Oil Fields & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. Treese Cotton Co.,
¶ 8 Article II, § 24 of the Oklahoma Constitution begins:
“Private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation. Just compensation shall mean the value of the property taken, and in addition, any injury to any part of the property not taken. ...”
The emphasized portion of § 24 just quoted was added by constitutional amendment in 1990.
See Williams Nat. Gas Co. v. Perkins,
¶ 9 City places particular emphasis on the distinction between total and partial takings, arguing that relocation costs are not a proper element of damage when there is a total taking of an entire parcel. However, Blincoe and Treese Cotton are binding precedents which authorize such recovery in either a partial or total taking case. We do not agree with City that, because only two out of three lots were taken, Blincoe involved a partial taking. The railroad took all of both tracts being used as a lumber yard. Furthermore, Article II, § 24 by its very terms, does not speak to only real property, nor is it limited to total takings of property.
¶ 10 In its second proposition, City argues that an award of moving costs would violate Article X, § 17 of the Oklahoma Constitution. Section 17 proscribes legislative authorization to a governmental entity “to become a stockholder in any company, association, or corporation, or to obtain or appropriate money for, or levy any tax for, or to loan its credit to[,] any corporation, association, or individual.” The provision was intended to prevent public investment in private enterprises.
Lawrence v. Schellstede,
¶ 11 Third, City argues that “loss of business income” may not be recovered as a separate element of damage in an eminent domain case. For that proposition, City cites several cases, none of which we find applicable here. 2 Appellees did not ask the City to pay for loss of income from their business. Loss of business income is not in any way comparable to the costs of relocating personal property of others stored at the condemned property.
*251 ¶ 12 The city’s “jurisdictional” argument is based its assertion that relocation expenses are not allowed in so-called “total taking” cases. We have dismissed the importance of that distinction earlier, and will not reconsider it here. We acknowledge there is, in the law of the various states, a distinction made on the basis of total versus partial takings, but this jurisdiction is bound by the tenets of our Constitutional provision as previously discussed, and thus those authorities are not applicable to the case at hand.
¶ 13 City’s final three propositions discuss the statutes which define just compensation and allow recovery of various incidental expenses when property is taken for public use. See 27 O.S.1991 §§ 9-16. Section 13(6) of that title requires, to the greatest extent practicable, at least 90 days’ written notice before having to relocate a business or farm operation, and specifically refers to the Oklahoma Relocation Assistance Act, 63 O.S.1991 §§ 1092.1, 1092.2, 1093-99. The Act authorizes payments and other assistance in order to comply with the analogous federal act. 3
¶ 14 City’s argument is that the policies enumerated in § 13 make no mention of the sort of relocation expenses awarded in the present case. And, City points out that § 13 has been construed as setting forth merely guidelines, and not creating enforceable rights.
See Western Farmers Elec. Coop. v. Willard,
¶ 15 We also agree with City that the state and federal relocation assistance acts do not apply to taking of property for a project in which there is no investment of federal funds. There is some indication in the record that Appellees intended to present some evidence of federal involvement, but the only transcribed portion of the trial record makes no mention of it. Again, however, Appellees’ recovery in this case does not depend on assistance payments authorized by those acts.
¶ 16 We hold that the trial court did not err by admitting evidence of the cost of relocating property stored in the warehouse, arid instructing the jury that it could award those costs as an element of damage caused by the taking. The judgment of the trial court is therefore affirmed.
¶ 17 AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
See now
.
State ex rel. Dept. of Highways v. Bowles,
. 42 U.S.C. §§ 4601 etseq.
