Plaintiff’s Appeal
Plaintiff brings forward four assignments of error and four arguments in support thereof. Each of plaintiff’s arguments concerns the trial court’s determination that defendants’ parcels should be treated as one tract for purposes of compensation. We find no merit in plaintiff’s arguments.
Municipalities such as plaintiff are empowered to condemn property for, among other things, the opening of roads. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 40A-3 (1984). This power is subject, of course, to the requirement that the municipality provide just compensation to the owner of the property to be taken.
Mount Olive v. Cowan,
235 N.C 259,
Plaintiffs first argument is that the trial court used the wrong test in determining that the defendants’ lands constituted a single tract. The court concluded “that as to the lands owned by [defendants] . . . there is substantial unity of ownership . . . there is physical unity . . . [and] the lands . . . are (and were at the time of taking) being used as an integrated economic unit.”
In reaching these conclusions, the court applied the traditional test for unity of lands, as enunciated in
Barnes v. Highway Commission,
The factors most generally emphasized are unity of ownership, physical unity and unity of use. . . . Usually unity of use is given greatest emphasis.
The parcels claimed as a single tract must be owned by the same party or parties. It is not a requisite for unity of ownership that a party have the same quantity or quality of interest or estate in all parts of the tract. . . . [T]here must be a substantial unity of ownership.
The general rule is that parcels of land must be contiguous in order to constitute them a single tract for severance damages and benefits. . . .
As indicated above, the factor most often applied and controlling in determining whether land is a single tract is unity of use. Regardless of contiguity and unity of ownership, ordinarily lands will not be considered a single tract unless there is unity of use.
Id.
at 384-85,
Plaintiff observes that the condemnation actions in
Barnes
and subsequent cases which have followed its reasoning were instituted pursuant to Chapter 136 of the General Statutes.
See Barnes; N.C. Dept. of Transportation v. Kaplan,
We must assume that the General Assembly is fully aware of all prior and existing law when it enacts legislation on the same subject.
Ridge Community Investors, Inc. v. Berry,
N.C.G.S. § 40A-67 requires that the lands which are sought to be joined for purposes of compensation be under the “same ownership,” while the
Barnes
test requires that there be “substantial unity of ownership.” To read these phrases as having different meanings would lead to an absurd result: Whether lands were considered together for compensation might depend on whether the property was being condemned by a municipality or the State. We must presume that the legislature acted with reason and common sense and that it did not intend such an unjust result.
King v. Baldwin,
In its next three arguments, plaintiff takes issue with the trial court’s conclusions as to each of the three elements of the Barnes test.
As to the unity of ownership portion of the test, the trial court found:
All of the lands sought to be joined by defendants in this action pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 40A-67 are owned by the Yarbroughs. Ruth N. Yarbrough has some quantity and quality of interest and estate in the lands of her husband, J.R. Yarbrough; and J.R. Yarbrough has some quantity and quality of interest and estate in the lands of his wife, Ruth N. Yarbrough. Although the City contended that spousal interests under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 29-30 are not sufficient to constitute an interest and estate in land for purposes of unity of ownership, the Court disagrees and finds that substantial unity of ownership exists with regard to the Yarbroughs’ land and notes that the City itself sued the non-title owner spouse in Case numbers 92-CVS-1551 and 92-CVS-1552 *345 because of their interests under § 29-30. In addition, the Yarbroughs offered the Affidavit of J.R. Yarbrough which amply -demonstrated that he and his wife were engaged in a common plan of development for the property that was owned both in their separate and joint names in an informal partnership. The City offered no evidence to the contrary. The Court therefore finds that substantial unity of ownership exists with regard to all tracts sought to be included by the Yarbroughs.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 40A-2 (1984) provides that, for purposes of eminent domain, an owner is “any person having an interest or estate in the property,” and property means
“any
right, title, or interest in land.” (Emphasis added). N.C. Gen. Stat. § 29-30 (1984) provides that, in lieu of taking his intestate share, a surviving spouse may take a life estate in one third in value of all of the real estate owned by his spouse during the time they were married, subject only to a few exceptions. This section preserves the benefits of the former rights of curtesy and dower.
Taylor v. Bailey,
Next plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in determining that there was unity of use among the defendants’ tracts. We disagree.
The trial court found that the parcels at issue “are, and were at the time of the taking, zoned for multi-family development and are (and were at the time of taking) being held for development under a common plan and scheme.”
As stated previously, the Barnes test for unity of use is the applicable standard. Plaintiff argues that defendants’ tracts may not be considered unified in use because they were not being actively used at all.
*346 In Barnes, the Court stated:
It has been said that “there must be such a connection or relation of adaptation, convenience, and actual and permanent use, as to make the enjoyment of the parcel taken reasonably and substantially necessary to the enjoyment of the parcel left, in the most advantageous and profitable manner in the business for which it is used.” The unifying use must be a present use. A mere intended use cannot be given effect.
Following Barnes, we conclude that the defendants’ tracts, which defendants were holding for future development, were being presently used in the same manner. Thus, the trial court correctly concluded that the tracts were unified in use, or, in the language of section 40A-67, were “being used as an integrated economic unit.”
Finally, plaintiff argues that the court erred in concluding that the tracts are contiguous. Yet, plaintiff concedes that the tracts “abut each other in succession.” This admission is fatal to plaintiff’s contention. We find that the tracts are contiguous and reject plaintiff’s final argument.
Thus, the trial court correctly found that there was substantial unity of ownership, that the tracts were being used as an integrated *347 economic unit, and that the tracts were contiguous. It properly united the tracts for compensation.
Defendants’ Appeal
Defendants assign error to the trial court’s denial of their motion to amend the answer to add parties in their counterclaim. They offer one argument which we reject.
First, however, we must address plaintiff’s motion to dismiss defendants’ appeal. Plainly, the trial court’s order denying the motion to amend was interlocutory, since it did not determine the entire controversy.
Veazey v. Durham,
Defendants’ claim against the individual members of the Board of Aldermen was made as an alternative to its claim for breach of contract. Had the court determined that the contract was void as
ultra vires,
then defendants would have sought to recover against the individual board members. If these alternative theories were not joined, defendants would face the possibility of inconsistent verdicts on the same factual issue in separate trials. We find that, in this case, the avoidance of such a possibility is a substantial right which would be prejudiced by delaying the defendants’ appeal.
See Davidson v. Knauff Ins. Agency,
Since plaintiff had responded to defendants’ original counterclaim, defendants could only amend their answer by leave of the court. N.C.R. Civ. P. 15(a). Generally, trial courts are to grant such amendments freely.
Mauney v. Morris,
From the face of the order, we cannot determine the trial court’s reason for denying the motion. This, however, will not preclude our examining any apparent reasons for the denial.
Martin v. Hare,
Defendants alleged in their proposed amendment that “[t]he Counterclaim Defendants are being named as defendants herein in their individual capacities rather than their official or representative capacities as Aldermen or City Attorney for the City of Winston-Salem.” This allegation is not controlling, however. We must “inspect the text of the complaint as a whole to determine the true nature of the claim.”
Taylor v. Ashburn,
When the government enters into a contract, it implicitly waives its immunity from an action on that contract.
Smith v. State,
In a case strikingly similar to the one at hand,
Jenkins v. Henderson,
*349 There is no implied warranty by an agent that his principal has authority to make a contract signed by the agent; and the agent, acting within the scope of his authority, is not answerable upon such a contract where his principal is not bound by it merely because he had no authority to enter into the particular contract.
Id.
at 247,
As was the case in Jenkins, the purported contract here was between defendants and the municipal plaintiff, and the aldermen were acting within their authority to approve contracts entered into by the plaintiff. Defendants could not hold the aldermen liable on the alleged agreement, and an amendment that added a claim to that effect would be futile.
Likewise, defendants’ proposed counterclaim would not state a claim against Seeber for negligent misrepresentation. For purposes of sovereign immunity, a claim against a public official in his official capacity is a suit against the public body he represents.
Truesdale v. University of North Carolina,
After reviewing the proposed amended answer, we observe that defendants have not alleged that the municipal plaintiff waived its sovereign immunity by the purchase of liability insurance. Such an omission renders their claim for negligence against Seeber in his official capacity fatally deficient.
Fields v. Board of Education,
We conclude that the defendants’ proposed amendment would have been futile because it would have stated no claim for relief. The trial court properly denied defendants’ motion to amend their answer.
*350 In summary, we affirm each of the actions of the trial court.
Affirmed.
Opinion written and concurred in prior to 16 December 1994.
