56 A.2d 512 | Conn. | 1947
On July 14, 1944, the defendant state highway commissioner took certain portions of the plaintiffs' farm in Woodbridge for the layout and construction of a trunk line highway and assessed the benefits and damages therefor, pursuant to 1528 of the General Statutes as amended. The plaintiffs applied to the Superior Court for a reassessment. The defendant by his answer simply admitted the taking set forth in the complaint and denied the allegations of damage. Upon the sole issue so presented as to the amount of the plaintiffs' damage, in due course the action was referred to a state referee and he by his report reassessed the damage at $16,558.20. The plaintiffs moved for judgment in accord with the report together with interest from July 14, 1944. On January 11, 1947, the court rendered judgment accepting the report and adjudging $16,558.20 to be the amount due the plaintiffs for the taking, ruling that there was no basis for the allowance of interest thereon from July 14, 1944, the date of taking, to the date of judgment. The plaintiffs have appealed. As the court pointed out, there is no finding in the referee's report that the plaintiffs had been physically dispossessed of the land between July 14, 1944, and the date of judgment, and it is undisputed that they had not been dispossessed.
The question determinative of the appeal is whether, where the defendant has taken the plaintiffs' land *228
pursuant to 1528 and there is nothing in the record to show that the plaintiffs have been physically dispossessed, they are entitled to receive interest from the date of taking until the date of judgment as an element of the just compensation guaranteed by article
Under this procedure the taking of the land is complete when the assessment is filed with the clerk of the Superior Court. Kratochvil v. Cox,
Since this taking was an exercise of the state's power of eminent domain, the plaintiffs' constitutional guaranties entitle them to just compensation as of the time of the taking. "Where land is taken by eminent domain the principal sum becomes due and payable when the land is taken." Woodward v. New Haven,
No decision by this court calls for a different conclusion. The question whether compensation in the form of interest for this element of loss sustained by the owner should be awarded has been presented to this court under two different types of eminent domain statute. Under the first, where the condemnor was not entitled to possession until payment of damages was made or, in the event of an appeal, the amount of damages was finally determined, interest was not allowed. Bishop v. New Haven,
New Haven Steam Saw Mill Co. v. New Haven,
The right of the owner to the element of just compensation to which we have been referring is generally recognized. The proposition has been thus stated: "This minimum [of just compensation] includes the allowance of interest on the amount of the award from the date of the taking to the date of the *232
award of compensation." Orgel, Valuation under Eminent Domain, p. 18, note 20. Again, it has been further defined by this statement: ". . . the owner is not limited to the value of the property at the time of the taking; he is entitled to such addition as will produce the full equivalent of that value paid contemporaneously with the taking. Interest at a proper rate is a good measure by which to ascertain the amount so to be added." Seaboard Air Line Ry. Co. v. United States,
Nor does the fact that the owner has not been physically dispossessed, the situation assumed by the parties in argument, necessarily relieve the condemnor of the duty imposed on it of paying interest from the date of the taking. The uncertain nature and consequent questionable value of the owner's tenure under such circumstances are obvious. As has been well observed: "From the time of the award, he is practically deprived of his right to dispose *233
of the land. His possession is precarious, liable to be terminated at any time; he cannot safely rent; he cannot safely improve; if he sows, he cannot be sure that he will reap. As he is not placed in this position by any act of his own, is not in as a wrongdoer, nor under any contract, there would be no justice in charging him with any assumed value of the use." Warren v. First Div. St. Paul P. R. Co.,
At least two courts, however, have held that to permit the condemnor to demand payment of the owner for his use and occupation and to require such an accounting would be entirely without the scope of the condemnation proceeding and that therefore his continuing in possession does not affect his right to interest thereunder. Whitman v. Providence,
This course is in accord with and properly safeguards the respective rights of the parties to a condemnation pursuant to the statute. This is an adversary proceeding by the present defendant against these plaintiffs. The defendant can only be entitled to compensation for the plaintiffs' continuing occupation upon proper allegations and supporting proof. Properly, the burden is upon him. Uniacke v. *235
Chicago, M. St. P. R. Co.,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to enter judgment for the plaintiffs in accordance with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.