The question posed on this appeal is whether a condemning authority, desiring to acquire real property for a public use, may avoid payment for personal property consisting of industrial equipment owned by a tenant, which is admittedly part of the realty for purposes of condemnation, by the device of an out-of-court purchase of the landlord-owner’s fee followed by the authority’s termination of the tenancy and demand for the land “clear of all improvements. ”
Appellant Concrete Service Company (Concrete) filed an action in inverse condemnation against the California Department of Public Works, Division of Highways (Department). The superior court granted summary judgment in favor of the Department. The appeal is from the judgment.
The facts stated in, and reasonably inferrable from, declarations before the superior court follow. Concrete had been a tenant on the land since 1950 under three successive five-year leases. It had constructed on the property a concrete batch plant consisting of buildings, garages, tanks and equipment. By the terms of the lease the plant was the property of Concrete which had the right to remove it at the termination of *145 the tenancy. In 1965, at the expiration of the third lease, a new lease was prepared but for some reason was never executed by the parties. Under the terms of the third lease Concrete continued on under a month-to-month tenancy.
In March 1966 the Department, by letter, advised Concrete that the demands of a freeway right-of-way required removal of all improvements on the land. Thereafter agents of the Department came upon the property; they requested and received permission of Concrete to appraise its batch plant for the “purpose of condemnation.” They appraised the plant at $71,536.50. Later in the year the Department learned that Concrete was occupying the land under the month-to-month tenancy. The Department then began private negotiations with Concrete’s landlord, resulting in a sale of the land to the State of California. Thereupon the Department sent to Concrete a “Landlord’s Notice of Termination” of the tenancy and demanded delivery of the land free of improvements. Concrete acceded to the demand and cleared the property. No eminent domain action was ever filed by the Department.
The batch plant, owned by the tenant Concrete with a right to remove it at the termination of the tenancy, was, as a matter of law,
personal property,
at least as between the parties.
(Teater
v.
Good Hope Dev. Corp.,
Code of Civil Procedure section 1248b, enacted in 1957, states: “Equipment designed for manufacturing or industrial purposes and installed for use in a fixed location shall be deemed a part of the realty for the purposes of condemnation, regardless of the method of installation.” Thus, although it was personal property, Concrete’s industrial equipment installed for use in a fixed location must here be deemed part of the realty for purposes of condemnation.
It appears to be conceded that if the Department had in fact exercised its power of eminent domain and commenced a condemnation action against the subject property, by virtue of section 1248b, Concrete would have been entitled to compensation for the " taking” of its batch plant.
*146 The Department, however, argues as follows: “Code of Civil Procedure, § 1248b enacted in 1957 did not create the right of an owner to be compensated for fixtures or improvements. It merely determined that certain industrial equipment would be ‘ deemed [a] part of the realty ’ regardless of the method of installation. In any event, by its terms the Code of Civil Procedure, § 1248b, definition applies only ‘ for the purposes of condemnation. ’ That is, the State must first file a condemnation suit. In the instant case no lawsuit was filed hy the State.” (Italics added.)
On July 27, 1966, the California Highway Commission adopted a resolution declaring the “public interest and necessity” required the acquisition of the subject property for highway purposes. (See Sts. & Hy. Code, § 102.) The resolution was conclusive evidence that such property was “necessary therefor.” (Sts. & Hy. Code, §103.) The Department thereby was authorized to “condemn [the property] for State highway purposes, under the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure relating to eminent domain.” (Sts. & Hy. Code, § 102.) Concrete and its landlord were notified that “right-of-way requirements for a portion of freeway Route 280, . . . required the clearing from the right-of-way of all improvements.” By virtue of California’s Constitution, article I, section 14, the Department was authorized to take immediate possession.
In
Hilltop Properties, Inc.
v.
State of California,
In the ease at bench the Department unequivocally expressed its intention to take the subject property for freeway purposes. It then appraised the plant’s equipment for the “purpose of condemnation.” We conclude that the Department acquired the real property in question, not as a result of bargaining in the open market, but rather in the broad exercise of its power to condemn private property for public use. Since the method used in obtaining the property constituted condemnation or its substantial equivalent, it is reasonable that Code of Civil Procedure section 1248b be applied. It follows, as prescribed by that section, that Concrete’s fixtures and equipment, although personal property, “shall be deemed a part of the realty for the purpose of condemnation. ’ ’
Our conclusion is consistent with the policy expressed by Traynor, J., concurring in
House
v.
Los Angeles County Flood Control Dist.,
A contention similar to that made by the Department here
*148
was recently rejected in
Redevelopment Agency
v.
Diamond Properties,
At the trial the agency argued that the tenant owned no compensable interest in the subject property, since its right to possession was neither defeated nor interfered with. The trial court agreed, but on appeal the judgment was reversed. The appellate court stated (pp. 318-319) : “Respondent cites numerous cases, . . . holding that where a tenant completes the term of his tenancy before the condemnor takes possession of the property the tenant has suffered no damage. ... [¶] However, the facts of the cited cases are not apposite, for we are not concerned with a lessee’s right to use the premises. It is not a possessory interest for which appellant claims the right to compensation; rather, appellant claims it had an interest in the property itself by virtue of section 1248b of the Code of Civil Procedure. The two-fold test delineated by that section is whether the equipment is designed for manufacturing or industrial purposes and installed for use in a fixed location. When these two conditions are met, such equipment ‘shall be deemed a part of the realty for the purposes of condemnation, regardless of the method of installation. ’ . . . [¶ ] ‘. . . Where the tenant owns personal property that measures up to section 1248b, such personal property being “deemed a part of the realty,” he has a compensable interest in the property which is separate and apart from his possessory rights. ’ ”
The Department relies principally on
Emerson
v.
City of Somerville,
The Department’s contention that Concrete, by “voluntarily” removing the batch plant,
waived
any claim in inverse condemnation, is without merit. The plant was dismantled and removed as a result of the Department’s notice that a freeway required removal of improvements from the land, followed by a “demand” that the land be so cleared. Concrete’s compliance cannot reasonably be treated as a waiver of its right to compensation. Waiver always rests on intent; it is the voluntary relinquishment of a known right.
(In re Elsholz,
The judgment is reversed.
Molinari, P. J., and Sims, J., concurred.
On July 2,1969, the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied August 13, 1969. Peters, J., and Mosk, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
