Lead Opinion
delivered the Opinién of the Court.
We granted certiorari to review the court of appeals' opinions in E-470 Public Highway Authority v. Tower 88 Co., No. 97CA1912, (Colo.App. Mar. 4, 1999) (not selected for official publication), and E-470 Public Highway Authority v. 455 Co.,
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
In December 1995, the Authority initiated condemnation proceedings to acquire property owned by Tower 88 and 455 Company for use in the construction of the E-470 highway. Tower 88 owned approximately 1,250 acres of undeveloped land west of Denver International Airport in Adams County. The Authority condemned a ribbon of land, running from north to south through the middle of the property, consisting of approximately 141 acres. The Authority constructed an interchange at 96th Avenue, allowing access from Tower 88's remaining property to the E-470 highway.
455 Company owned approximately 463 acres of undeveloped land also west of Denver International Airport in Adams County. The Authority condemned a ribbon of land, running from southeast to northwest through the middle of the property, consisting of approximately 95 acres. The Authority constructed an interchange at 104th Avenue, allowing access to the E-470 highway from the north and south ends of 455 Company's remaining property via the 104th Avenue interchange and the 96th Avenue interchange.
The Authority and the landowners entered into a stipulation for possession of the property, leaving the issue of the amount of compensation due to the landowners for trial. Prior to trial, the landowners filed motions in limine seeking to exclude all evidence of any "special benefits"
In the companion cases of Tower 88 Co., No. 97CA1912, slip op. at 2, and 455 Co.,
The court noted that although special benefits to 'the remainder normally may be set off against a condemnation award, "there can be no offset where the remaining property is subject to an assessment for those same benefits." Id. The court stated that the purpose of this rule is "to avoid the inequity of forcing the condemnee to pay twice for the same benefits, which would in effect constitute double taxation and would deny the con-demnee its constitutionally guaranteed just compensation." Id. .
In analyzing the issue, the court noted that there was evidence that the landowner would be paying for the benefit of being near Highway E-470 ind its interchanges when it paid the HEF. Id. Therefore, the court concluded that it was not an abuse of discretion for the trial court to preclude the Authority from introducing evidence of special benefits. Id.
The Authority petitioned this court for review of the court of appeals' decisions. We granted certiorari review
The Authority argues that the trial court abused its discretion by excluding evidence of special benefits because the HEF is a speculative fee due to the fact that the landowners may never pay the fee. Additionally, the Authority contends that revenues generated by the HEF are not used to pay for capital improvements that benefit the property. The Authority contends that the landowners' property has been immediately benefited by the construction of Highway E-470 and the interchanges and that the existence of the speculative HEF should not prevent the Authority from introducing evidence of the amount of special benefits accruing to the property as a result of the construction of the highway.
The landowners contend that the trial court properly excluded the Authority's evidence of special benefits because allowing the Authority to introduce this evidence would require the landowners to "pay twice" for the same benefit and, thus, would deny them their just compensation for their property. The landowners' argument is based on their contention that they will pay for the special benefits to the property when they pay the HEF and, therefore, it would be unfair to allow their compensation award also to be offset by evidence of these special benefits.
After reviewing the record and considering the parties' arguments, we conclude for the reasons stated below that the trial court abused its discretion by precluding the Authority from presenting evidence of special benefits.
A. Standard of Review
We consider these cases in the context of reviewing the trial court's grant of the landowners' pretrial motions in limine. The trial court's rulings excluded all evidence of special benefits from consideration at trial as a matter of law. The trial court relied on a principle of law adopted in other jurisdictions holding that no evidence of special benefits to the remaining property resulting from the improvement can be presented in a compensation proceeding when the government has levied a "special assessment" for the same improvement. See Oro Loma Sanitary Dist. v. Valley,
Findings of fact are generally reviewed under a clear error or abuse of discretion standard, whereas conclusions of law are generally reviewed under a de novo standard. See Valdez v. People,
The Colorado Rules of Evidence strongly favor the admission of material evidence. See People v. Quintana,
B. Just Compensation
1. Colorado Law
Article II, section 15 of the Colorado Constitution provides, in relevant part, "Private property shall not be taken or damaged, for public or private use, without just compensation." When private property is condemned for a public purpose, the property owner is entitled to recover "an amount equal to the loss which he has suffered by reason of the taking, and nothing more." City of Englewood v. Weist,
2. Trial Court Proceedings
The Authority sought to introduce evidence of special benefits accruing to the landowners' property as provided for by section 38-1-114(2)(d). Both the Authority's appraiser and the landowners' appraiser agreed that the landowners' property had been specially benefited by construction of the E-470 highway; they differed only regarding the amount of special benefits. The Authority's appraiser determined that Tower 88's remaining property was specially benefited in the amount of $1,414,700 and that 455 Company's remaining property was specially benefited in the amount of $597,000. Tower 88's appraiser calculated the special benefits to its property as $464,801 and 455 Company's appraiser determined its special benefits to be $126,295.
Before trial, the landowners moved for exclusion of any evidence of special benefits on the theory that admission of this evidence would require the landowners to "pay twice" for the same benefits because of the existence of the HEF. The landowners based this argument on authority from other jurisdictions holding that no evidence of special benefits to the remaining property resulting from the improvement can be presented in a compensation proceeding when the government has levied a "special assessment" for the same improvement. See Oro Loma Sanitary Dist.,
In reaching its decision to exclude the special benefits evidence,
3. "Special Assessment" v. "Special Fee"
Initially, we disagree with the trial court's characterization, based on Bloom, of the HEF as a "special assessment." The trial court's characterization of the HEF as a "special assessment" is important because authority from other jurisdictions, relied on by the landowners, holds that only a "special assessment" for the same improvement can prevent the introduction of special benefits in a compensation proceeding.
In Bloom we considered whether a transportation utility fee imposed by the City of Fort Collins constituted an invalid tax in violation of the uniformity requirement of article X, section 8 of the Colorado Constitution. Id. at 305. In considering this question, we discussed the difference between a "special fee" and a "special assessment." Id. at 308-309. We described a "special fee" as "a charge imposed on persons or property for the purpose of defraying the cost of a particular governmental service." Id. at 308. In contrast, we stated that a "special assessment ... must specifically benefit or enhance the value of the premises assessed in an amount at least equal to the burden imposed. The funds generated by a special assessment cannot be diverted to other purposes, since the imposition of the assessment upon a particular class of taxpayers can be justified only to the extent that such taxes are equivalent to special benefits conferred upon those taxpayers." Id. (internal quotation marks omitted, citations omitted).
Analyzing the transportation utility fee at issue in that case, we noted that the City of Fort Collins imposed the fee upon owners of developed lots fronting city streets "for the purpose of providing revenues for the main
Our decision in Bloom does not support the trial court's characterization of the HEF as a "special assessment." Rather, the record here indicates that the HEF will be used primarily for debt reduction and to defray the costs of future operational expenses associated with increased traffic burdens. Initial projections estimate that the revenues generated by the HEF will constitute only approximately one-quarter of one percent of the total construction costs of the E-470 highway. As such, the evidence in the record more closely supports the characterization of the HEF as a "special fee" under the analysis in Bloom.
4. The Highway Expansion Fee
More importantly, we do not find the characterization of the HEF as either a "special assessment" or as a "special fee" to be determinative or necessary for the resolution of this issue. Whether the HEF is labeled as a "special fee" or as a "special assessment," the mere existence of the HEF is not, in and of itself, an adequate basis for excluding all evidence of special benefits for two reasons: (1) the fee is speculative; and (2) the fee does not charge for the same benefits as those the Authority sought to introduce into evidence in the condemnation proceedings.
a. Speculative Nature
The HEF is a speculative fee that the landowners may never be charged. The HEF is a building fee that will only be collected if and when the landowners choose to develop the property. The legislative declaration to the Public Highway Authority Law reveals the General Assembly's intent to phase out all revenue-raising fees (such as the HEF) other than tolls paid by drivers as soon as the toll revenue is sufficient to cover debt reduction and highway maintenance expenses. See § 48-4-502(1)(d). As such, it cannot be said with certainty that the landowners will be subject to the HEF. If the landowners do not develop their property. before the HEF is phased out, they will never be required to pay these fees.
Although we agree generally with the principle expressed by other jurisdictions that no evidence of special benefits to the remaining property resulting from the improvement can be presented in a compensation proceeding when the government has levied a special assessment for the same improvement, we find that principle inapplicable to the facts before us because of the speculative nature of the HEF. In the cases cited from other jurisdictions that have applied this general principle, either the landowner had already been assessed for the cost of the improvement, or it was certain that the landowner would be assessed for the special benefits accruing as a result of the improvement. See. Oro: Loma Sanitary Dist.,
b. Different Benefits
Even assuming that the landowners will be subject to the HEF in the future, the HEF will not charge for the same benefits as those excluded by the trial court in the condemnation proceedings. We previously have held that the special benefits determined in a condemnation proceeding are not identical to the benefits that may justify a later assessment. In Weist we held that a determination in a condemnation proceeding that a property owner received no special benefits was not res judicata in a later proceeding on the issue of whether the improvements benefited the landowner and justified a special assessment. See
Turning to the facts before us, we note that only the third component of the HEF collection methodology is arguably benefits-based. As noted above, the HEF is a development fee that is paid by landowners when they build on their property. The HEF is assessed based on three independent factors: (1) the type of development (e.g., residential, office, retail, industrial); (2) trip generation/traffic impact; and (8) proximity to the interchange. The first two factors that determine the amount of this fee are completely unrelated to the special benefits evidence the trial court excluded because the Authority's proposed special benefits evidence is solely the added value to the land resulting from the close proximity of the E-470 highway and its interchanges. Therefore, the landowners' assertion that the HEF will charge for the same benefits as the special benefits that the trial court excluded is erroneous. See also Sackman, supra, § 8A.02[T] ("[Wlhere a part of a tract is taken for a public use, the mere fact that the remainder may thereafter be subject to assessment does not constitute an element of damage in a condemnation proceeding.").
III. CONCLUSION
The commissioners should have had the opportunity at trial to consider all parties' evidence of the special benefits accruing to the remaining property. The commissioners' function in a condemnation proceeding is to hear the disputed evidence and then make a factual finding as to the amount of compensation due to the landowner. See § 88-1-101. As noted above, the Colorado Rules of Evidence strongly favor the admission of all material evidence. See Quintana,
Therefore, we hold that the trial court abused its discretion by granting the landowners' motions in limine to exclude all evidence of special benefits accruing to the landowners' property as a result of the E-470 highway construction. Accordingly, we reverse the opinions of the court of appeals in Tower 88 Co. and 455 Co. and remand for a new trial in both cases to allow all parties to present evidence of special benefits.
Notes
. "Special benefits" are defined as "those which accrue directly to the residue as a result of the construction or the improvement and which directly and particularly benefit that residue, as opposed to benefitting the public generally." Western Slope Gas Co. v. Lake Eldora Corp.,
. The Public Highway Authority Law authorizes the Authority to "establish, and from time to time increase or decrease, a highway expansion fee and to collect such fee from persons who own property located within the boundaries of the authority who apply for a building permit for improvements on such property." § 43-4-506(1)(G), 11 C.R.S. (1999).
. This award consisted of $759,000 as fair market value for the property taken, plus $297,500 as damages to the residue.
. This award consisted of $1,185,937.80 as fair market value for the property taken, plus $293,601.29 as damages to the residue.
. The Tower 88 Co. court adopted the 455 Co. court's analysis without comment on the issue before us in an unpublished opinion; therefore, all citations are to the 455 Co. case.
. We granted certiorari on the following issues:
No. 99SC302 (The 455 Company):
1. Whether, in the absence of any showing that any funds from the Authority's E-470 Highway Expansion Fee were used to pay for the 96th Avenue and 104th Avenue interchanges, the court of appeals erred by prohibiting the E-470 Public Highway Authority from presenting evidence of special benefits from the two interchanges on grounds that 455 Company may have to "pay twice" for the interchanges by imposition of the Highway Expansion Fee.
2. Whether 455 Company received a windfall by the court of appeals decision that the existence of the Highway Expansion Fee prohibits the E-470 Public Highway Authority from presenting evidence of over $597,000 in special benefits to 455 Company's remainder as a result of E-470's construction of the 96th and 104th Avenue interchanges.
No. 99SC303 (Tower 88):
1. Whether, in the absence of any showing that any funds from the Authority's E-470 Highway Expansion Fee were used to pay for the 96th Avenue interchange, the court of appeals erred by prohibiting the E-470 Pub*22 lic Highway Authority from presenting evidence of special benefits from the interchange on grounds that Tower 88 may have to "pay twice" for the interchange by imposition of the Highway Expansion Fee.
2. Whether Tower 88 received a windfall by the court of appeals decision that the existence of the Highway Expansion Fee prohibits the E-470 Public Highway Authority from presenting evidence of over $597,000 in special benefits to Tower 88's remainder as a result of E-470's construction of the 96th Avenue interchange.
. The trial court's grant of the landowners' motions resulted in the following jury instruction being given to the commissioners (the language omitted from the model instruction, CJI-Civ. 4th 36:4, is bracketed in bold):
You are also to determine the amount of com-pensable damages, if any, [and the value of special benefits, if any,] to the residue of the property owned by [Tower 88 /455 Company], and, after having determined any such damages [or benefits], you are to state the amount of any damages, [and the amount of any benefits] in your certificate.
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Any damages [or benefits} are to be measured by the effects the acquisition ¢f, and the expected uses of, the property actually taken has on the reasonable market value of the residue. Any damages are to be measured by the decrease, if any, in the reasonable market value of the residue, that is, the difference between the reasonable market value of the residue before the property actually taken is acquired and the reasonable market value of the residue after the property actually taken has been acquired. Any damages which may result to the residue from what is expected to be done on land other than land actually taken from the respondent and any damages to the residue which are shared in common with the community at large are not to be considered. [Similarly, any benefits to the residue are to be measured by the increase, if any, in the reasonable market value of the residue due to the construction of the E-470 highway. For anything to constitute a special benefit, however, it must result directly in a benefit to the residue and be peculiar to it. Any benefits which may result to the residue but which are shared in common with the community at large are not to be considered.] Nothing should be considered as a factor of [either] damages [or benefits] unless you find that it increases or decreases the reasonable market value of the residue. Any finding of damages [or benefits] to the residue shall not affect your determination of the value of the property taken. [You are to determine any damages or benefits as separate, independent items. You should not attempt to balance the two. Any adjustment or balancing must be done by the court.]
. Whether the landowners are entitled to a credit against a future HEF assessment if benefits are offset against the condemnation award is an issue we do not reach.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The Colorado Constitution requires just compensation for all property taken by the government according to its eminent domain power. See Colo. Const. art. II, § 15. Since the E-470 Highway Authority has the statutory right to collect a fee from the landowners based in part on the benefits that the Highway confers upon the property, the Authority may not also seek to have the value of the property reduced by those same benefits.
I.
In granting the motion in limine in this case, the trial court concluded that the HEF was based "on the percentage of traffic and the likelihood of future development based on access and proximity to E-470 interchanges" and "on future benefits to the property." Therefore, it construed the HEF as a special assessment under Bloom v. City of Fort Collins,
The court of appeals affirmed the decision of the trial court. See E-470 Public Highway Auth. v. 455 Co.,
I would affirm both the trial court and the court of appeals for two reasons. First, the trial court made a finding of fact that is amply supported by the record. , Second, the trial court's legal analysis conforms to that required by the applicable statutes and case law. .
A.
In cases such as this, the supreme court defers to the trial court's findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous and not supported by the record. See Arapahoe County Bd. of Equalization v. Podoll,
B.
Further, I independently agree with the trial court's legal conclusions concerning the proper understanding of the HEF. Fundamentally, the question must be whether the landowners are being asked to pay twice for the same benefits: once through a deduction from just compensation awarded for the taking, and again through the statutorily authorized HEF. -At its core, this determination requires a thorough examination of the HEF to decide if it is designed to siphon off some of the appreciation of the landowners' property caused by the construction of E-470 near the property
IL
A.
Section 48-4-506(1)(j), 11 CRS. (1999) permits the Authority "[tlo establish, and from time to time increase or decrease, a highway expansion fee and collect such fee from persons who own property located within the boundaries of the authority." Pursu
Governments impose special assessments for particular improvements that benefit the assessed property, and the assessment cannot exceed the land's increase in value. See Bloom,
I conclude that the HEF more closely resembles a special assessment than a special fee. The HEF assessment is based in part on the land's proximity to E-470 and the nature of the development on the site. The collected fees will be used solely for purposes of constructing, financing, operating, or maintaining E-470. A portion of the fees go toward paying for E-470 itself, and other portions toward its operation and maintenance. Hence, the HEF is assessed based on enhancement to a particular property and the proceeds go toward the very structure creating the increase in value, and not toward "the cost of a particular governmental service." Id. at 308.
Regardless, I do not find the characterization of the HEF as either a fee or assessment to be dispositive. Certainly, these terms may have different meanings in a condemnation setting, than in Bloom, a tax case. The Authority calculates the fee based in part on the benefits attributed to a particular parcel, and collects it to capture some of the appreciation to the landowner's property. The Authority apparently presumes that those sites closest to E-470 will benefit most. Appraisers use proximity to interchanges and other similar information to determine special benefits,. As a result, if the compensation paid the landowners were reduced by the special benefits to the property at issue, the landowners would be subject to double payment for the same benefit.
B.
Although the landowners may escape the HEF if they choose not to develop their land until the Authority lifts the HEF, I do not attach any significance to this issue. The General Assembly has authorized the imposition of the HEF by statute. Undoubtedly, the Authority will collect the fee if it remains in force when the land is developed.
Furthermore, both the Authority's appraiser and the landowners' appraisers valued the property according to its highest and best use. Both parties are assuming the property will be developed. In fact, the HEF is likely to reduce the market value of the land. The theoretical ability to sit on the land until the fee is eliminated, if it ever is, offers little consolation to a landowner being penalized at the time of condemnation for the benefits associated with those development rights.
C.
The special assessment issue in City of Englewood v. Weist,
At the subsequent hearing on the special assessment, Weist protested the propriety of any assessment on his property because the trial court had determined in the condemna
In Weist, as in the case on which it largely relied, City of Baldwin Park v. Stoskus,
Of course ... since the benefits which flow from the improvement are paid for in the - form of a special assessment, the municipality may not seek to tax those benefits a second time by deducting their value from the award of severance damages in the form of "special benefits."
City of Baldwin Park,
IIL.
Under the majority's holding, properties neighboring those at issue pay considerably less for the construction of the thoroughfare than do the condemnees. All development within the E-470 corridor must pay the HEF, albeit at varying levels, but only the condemnees pay not only the fee, but also suffer the deduction from their condemnation award. They thus pay an additional charge for the special benefits to their remaining land. As the Supreme Court of Minnesota eloquently opined:
if a special assessment were to be levied for those same special benefits, the landowner who had property taken might well be required to pay an amount in excess of that required of landowners who did not lose land in the condemnation proceedings. Under the cireumstances the cost of the improvements would be disproportionately assessed because a person whose land was actually taken and who had suffered damages as a result of that taking would be required to pay more for the improvements to the area than his neighbor whose land was not taken. Such a rule would penalize the individual owner whose property has been taken.
City of St Louis Park,
Because I would defer to the trial court's findings and conclusions, and would find that under these circumstances an offset to the compensation award for special benefits creates a situation where the landowners could be required to pay twice for the same benefit, I respectfully dissent.
. The Authority published a marketing document on the E-470 project which stated that "as property values in the E-470 corridor jump substantially due to construction of the highway, a portion of that increase will be 'captured' through taxes and fees paid by developers and landowners." The same publication explained. that the growth spurred by E-470 will mean a 10-fold increase in property values and a significant jump in retail sales. Since E-470 will create much of these increases, it's fair that a portion be "captured" to help pay for the highway. This can happen through impact fees ... paid by developers and builders....
