The questions now reserved to us arise by virtue of a motion of the plaintiff asking for an award of additional interest on a judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff in a proceeding in eminent domain brought pursuant to General Statutes § 13a-73. The plaintiff appealed to the Superior
The questions reserved for the advice of this court are three in number and are set forth in the footnote.
2
In the view which we take of the case,
Basically, it is the position of the defendant that payment of the judgment within a reasonable time after it has been rendered fulfils the constitutional requirement for payment of just compensation because otherwise “[i]t is impossible to conceive the ability of the . . . State ... to make payment to the owner simultaneously with the instant of taking of the property or at the time of judgment being entered by the court” and that “[statutory requirements for making payment as well as the bureaucratic process preclude such simultaneous exchange of interests and values at the time of entering judgment.”
The issue in this case of a failure to award additional interest from the time of judgment to the date of payment is one of constitutional dimension.
3
A statutory rule for compensation cannot he pro
Just compensation means the full, perfect and exact equivalent, in money, for the property taken.
Monongahela Navigation Co.
v.
United States,
A landowner, if there is no fault for delay on his
The defendant is obligated to pay interest to the plaintiff on the additional damages awarded to the plaintiff in accordance with the judgment from the date of judgment to the date of payment in the amount of $1217.06, the amount of interest for that period of time as stipulated to by the parties.
We answer question one in the affirmative. Questions two and three will not be answered.
No costs will he taxed in this court in favor of either party.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
Although, the questions raised could have been decided by the trial court and would have afforded the relief sought at the trial level at an earlier time, we have decided to accept the reservation based upon the stipulation of the parties in order to avoid further delay in the determination of an issue regarding postjudgment interest in condemnation cases which is a recurring question for determination in cases involving the defendant’s exercise of the power of eminent domain. See
Barr
v.
First Taxing
District,
“1. Is the defendant obligated to pay to the plaintiff interest upon the additional damages in the amount of $228,200.00 awarded to the plaintiff in accordance with the judgment of the Superior Court for the period from October 7, 1966, the date of judgment, to November 8, 1966, the date of payment?
“2.
If the period for which the plaintiff is entitled to said interest is shorter in duration than the October 7, 1966, to November 8, 1966, period, is the defendant obligated to pay to the plaintiff
“3. If the period for which the plaintiff is entitled to said interest is shorter in duration than the October 7, 1966, to November 8, 1966, period, or the October 11, 1966, to November 8, 1966, period, is the defendant obligated to pay to the plaintiff interest upon the additional damages in the amount of $228,200.00 awarded to the plaintiff in accordance with the judgment of the Superior Court for the period from October 13, 1966, the date the certified copies of the assessment of the Commissioner and of the judgment were received by the Comptroller, to November 8, 1966, the date of payment?”
There is nothing in the record before us to show that there was any delay due to the fault of the landowner so as to preclude the payment of additional interest. See 27 Am. Jur. 2d 120, Eminent Domain, § 305.
