Greensboro-High Point Airport Authority v. Irvin

54 N.C. App. 355 | N.C. Ct. App. | 1981

ARNOLD, Judge.

The question presented by this appeal is whether, for the purpose of assessing the value of defendants’ land, the date of taking was the date the petition was filed or the date of trial, some five years after petition.

The Airport Authority’s position is that North Carolina cases consistently have held that the value of land taken by eminent domain “should be ascertained as of the date of the taking . . .” and that “the land is taken within the meaning of this principle when the proceeding is begun.” Western Carolina Power Co. v. Hayes, 193 N.C. 104, 107, 136 S.E. 353 (1927). Indeed it may be said that a policy favoring the date of petition as the date of taking has been developed by courts and that this policy holds a certain attraction in that it establishes a uniform valuation date. See Kings Mountain v. Goforth, 283 N.C. 316, 196 S.E. 2d 231 (1973); Ayden v. Lan*357caster, 197 N.C. 556, 150 S.E. 40 (1929). However, a close anaylsis of cases setting forth the rule that the date of taking in a Chapter 40 condemnation proceeding is the date the proceeding is commenced discloses, in our view, an underlying purpose for the rule. It is to prevent a windfall to the landowner whose property value is “enhanced by the purpose for which it is taken.” Ayden, supra at 559. In the case at bar there is no evidence that the value of defendants’ land was so enhanced or that it increased because of anything other than a general increase in property values during the five years between petition and trial. In Kings Mountain v. Goforth, supra, and Charlotte v. Spratt, 263 N.C. 656, 140 S.E. 2d 341 (1965), our Supreme Court adhered to the rule which was applied by the trial court: that the value of the condemned property is determined as of the date the condemnation action is commenced. In both Kings Mountain and Charlotte v. Spratt Chief Justice Bobbitt, writing for the Court, prefaced his statement of the rule with the adverb “ordinarily,” thus implying that some facts might justify imposition of a valuation date other than the date of petition. Such a fact situation is presented by the present case.

During the years of litigation between these parties the property owners have received no payment, and no interest has accrued on the value which was assessed by the Commissioners. Our economy unquestionably has experienced rampant inflation during this period of time resulting in a reduction in the value of the dollar. To permit the Authority to satisfy its obligation to the landowners in the value of 1980 dollars when the value of the land was measured by 1975 dollars of considerably greater value is patently unfair. The market value of the property, therefore, in the case at bar, must be ascertained as of the date of trial rather than the date of petition.

We are unimpressed by plaintiffs contention that the long delay here was due to defendants’ election to raise a “myriad” of defenses to the condemnation proceeding which resulted in four years of hearings and appeals.

Likewise, we refuse to accept plaintiffs argument that payment of money into court would have been futile. While it is true that such payment would not have given plaintiff the right to damage or irreversibly alter the land while the appeal was pending, it would have placed the plaintiff in possession for the purpose of establishing the valuation date.

*358New trial.

Judges VAUGHN and WEBB concur.