231 N.E.2d 476 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1967
The issue in this case is the date of take for purposes of valuation in an appropriation case filed by the Director of Highways. The Director of Highways is appealing a verdict and judgment for $47,052.11 on behalf of the property owners as compensation for property appropriated in fee simple.
The resolution and finding, which was filed on September 24, 1965, in addition to other requirements, set forth that the appellees, property owners, pursuant to Section
After vacation of the property, but prior to trial, a third party entered upon the premises and demolished the structure located thereon. This third party was acting in its own behalf and not as an agent of the Director of Highways or of the property owners.
On February 16, 1967, the cause came on for trial in the Court of Common Pleas of Trumbull County. Prior to empaneling the jury, the trial court heard testimony for the purpose of determining the date of take. It was the contention of the Director of Highways that the date of take should be established as being the date of trial, for the claimed reason that the Highway Department had never taken possession of the premises. Thereupon, the trial court ruled that the date of take was December 22, 1965, being sixty days subsequent to service of the resolution and finding.
The appellees, during the trial, were allowed to give testimony of valuation as of December 22, 1965. The trial court excluded entirely the fair market value opinion testimony of appellant's appraisers, such opinion testimony as proffered showing that these appraisers appraised vacant land only as of the date of trial.
The Director of Highways, in pursuit of the construction of highway facilities, has the power to appropriate private property under Section
"* * * As a general rule, there is a taking of property within the meaning of the constitutional provision, `nor shall private *171 property be taken for public use, without just compensation,' where the act involves an actual interference with, or disturbance of, property rights, as distinguished from injuries which are merely consequential or incidental, and as distinguished further from trivial or insignificant takings or interferences." 26 American Jurisprudence 2d 823, Section 157.
The institution by the director of the mandate to vacate under Section
"It is not necessary that property should be absolutelytaken, in the narrowest sense of that word, to bring the case within the protection of this constitutional provision. There may be such serious interruption to the common and necessary use of property as will be equivalent to a taking, within the meaning of the Constitution." Pumpelly v. Green Bay Co.,
The foregoing case was one of the authorities relied upon by the Ohio Supreme Court to arrive at the determination that:
"Any actual and material interference with such rights, which causes special and substantial injury to the owner, is a taking of his property." Mansfield v. Balliett,
Recently, the Ohio Supreme Court approached the same question in the case of Director of Highways v. Olrich,
"Had the order to vacate been grounded upon the prospective taking for highway purposes, we would have to consider the rule in City of Cleveland v. Carcione,
In the Carcione case,
"* * * Under such circumstances, the time as of which the evaluation of the property should be made must comport *172 with the peculiar facts and circumstances of the case so as to assure the owner of the property compensation in money which is just as contemplated by the Constitution of Ohio."
Under the facts and circumstances in the instant case, when the director chose to order the appellees to vacate their property pursuant to the mandatory provisions of Section
We hold that when the Director of Highways files a resolution and finding in the Common Pleas Court for the appropriation of property on which a structure is situated, and the owner or occupant of such structure is ordered to vacate such structure within sixty days after service of notice pursuant to Sections
Judgment affirmed.
JONES, P. J., and LYNCH, J. *173