Land Clearance for Redevelopment Authority of Kansas City, Missouri, filed a petition to condemn for redevelopment purposes respondents’ “leased fee interest” in a parcel of ground in downtown Kansas City known as the Lakenan Tract, owned by respondents in various undivided interests. The tract underlies the building most recently occupied in part by Dillard’s Department Store, before that occupied by Macy’s and earlier yet by John Taylor Dry Goods Company. Respondents’ fee in the land is subject to a ground lease originally entered into by John Taylor Dry Goods Company in 1947, which by mesne assignments has come to rest in Real Properties Holding, Inc. Real Properties Holding, Inc., is a mere nominee, holding the leasehold interest for the benefit of M-Downtown Properties Company. M-Downtown has been chosen as redeveloper of the prop-' erty including the Lakenan Tract, and it is for the benefit of M-Downtown that the condemnation proceeding has been initiated.
The sole question in the ease is whether the condemning authority before it filed its eminent domain proceeding had made a reasonable good-faith attempt to secure the property by negotiated treaty with respondents. Respondents claimed it had not made a reasonable offer for the property sought to be condemned, and that the trial court was therefore without jurisdiction of the eminent domain proceeding. Section 523.010, RSMo 1986, requires the condemning authority to allege and show that “such [condemning authority] and the owners cannot agree upon the proper compensation to be paid”. This showing is jurisdictional. State ex rel. Weatherby Advertising Co., Inc. v. Conley,
The trial court held an evidentiary hearing on the motion to dismiss, and ruled that the condemning authority’s offer of $190,-000 for respondents’ leased fee interest was unreasonably and unrealistically low. The trial court therefore dismissed the eminent domain proceeding, and Land Clearance has appealed.
We hold that the $190,000 offer was a reasonable offer for respondents’ leased fee interest in the Lakenan Tract, and that the trial court erroneously ruled that it was without jurisdiction to proceed with the eminent domain proceeding.
The only valuation witness on the hearing on the motion to dismiss was Kevin K. Nunnink, a real estate appraiser of unchallenged credentials. He testified that he had appraised the respondents’ leased fee interest at the request of Land Clearance and had fixed its value at $190,000. He had arrived at that valuation by the following method: He had computed the present value of the rentals to be paid in the future. The rentals to be received by respondents are $17,500 per year through the year 2012, then $20,000 per year until 2026 when the lease with its optional exten
None of Nunnink’s assumptions, his computations or his methodology is challenged by respondents. Respondents argued to the trial court, and argue here, that Land Clearance’s offer should have been, at a minimum, the present value of the tract as determined by Nunnink, or $556,820. In other words, the offer should have been for the present value of the combined interests of the landowner respondents and the holder of the leasehold interest — even though the condemning authority already owns the leasehold interest by assignment and does not need to acquire it by eminent domain. Respondents recognize that this would involve bringing the owner of the leasehold interest into the lawsuit as a party, and that there would then be a proceeding for the apportionment of the condemnation damages between the fee owner and the holder of the leasehold.
If the condemning authority were condemning the entire fee in the property (the fee including both the leased fee and the leasehold interest), then the condemning authority would be held to pay in damages the reasonable market value of the whole. It would pay a single sum; it would then be up to the landlord and the tenant to settle the division thereof by agreement or by litigation. See Section 523.053, RSMo 1986.
It is not required that a condemning authority condemn the entire fee in a parcel of land. It need not condemn more than it needs. This principle has been recognized in numerous of our own cases, as well as those of other jurisdictions. Missouri Public Service Co. v. Argenbright,
Respondents say that if their leased fee interest can be condemned separately from the leasehold interest they are deprived of the contractual right to arbitrate
Judgment reversed and cause remanded to the trial court for further proceedings.
All concur.
Notes
. In the present case the lease provides for termination of the lease "[i]n the event that the fee title to the entire demised premises" is condemned, and provides for apportionment of the damages between landowner and tenant by arbitration. The lease would terminate by operation of law upon condemnation, even without such a provision in the lease. Union Electric Co. v. Slay Bulk Terminals, Inc.,
