Appellants Lange, et al, in Oсtober 1970, brought an inverse condemnation action alleging there had been a “de facto” taking of their property by the State of Washington, Department of Highways. Approximately 1 *586 year later, the State filed a condemnation action to acquire appellants’ property for highway purposes. The trial court dismissed the inverse condemnation claim and awarded apрellants compensation based upon the value of their property at the time of trial in the eminent domain proceeding. The issue presented is whether, under the facts of this case, appellants’ property is to be valued as of a date earlier than the time of trial. We hold that it may, reverse the trial court judgment, and remand for further findings.
Appellant Lange has been engaged for 25 years in the business of purchasing, subdividing, and developing real property into residential building sites. The assemblage of 15 parcels, which is the subject of this appeal, was acquired by Lange in several independent purchases between 1958 and 1965. In preparation for the development of this land, appellant Lange petitioned for and had the property annexed to the local sеwer district in 1966. He also imposed on all of the land, by deed conveyance, mutual easements for sewer, water, and access. Some surveying and grading of streets over a portion of the area was undertaken as well.
Late in 1966, Lange noticed surveying engineers on his land and was advised that they were under contract with the State, which proposed to run a highway through Lange’s property. In Februаry 1967, the State Highway Department delivered to the City of Des Moines, to which appellants’ land was eventually annexed, an aerial photograph with an overlay showing the proposed route of state highway SR 509. In May 1967, the department issued a press release, published in the Seattle Times, stating that federal and state funds were to be used for acquisition of land along the proposed routе. On May 25, 1967, in response to an inquiry by Lange, the highway department stated that the proposed highway would affect virtually all of the Lange property and that the present schedule called for right-of-way purchases beginning in late 1968.
On July 6, 1967, the State Highway Department held a public hearing for route corridor selection at which depart *587 ment officials advised the public and Mr. Lange, who was present, thаt property acquisition, including the Lange property, would be completed in 1969. In March 1969, the department issued a proposed design and limited access proposal. At a public hearing in May 1969, the department indicated there would be a delay in acquisition of appellants’ property until some undetermined date. On July 22, 1969, the highway commission entered an order approving the design, a сopy of which was received by appellant Lange on October 9. In October 1969, the State purchased a large tract a few blocks north of appellants’ property for a price of $431,071.50. In late October, the highway was approved as an advance right-of-way project. On December 1, 1969, the State issued its formal notice under RCW 47.28.025 and 47.28.026 describing the location and width of the prоposed highway. This notice was filed with the county auditor on January 16,1970.
For several months in 1970, appellants communicated with the highway department about the schedule for acquisition of their property. Appraisal of the Lange property began on September 9, 1970. On October 30, 1970, appellants instituted their inverse condemnation action. Between February 25 and July 15, 1971, the highway project was temрorarily stopped due to withdrawal of approval by the City of Des Moines. On September 29, 1971, the condemnation process began and a notice of condemnation was filed in superior court in early October 1971. On November 30, 1971, the State paid possession and use money in the sum of $114,000 into the registry of the court. A consolidation of the inverse condemnation and condemnation actions was stipulated and the case came on for trial without a jury on September 25, 1972. In its memorandum opinion, the trial court ruled that no “taking” of appellants’ property occurred prior to the institution of condemnation proceedings by the State and that the valuation date was the date of trial. As compensation for the appropriation of their property, appеllants were awarded $134,911.
Appellants contend that the cumulative effect of the ac
*588
tions of the State in surveying, issuing press releases, acquiring nearby property, and implementing its plans for the highway amounted to “condemnation blight” and a “taking” of their property in December 1969.
See
4
Nichols on Eminent Domain
§ 12.3151 [5] (3d rev. ed. 1975). In support of their position, appellants rely upon
Drakes Bay Land Co. v. United States,
However, these conclusions of themselves do not require affirmance of the trial court’s judgment nor should they exhaust our inquiry in cases such as this. When private property is taken for public use, our cоnstitution re
*589
quires the payment of “just compensation.” Const, art. 1, § 16. In the scheme established by the legislature for the procurement of land by the State, the amount of compensation required to satisfy the constitutional mandate is a matter for judicial determination. RCW 8.04.092, 8.04.110. In discharging this obligation, the courts must be guided by considerations of fairness and justice. “The constitutional requirement of just compensation dеrives as much content from the basic equitable principles of fairness . . . as its does from technical concepts of property law.”
United States v. Fuller,
It is well established that the condemnee is entitled to be put in the same position monetarily as he would have occupied had his property not been taken.
Almota Farmers Elevator & Warehouse Co. v. United States,
We have repeatedly recognized that “property,” as used in the constitutional phrase, encompasses mаny rights.
“Property in a thing consists not merely in its ownership and possession, but in the unrestricted right of use, enjoyment and disposal. Anything which destroys any of these elements of property, to that extent destroys the property itself. The substantial value of property lies in its use. If the right of use be denied, the value of the property is annihilated and ownership is rendered a barren right.”
Ackerman v. Port of Seattle,
In addition, in determining the extent of protection afforded by the just compensation provision, the particular facts of the сase are significant.
Wandermere Corp. v. State,
In the usual eminent domain proceeding, the property is valued as of the date of the trial.
State v. Williams,
It is similarly widely recognized that any decrease in property value attributable to the project for which the eminent domain proceeding is instituted is to be disregarded in computing just compensation.
United States v. Virginia Elec. & Power Co., supra; Tharp v. Urban Renewal & Community Dev. Agency,
In
Matlow Corp. v. State,
36 App. Div. 2d 461,
In this case, the State acknowledges the principle established by these and other cases when it states that the value of the property is to be estimated without reduction for depreciation caused by the actions of the condemnor in anticipation of the improvement.
See
Annot.,
In some cases, the owner of property taken for public use must suffer the loss occasioned by a market decline prior to appropriation by the government.
See Klopping v. Whittier,
The loss was a direct consequence of the State’s action since after December 1969 the marketability of appellants’ land was substantially impaired. The record indicates that this marketability was affected by the surveys, public announcements, and hearings, followed by the purchase of a tract north of appellants’ parcel in October 1969. On De *594 cember 1, 1969, the State, pursuant to RCW 47.28.025, executed formal notice establishing the location of the proposed highway, including most of appellants’ land. Under RCW 47.28.026 no owner of property within the limits of such a highway may erect any buildings or make any improvements on that land. The undisputed evidence indicates that after November 1969 appellants сould not effectively sell the property as building sites, could not proceed with development of the property, and could not borrow money on the property. The property had no income potential, yet appellants were obligated to pay property taxes.
Such a result was clearly foreseeable in this situation because the property was vacant and in the process of being developed. Appellant Lange had been engaged for 25 years in the business of developing real property for residential building sites. Prior to any knowledge of the highway project on the part of appellant or the public, appellant had his property annexed to the local sewer district, undertook to survey and grade streets over a portion of the tract, and imposed by deed conveyance on all of the land, mutual easements for sewer, water, and access. Given appellant’s business, his property was akin to an inventory of goods. In these respects, appellant occupies a position different from that of the typical owner of a house or store which is the subject of condemnation аctivity. The home or store owner does not purchase the land with the sole objective of developing and marketing the land and will not take major steps to accomplish this objective. The impairment of marketability, financing, and income is not as clearly foreseeable in such circumstances. The home or store owner may suffer from a general market decline but his sole purрose is not destroyed, since he may continue to use the property, derive some income or benefit from it, and thus moderate the market decline.
See Swampscott v. Remis,
In this case, the effect of the condemnation activity was *595 to chain appellant to his land in a falling real estate market. Once the Stаte manifested its unequivocal intent to appropriate the Lange property, appellants were precluded from exercising their business judgment and selling the property before the market fell further. Moreover, appellants were precluded from taking any steps to counteract the market decline by making improvements on the land or otherwise changing its use. Thus, appеllants were deprived of the most important incidents of ownership, the rights to use and alienate property. In addition, because the condemnation did in fact take place, appellants were prevented from holding their property, as other owners would be able to do, until economic conditions improved and market values rose again.
Under these circumstances thе loss suffered is so closely connected to the condemnation itself that our constitutional concern for truly just compensation requires valuation in an eminent domain proceeding at a time earlier than the date of trial. This conclusion is necessary if the condemnee is to be placed in the same position monetarily as he would have occupied had his property not been taken.
Cf. Almota Farmers Elevator & Warehouse Co. v. United States,
The facts here bring this case within the rule that valuation of property in a сondemnation proceeding should disregard the depreciation attributable to the acts of the con *596 demning authority. Therefore, we reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand the case for a valuation of appellants’ property as of December 1,1969.
Stafford, C.J., and Finley, Rosellini, Hunter, Hamilton, Wright, Brachtenbach, and Horowitz, JJ., concur.
Petition for rehearing denied June 7,1976.
Notes
RCW 8.26.180 strongly supports, but does not compel this сonclusion. That section provides as follows:
“Every state agency and local public body acquiring real property in connection with any program or project shall, to the greatest extent practicable, be guided by the following policies:
“(3) . . . Any decrease or increase in the fair market value of the real property to be acquired prior to the date of valuation caused by the public improvement for which such property is acquired, or by the likelihood that the property would be acquired for such improvement . . . will be disregarded in determining the compensation for the property.” (Italics ours.)
In
Klopping v. Whittier,
