Appellant brought this class action to challenge the constitutionality of the Massachusetts eminent domain statutes. Injunctive relief was sought, but the district court nonetheless refused to request a three-judge court, finding that no substantial constitutional question was presented. The parties thereafter filed legal memoranda, and oral argument was held. The court then dismissed the action for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, and this appeal followed.
Since no three-judge court was convened, we can affirm the dismissal of the action only if appellant’s constitutional claims are “wholly insubstantial”.
Goosby v. Osser,
The main thrust of appellant’s attack is that the pro tanto offered may be substantially less than the true value of the property which is taken, * and that *850 despite the statutory requirement that the amount offered be reasonable a landowner has no meaningful opportunity to show that it is not. Appellant claims that the ultimate judicial determination and receipt of the additional compensation due may be long delayed, and that the statutory procedures therefore deny due process. He argues that the prospect of such delay, the inadequacy of legal interest in an inflationary period, the possibility of lost special damages and the threatened hardship on dispossessed homeowners without additional resources render illusory the objective of fair compensation.
This claim that a landowner is entitled to a judicial determination of the fair value of his property before losing possession of it was recently rejected in a comprehensive and thoughtful opinion by a three-judge district court.
Joiner v. City of Dallas,
Appellant also attempts the bootstrap argument that section 8A creates, apart from the ultimate right to reasonable compensation, an independent property right to a reasonable
pro tanto.
The courts of the Commonwealth have not adopted this unlikely interpretation, nor will we. “The purpose of a pro tan-to payment is merely to prevent the accumulation of interest on the amount of the offer and to provide funds for the recipient of the offer without waiting for a final adjudication.”
Horne
v.
Boston Redevelopment Authority,
Under the Massachusetts provision, G.L. c. 79, § 34, providing for expedited hearing on damages, a landowner can obtain as prompt a determination as the judicial process affords. While the Massachusetts court has declined to issue a writ of mandamus, holding that the statutory scheme provides a “complete and adequate remedy”, Coach & Six Restaurant, supra, it is not clear to us that in a case where an egregiously low pro tanto offer is demonstrated to cause substantial and irreparable injury extraordinary relief might not be available. See id. In any event, further refinement of procedures in condemnation, such as determination of the pro tanto by a panel of independent assessors, is a matter for legislative judgment.
Affirmed.
Notes
Appellant alleges that two appraisers estimated that the value of his property ranged from $120,000 to $160,000 and that the pro
tanto
offer made to him of $43,300 is not “a reasonable amount”. “But an attack on lawless exercise of authority in a particular case is not an attack upon the constitutionality of a statute conferring the authority . . ..”
Phillips v. United States,
