46 A.2d 125 | Conn. | 1946
This is an appeal from an appraisal of damages by the state highway commissioner, proceeding under the authority of 1528 of the General Statutes, for the taking for trunk highway purposes of 29.88 acres of the plaintiff's property in Woodbridge together with drainage rights over certain of his remaining land. The court accepted the report of the state referee to whom the case had been referred, by which damages for the taking were reassessed at $6391, and rendered judgment therefor in favor of the plaintiff, who has appealed.
The facts as found by the referee are undisputed and in so far as material may be thus summarized: Prior to the taking, the plaintiff owned a 114.5 acre dairy farm in Woodbridge consisting of a single tract with house, large barn, and other buildings. From it the highway commissioner took for the layout and construction of the Wilbur Cross Parkway the southerly portion, consisting roughly of a parallelogram 2720 feet long and containing 29.88 acres. The tract was vacant land located thirteen hundred feet from the buildings on the remaining tract. The taking also included the right to drain water upon the plaintiff's remaining land at two places. Of the land taken, 12 acres is more or less tillable and is of the fair market value of $275 per acre, a total of $3300; and 17.88 acres is pasture and woodland worth $75 an acre, a total of $1341. The grade of the parkway when constructed will vary from 12.4 feet below to 43.2 feet above the adjoining land. No damage from noise or from traffic in consequence of the construction of the parkway will result to the plaintiff's remaining land. The consequential damage to the land not taken and to the buildings and equipment thereon and the use made thereof, which is the most practicable and profitable use to be made of the property, amounts to $1500. *585 The damage resulting from the drainage rights taken, including the incumbrance on the remaining land, is $250. The total damage resulting from the taking is $6391.
The plaintiff filed a thirteen-paragraph remonstrance to the report of the referee to which the defendant demurred. The court sustained the demurrer and rendered judgment for the plaintiff for $6395 and costs. The demurrer was properly sustained as to ten of the paragraphs on the ground that they presented nothing for the court to consider in the absence of the evidence, and to two others because they were immaterial. The sole question for decision, by reason of the court's ruling on the remaining paragraph, is whether the referee erred in that he did not arrive at the damages for the land taken by determining the value of the farm before and after the taking. It is true that "It is one of the general rules governing the right of eminent domain, that just compensation for taking a part of a parcel of land, or an easement in such a part, is to be ascertained by comparing the value of the entire parcel before the taking with the value of what remains after the taking, and in view of the new conditions created by the taking. If the latter of these two values be less than the former, the amount of the difference measures the damages to be paid." New York, N. H. H.R. Co. v. New Haven,
This is evident from the language this court has used repeatedly in disposing of similar cases. It is established by these decisions that, even though the court does not apply the before and after rule, if the result it reaches gives to the plaintiff all the damages to which he is entitled he cannot claim error because the trier adopted the method followed by the referee in this case. Heublein, Inc. v. Street Commissioners,
The final assignment of error is that the court refused to make a finding of facts as requested by the plaintiff. There are two answers to this claim. Failure of the trial court to make a finding is not ground for assigning error. Conn. App. Proc., p. 190; Archambault v. Jamele,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.