The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Dеfendants, Val Dikert and Sandra Anselmo, appeal from the Law Division judge’s decision ruling that they were not entitled to compensation from the State as a result of its condemnation of the servient tenement, including an easement providing them with access to the highway, because the State provided them with a reasonable alternative means of access to their respective properties. The judge found that where the State рrovides a reasonable means of alternative access, there is no taking by eminent domain, but rather it is accomplished by the police powers.
Dikert and Anselmo are owners of adjacent properties in the Township of Millstone that have the right to use an easement that runs through property owned by Wawa Inc. The easement was reserved in the deed under which Wawa Inc. acquired the property. From the southerly end, the easement runs perpendicular to Route 537 and then at Anselmo’s property line it extends to the west, providing Dikert and Anselmo with ingress and egress to their properties from Route 537.
The State engaged in a highway project around 1995 to improve the interchange between 1-195 and Route 537, a major access route to Great Adventure. The project consisted of: adding a lane on Route 195 eastbound to Route 537 southbound; adding a new ramp from Route 195 еastbound to Route 537 northbound; increasing the lanes in both directions on Route 537; adding a jughandle on Route 537 northbound along with a traffic signal at the intersection with Pine Drive; and creating a new service road off of Pine Drive to provide access to Dikert’s and Anselmo’s properties as well as the rear of the commercial properties along Route 537.
The Department of Transportation (DOT) offered Wawa Inc., $230,000 as just compensation for the partial taking, filed a declaration of taking, and deposited that amount with the Superior Court. The March 17,1997 order to show cause, returnable April 18, directed defendants to show cause why judgment should not be entered appointing commissioners to fix the compensation for the property interests described in the complaint.
In May 1997, Dikert and Anselmo filed answers and counterclaims seeking to compel the DOT to condemn their adjoining property due to a decrease in value of their property resulting from the construction of the service road, and interference with their use of an access easement as a result of the DOT’s taking of Wawa’s property. Before the adjourned return datе, the DOT
Defendants Dikert and Anselmo were permitted to file an amended answer and counterclaim nunc pro tunc. Their counterclaim alleged that the condemnation of the Wawa property severed the access easement serving their dominаnt tenements, obligating the DOT to pay just compensation. They also asserted that the construction of the service road would result in an inverse condemnation of their property by destroying its aesthetic value. In addition, the counterclaim alleged that construction on the service road diverted surface water and directed it onto their properties, creating an actionable nuisance, and that the drainage system was imprоperly designed.
On January 20, 1998, the judge concluded that Dikert and Anselmo failed to set forth any facts warranting the relief requested. As to the access easement, the judge stated that in taking the easement the DOT had provided the defendants with a reasonable alternative route to access Route 537, relying on State, by Commissioner of Transportation v. National Amusements, 244 N.J.Super. 219,
Defendants argue that the judge erred in dismissing their claims. They assert entitlement to just compensation for the condemnation of the servient tenement, which contained the access easement, and for the alleged resulting decrease in the value of their properties flоwing from the construction of a service road as the alternative means of access. They also argue that their interests in the easement and their properties are inseparable, entitling them to severance damages.
I.
Defendants argue that the judge erred in dismissing their request for an order compelling the State to initiate condemnation proceedings for the acquisition of the easement.
Our federal and state constitutions provide that when private property is condemned for public use, the government is required to pay the property owner just compensation. U.S. Const, amend. V; N.J. Const, art. 1, H 20.
Dikert and Anselmo claim that the taking of the easement over the Wawa property that had benefitted their property constituted a compensable taking. An easement is a “ ‘nonpossessory incorporeal interest in another’s possessory estate in land, entitling the holder ... to make some use of the other’s property.’ ” Kline v. Bernardsville Ass’n Inc., 267 N.J.Super. 473, 478,
Cases dealing with the impact of eminent domain on easements generally involve situations where: (1) the servient tenement, including an easement, is taken, precluding the dominant tenement on adjacent land from utilizing the easement, see, e.g., State, by Commissioner of Transportation v. Orenstein, 124 N.J.Super. 295, 302,
The first category of cases is represented by State, by Commissioner of Transportation v. Orenstein, supra (124 N.J.Super. at 302,
If land burdened with an easement is taken by eminent domain, the owner’s measure of damages is the market value of the land as affected by the easement. The easement attaches to the land of the owner of the dominant fee and is appurtenant to his land, and must be valued with reference to it and not as though the easement constituted a separate entity. The owner of the dominant estate must be compensated for the value of the easement taken from him and the measure of damage is the difference in the market value of the dominant estate*318 with the easement and its value without the easement. [Id. (quoting Jahr, Eminent Domain, Valuation and Procedure, § 160 at 251 (1953)).]
Under the second category of cases, a “preexisting easement of access to and from a public highway, possessed by an owner of land abutting on such highway, constitutes a right of property of which he cannot be deprived without just compensation.” Mueller v. New Jersey Highway Authority, supra (59 N.J.Super. at 589,
A property owner may not be shut off from access to his land, but there is a qualification to the usual principle of compensation. Where a reasonably suitable alternative means of access remains, compensation is not required because reasonable highway regulation will not give rise to a compensable taking. State, by Commissioner of Transportation v. National Amusements, Inc., supra (244 N.J.Super. at 223-224,
e. Every owner of property which abuts a public road has a right of reasonable access to the general system of streets and highways in the State, but not tо a particular means of access. The right of access is subject to regulation for the purpose of protecting the public health, safety and welfare.
*319 f. Governmental entities through regulation may not eliminate all access to the general system of streets and highways without providing just compensation.
g. The access rights of an owner of property abutting a State highway must be held subordinate to the public’s right and interest in a safe and еfficient highway.
[N.J.S.A 27:7-90.]
Moreover, the use of a more circuitous route does not necessarily constitute a compensable taking of property. See State, by Commissioner of Transportation v. Monmouth Hills, Inc., 110 N.J.Super. 449, 452,
Here, there is a combination of both categories — the access cases and the easement cases. As noted, the pre-condemnation acсess easement onto Route 537 violated state highway regulations, i.e., State Highway Access Management Code, N.J.AC. 16:47-1.1, et seq., which for safety reasons generally proscribes access points along acceleration lanes and along interchange ramps. The usual access cases are distinguishable, however, on the ground that the property owners claiming denied access abutted the highway. Here, Dikert’s and Anselmo’s properties do not abut Route 537, but had access to it acrоss an easement on the land of others.
Although the State condemned the easement that had been reserved in the grant to the servient tenements that benefitted the Dikert and Anselmo properties, the easement cases relied upon by defendants
II.
Defendants also contend their counterclaim supports a cause of action for relief under takings law in that the setting of their property was transformed from a tranquil, rural area to a noisy, semi-urban, commercial environment. In essence, their claim is that the change in character of the land entitles them to an award of just compensation.
The State responds that Dikert and Anselmo are attempting tо bootstrap their claims onto the Wawa claim because of the difficulty in meeting the burdens of an' inverse condemnation
On the other hand, Dikert and Anselmo claim that they are entitled to compensation based on a change in character of their land, which essentially decreased the value of their properties, or consequential damages.
The general rule is that acts done in the proper exercise of govеrnmental powers, or pursuant to authority conferred by a valid act of the legislature, and not directly encroaching on private property, although their consequences may impair its use or value, do not constitute a taking ... and do not entitle the owner of such property to compensation, in the absence of constitutional or statutory provisions requiring compensation to be made for damaging, injuring, or destroying propеrty. [29A C.J.S. Eminent Domain § 84 at 238 (1996). See also New Jersey Bell Telephone Co. v. Delaware River Joint Commission, 125 N.J.L. 235, 237,15 A.2d 221 (Sup.Ct.1940).]
In such exercise of governmental powers, the injury is considered damnum absque injuria and not compensable. See State v. Whitehead Brothers Co., Inc., 210 N.J.Super. 359, 368,
The Law Division properly dismissed plaintiffs’ claims as they are not compensable in the context of the instant condemnation.
III.
Defendants argue that the judge erred in dismissing their counterclaim by misconstruing their claim as one for losses due to a change of access to their residential properties. They argue that their interests in the easements and their estates are inseparable, and they should be cоmpensated with severance damages.
The State responds that defendants are not entitled to severance damages and distinguishes cases awarding severance damages on the grounds that they did not involve the taking of an easement. It also argues that defendants are not entitled to “severance damages,” which are only available for partial takings, not where the property of adjoining or neighboring landowners is taken, relying on Public Service Electric & Gas v. Oldwick, 125
The taking of private property for a public use requires the property owner to be compensated, with the fair market value of the property at the date of the taking, where the whole property is taken, measured by what a willing buyer would pay a willing seller. State, by Commissioner of Transportation v. Silver, 92 N.J. 507, 513,
In cases involving severance damages, the owner of the condemned property is claiming that he is entitled to damages, resulting from the decrease in value of his remaining property. See, e.g., State, by Commissioner of Transportation v. Weiswasser, supra (149 N.J. at 329,
In summary, the State condemned Wawa’s property, which included an easement benefiting Dikert’s and Anselmo’s properties, but no portion of their lands were taken, only thе easement from their land to the highway. The easement was taken under the police power relating to the safety and flow of traffic on Route 537, and the defendants were provided with a reasonable alternative means of access to replace the easement taken. Hence, Dikert and Anselmo cannot claim damage to their respective properties resulting from the exercise of the police рowers or damage to their property from the construction on property taken from other parties.
Affirmed.
Notes
Access was required via the service road because the entrance to Wawa violated the State Highway Access Management Code, NJ.A.C. 16:47-1.1, et seq. which precludes access points along acceleration lanes and along interchange ramps for safety reasons. This access point was also part of thе existing easement used by Anselmo and Dikert.
Artl, 120 of the New Jersey Constitution states: "Private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation."
They are essentially the first category of cases discussed where a servient tenement, including easement, are taken. See supra at p. 317,
Based on the tract map provided in the record on this appeal, if traveling southbound on Route 537 from 1-195, it appears from a rough measurement that persons travеlling to defendants' properties would have to travel approximately 1,000 additional feet. If traveling northbound on Route 537, the additional travel distance via the service road and Pine Drive appears negligible.
Through an inverse condemnation proceeding, a property owner seeks compensation for a de facto taking of his properly. Pinkowski v. Township of Montclair, 299 N.J.Super. 557, 575,
To establish a prima facie case under the Tort Claims Act, N.J.S.A. 59:4-2, the party must show that: (1) the property wаs in a dangerous condition at the time of the injury; (2) the condition proximately caused the injury; (3) the condition created a reasonably foreseeable risk of the injury that was incurred; and, (4) a public entity had notice in sufficient time to protect against the condition or the condition was created by the act or omission of a public employee acting within the scope of his employment. See, e.g., Brown v. Brown, 86 N.J. 565, 575,
