The issue here is as to the propriety of condemnation proceedings affecting defendants’ land taken by the United States Government 1 for the purpose of a military instаllation, as to the character of which the Secretary of the Army has formally claimed “privilege”. But it is stipulated by counsel for the purpose of the present motion, that the taking is for the sole purpose in fact of transmitting electronic impulses, at a height *86 of not less than 50 feet above the land, called the “line-of-sight clearance surface”.
Defendants Samuel P. Matarazzo and Mary L. Matarazzo, owners of certain portions of the entire property to be taken, have filed answer to the amended complaint objecting to the taking on various grounds. These are substantially that (1) the United States is in fact taking a fee instead of an easement, which its amended complaint and declaration of taking should accordingly recognize, (2) that the cash deposit of $1,-125 made by the Government, as “estimated” just compensation for the interest taken in the tract of said defendants, is but a nominal amount, and therefore is a non-compliance with the Declaration of Taking Act, 2 (3) that the Government’s action in suсh taking is an unreasonable search and seizure in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and a taking of property without due process of law, and without just сompensation, in violation of the Fifth Amendment. The United States moves to strike these defenses as being either “insufficient” in law, Fed.Rules Civ.Proc. rule 12(f), 28 U.S.C., or “sham and false”, F.R.C.P. 11. At the argument counsel disregarded the somewhat inartistic form of defendants’ answer, including its conclusions of law, and considered such answer as properly raising in substance the above points and facts.
Defendants first contend that in a situation of this kind the United States (1) can take only a fee and that even if it could take less than a fee, its taking here is in fact of a fеe, which its declaration of taking mis-describes as an easement.
But “the power of eminent domain is not dependent upon any specific grant (in the United States Constitution) ; it is an attribute of. sovereignty, limited and conditioned by the just compensation clause of the Fifth Amendment.” Hanson Lumber Co. v. U. S., 1923,
*87 We turn to the further questions, above alluded to, as to whether (2) the “declaration of taking” which here circumscribes and delineates the character of the taking, and which calls it “an easement and rights * * * ” is in fact the taking of a fee, so that it is essentially misleading and a possible violation of the statute, and whether (3) the statute is further violated by the Government’s alleged deposit, not of “estimated” just compensation, but of a purely nominal, and accordingly arbitrary, sum.
The declaration of taking specifically sets forth the “easement and rights” to be taken as “сonsisting of the following:
(1) The continuing and perpetual right to cut to ground level and remove trees (etc.) * * * infringing upon or extending into or above the line-of-sight clearance surface * * * and
(2) The right to remove, raze or destroy those portions of * * * structures and land infringing upon or extending into or above the line-of-sight clearance surface * * * аnd
(3) The right to prohibit the future construction of * * * structures infringing upon or extending into or above the line-of-sight clearance * * *
Reserving, however, to the land owners * * * all right, title, interest аnd privilege as may be exercised and enjoyed without interference with or abridgement of the easement and rights hereby taken for said public uses * * *»
In short, for the purpose of transmitting electronic impulses for military use, the United States Government took the right to use, and keep clear of physical obstructions from the ground below, an air spаce starting at its lowest level 50 feet above defendants’ land. But the right to use the lands themselves was left to the defendants, subject to such restriction. In short, defendants could build houses thereon provided they were no higher than 50 feet, and provided electronic impulses from such houses did not interfere with those emanating from the governmental-installations. Furthermore, the land remained perfectly free ■for either farming or grazing purposes. Obviously, substantial beneficial uses of the land remain in defendants. Obviously, the United States Government is not taking the fee of defendants’ land, but ■ some easement or servitude affecting such lands. U. S. v. Causby, 1946,
As to the objection that the cash deposit with the court by the United States was not, as the above Congressional act requires, the amount of compensation which had been in fact “estimated”, but a mere nominal amount fixed at a purely arbitrary sum, so that the proceedings here violated the Congressional authority on that account, it is, of course, true that, if such were the fact, the objection might be well táken. For then the purpose of the statute, in assuring the land owner that he would not be deprived of the possession of his land, until he had obtained its estimated ■equivalent, would have bеen “thwarted by arbitrary governmental action”. U. S. v. 44 Acres of Land, D.C.W.D.N.Y.1953,
Since a land owner will receive just compensation for his land taken, after hearing, on notiсe — the prime requisites of due process — it is clear that defendants’ final claim is incorrect that their rights under the Fourth and Fifth Amendments of the United States Constitution have been violated.
An order may be entered accordingly.
Notes
. 46 Stat. 1421, 40 U.S.C.A. § 258a; 25 Stat. 357, 40 U.S.C.A. § 257 ; 26 Stat. 316, 40 Stat. 241, 40 Stat. 518, 50 U.S. C.A. § 171; Public Law 207 and 209, 1st Session, 83rd Congress, approved August 7,1953, 67 Stat. 418, 440.
. Title 40, Public Buildings Property and Works, § 258a.
