ORDER
Came on for consideration before the Court, Honorable Robert M. Hill, presiding, the motions for judgment filed by the United States of America (Government), plaintiff, and the City of Duncanville (City), defendant. Having considered the motions, *221 the Court is of the opinion that a judgment in the amount of $225,000 plus interest on the amount of the deficiency should be entered.
This is an eminent domain proceeding. The Government has condemned approximately 50 acres of land owned by the City. The Government is seeking to limit the condemnation award to the fair market value as found by the jury. The City, in turn, is seeking to recover the cost for a substitute facility, an amount as found by the jury substantially in excess of the fair market value of the condemned property. Following a trial on the merits, the jury found the fair market value of the land to be $225,000 and the cost of a functionally equivalent substitute facility to be $723,-624.01.
Under Rule 71A(h), Fed.R.Civ.P., it is for the Court to decide all issues, factual and legal, other than the precise issue of the amount of compensation to be awarded.
United States v. Reynolds,
The Supreme Court has never ruled on the propriety of substitute-facilities compensation for public condemnees.
United States v. 564.54 Acres of Land, More or Less, Situated in Monroe and Pike Counties, Pennsylvania,
The Court is of the opinion that fair market value is the appropriate measure of compensation in this action. The 50 acres of land condemned by the Government had been used by the City as a sanitary landfill. The City presented evidence on the costs it had incurred as a result of purchasing substitute land to be used as a landfill, as well as interim costs it had incurred for garbage disposal while a new site was being located and purchased. However, the City purchased a much larger tract of land than was condemned and the evidence indicated that they paid a premium for this tract. There was no evidence presented of any attempts by the City to acquire any other tracts of land. The evidence also showed that part of the condemned land had already been used to dump waste. The City failed to establish how this would effect the value of a functionally equivalent substitute facility. The City did not meet its burden of establishing what would be a reasonable cost of a substitute facility.
The City contends that the acquisition of permits for a sanitary landfill are difficult to obtain and there are only a limited number of areas for which permits can be obtained, so that the buying and selling of landfill properties on the open market in other areas would not be relevant to the City’s ability to acquire a substitute facility. The jury was specifically instructed to determine the reasonable cost of a functionally equivalent substitute landfill, and the City urges that the combination of these two factors supports the jury finding.
Assuming the City’s assertion that the jury finding is supportable, the fair-market-value standard should still be applied. The normal rule for calculating just compensation is to award the condemnee the fair market value of the condemned property.
564.54 Acres,
The instances in which market value is too difficult to ascertain generally involve property such as roads or sewers, where there is either no market or the property is so infrequently traded that the price obtained in a prior sale would not be representative of the price a sale of the condemned property would bring.
Id.
The vast majority of cases that have utilized the substitute facilities measure of compensation have involved property of this kind.
See, e.g., Caporal v. United States,
A few cases have extended the application of the substitute facilities measure of compensation to other property deemed reasonably necessary to the public welfare.
See, e.g. United States v. Certain Property Located in the Borough of Manhattan, City, County and State of New York,
The Court is of the view that substitute facilities compensation should not be awarded in every case where a public condemnee can establish a duty to replace the condemned property, at least where a fair market value can be established. When the doctrine of cost of substitute facilities is applied, a windfall
necessarily
accrues to the condemnee who is awarded an amount sufficient to replace ancient or depleted facilities with brand new facilities.
Id.
at 517,
Obviously, replacing the old with a new facility will cost more than the value of the old, but the new facility itself will be more valuable and last longer. This is true with respect to the condemnation of any facility, whether or not there is an obligation to reproduce it, and I had not understood the Just Compensation Clause to guarantee subsidies to either private or public projects. Similarly, if more demanding building codes or other regulations will enhance the cost of replacement, it is reasonable to assume that compliance itself will be of some benefit *223 to the owner and hence need not be financed by the condemnor.
Id.
at 518,
The evidence clearly established that there had been a sufficient number of comparable sales from which a fair market value for the 50 acres involved in this action could be determined. The jury finding that $225,000 was the fair market value of the tract in question is amply supported by the evidence. The Court is of the opinion that an award representing the fair market value of the tract does not impermissibly deviate from the indemnity principle; the City is placed in as good a position pecuniarily as if its property had not been taken. The basic principle of just compensation is that the condemnee must be made whole but is not entitled to more.
Olson v. United States,
A final issue involves the rate of interest to be awarded on the difference between the condemnation award and the amount deposited with the Court as estimated compensation. The Declaration of Taking Act, 40 U.S.C. § 258a (1970), specifically provides that the judgment on a declaration of taking
shall include, as part of the just compensation awarded, interest at the rate of 6 per centum per annum on the amount finally awarded as the value of the property as of the date of the taking, from said date to date of payment; but interest shall not be allowed on so much thereof as shall have been paid into the court
In this action, there was a deficiency in the estimated compensation paid into the Court of $25,050.
The Fifth Amendment requires the payment of interest as an element of just compensation where the date of taking of the property precedes the payment of the award.
United States v. Miller,
The City argues that a rate of interest on the deficiency of only six percent contravenes the Fifth Amendment because of the disparity between the six percent figure and the market rate of interest, so that the City is not receiving the full equivalent for its property. It has been held that the six percent rate provided for in the Act operates only as a floor in computing just compensation and cannot be viewed as a ceiling on the rate of interest allowable.
United States v. Blankinship,
Assuming the principle enunciated in these eases is a sound one, the difficulty arises in calculating a rate of interest to be applied. There is a strong judicial policy in favor of the establishment of a uniform rate of interest applicable in condemnation cases in order to avoid discrimination among litigants.
Miller,
Accordingly, it is ORDERED that the motion for judgment filed by the United States of America is granted, the motion for judgment filed by the City of Duncan-ville, Texas, is denied, and judgment in accordance with this Order be entered.
Notes
. Apparently, other courts have simply taken judicial notice of such publications as the Treasury Bulletin, the Federal Reserve Bulletin and Moody’s Composite Index of Yield on Long Term Corporate Bonds.
See e.g. Miller,
