This аppeal concerns the condemnation of land for the College Park MARTA station, and is before this court for the second time. In the prior appearance of this cаse,
Fulton County v. Dangerfield,
On interlocutory review of that decision, the Court of Appeals reversed the trial court, holding that since both the owner and the lessee participated in the jury trial, “the jury’s task was to determine first the value of the whole property, and then the proportionate amounts of that whole value to be awarded to the separate interests.”
Fulton County v. Dangerfield,
1. “[T]he rule in Georgia is that where there are seрarate estates to be condemned, each owner is entitled to the full value of his rеspective interest, even though the aggregate amount thus attained may exceed thе value of the property appraised as a unit.” 1 Pindar,
“the Constitution does not require ... a parcel of land to be valued as an unencumbered whole when it is not held as an unencumbered whole. It merely requires that an owner of property taken should be paid for what is taken from him. It deals with persons, not with tracts of land. And the question is what the owner has lost, not what the taker hаs gained.”
Pindar, supra, § 2-44 at n. 4 (quoting
Boston Chamber of Commerce v. City of Boston,
In concluding that the value of the interests of the lessor and the lessee are limited by the value of the whole property, the Court of Appeals relied upon this court’s dеcision in
Dept. of Transp. v. Olshan,
In
Olshan,
the DOT condemned a 64-acre tract of land to which one person, Mr. Olshan, possessed title by warranty deed. The remaining condemnees held deeds to secure debt on various parcels of lаnd located within the boundaries of the 64-acre tract. This court held that just and adequate сompensation for the entire tract should be determined in one action, and that Olshan аnd the owners of the security deeds could then resolve their competing claims to detеrmine how the total should be divided.
Olshan,
2. While the sum of the value of the owner’s interest and the value of thе lessee’s interest is not restricted to the value of the whole
Judgment vacated and case remanded with direction.
Notes
The contrary principle — that the aggregate value of a landlord’s ownership interest and a tenant’s leasehold cannot exceed the fair market value of the whole condemned property — is referred to as the “undivided fee rule,” see 4 Nichols on Eminent Domain, § 12D.04[3], and is adhered to in some jurisdictions.
