WINOOSKI HYDROELECTRIC COMPANY, Appellee,
v.
FIVE ACRES OF LAND IN EAST MONTPELIER AND BERLIN, VERMONT,
Green Mountain Power Corporation, and unknown
owners, Defendants,
Green Mountain Power Corporation, Appellant.
No. 1200, Docket 85-7065.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued June 7, 1985.
Decided July 30, 1985.
Richard I. Rubin, Skinner & Rubin, Barre, Vt., for appellee.
Michael G. Furlong, Burlington, Vt. (William B. Gray, Sheehy, Brue & Gray, Burlington, Vt., of counsel), for appellant.
Before LUMBARD, OAKES and MESKILL, Circuit Judges.
OAKES, Circuit Judge:
This appeal is by a condemnee from a judgment on a jury verdict awarding $30,000 as compensation for the taking of approximately five acres of land. Green Mountain Power Corporation ("Green Mountain"), a Vermont public utility, owned the land and dam on the Winooski River in the towns of East Montpelier and Berlin, Vermont, the property being referred to as Montpelier # 4. Winooski Hydroelectric Company ("Winooski Hydro") is a Vermont partnership which applied for a minor license to develop Montpelier # 4. Green Mountain then filed a competing application, but the license was awarded to Winooski Hydro by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission on August 29, 1983. Section 21 of the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. Sec. 814 (1982), authorizes license holders to proceed in the federal courts to condemn the property necessary to construct the licensed project, and after negotiations failed, Winooski Hydro filed this condemnation proceeding in the United States District Court for the District of Vermont. An order granting partial summary judgment was issued on November 1, 1984, leaving only the matter of just compensation to be determined. In a jury trial before Judge Franklin S. Billings, Jr., an award of $30,000 was made.
Montpelier # 4 includes a seventy-five-year-old concrete dam which Green Mountain had operated as a hydroelectric facility until 1970, when the powerhouse roof collapsed. Green Mountain had not spent money on maintenance since 1953, except for a few minor repairs to protect the public safety, and indeed two engineers who had examined the dam thought it structurally unsound and unsafe. Green Mountain itself had considered breaching the dam to minimize its risk of collapse.
At trial Green Mountain presented several witnesses in an effort to establish that Montpelier # 4 was worth approximately $250,000. However, the district court excluded the testimony of one witness, a University of Vermont School of Business Administration professor, James F. Gatti, concerning his opinion of the property's value based upon an income approach to valuation. That exclusion is one of the three bases of appeal. The second basis is that the district court declined to charge the jury on severance damages to compensate for the diminution in value of Green Mountain property not taken by Winooski Hydro, viz., another dam upstream ("Montpelier # 5"). Finally, Green Mountain objects to the jury instruction that Green Mountain bore the burden of proof and persuasion as to the fair market value of the property taken. We affirm.
Preliminarily, we agree with the Fifth Circuit that in a condemnation action under 16 U.S.C. Sec. 8141 the substantive law applied is federal law, Georgia Power Co. v. 138.30 Acres of Land,
As to the court's exclusion of Professor Gatti's testimony, we note in passing that "[t]he latitude allowed the trial court in passing on opinion evidence is nowhere greater than that pertaining to the market value of property being acquired in condemnation proceedings." Farr v. State Highway Board,
Professor Gatti was allowed to testify concerning his qualifications, his competence to give opinion evidence on value, and his method of analysis using the so-called "income approach." Based on numbers provided by Winooski Hydro in interrogatories, Professor Gatti made assumptions about capital costs to construct the project, operating costs over its life, and net after-tax revenues that would theoretically accrue to the investor. He then capitalized these hypothetical earnings and subtracted the assumed value of Winooski Hydro's federal license to arrive at the fair market value of the land.
However, the district court excluded the ultimate question on Professor Gatti's direct examination, his opinion of value. Several considerations fully support this decision. On the most basic level, the future income calculations were too speculative, since Green Mountain had not operated any business at Montpelier # 4 for over a decade. Although the Vermont courts have approved the income approach in certain circumstances, see, e.g., Town of Barnet v. New England Power Co.,
Judge Billings also rejected the use of the income approach because it measured the property's value to the condemnor rather than to the condemnee. "It is a well settled rule that ... it is the owner's loss, not the taker's gain, which is the measure of compensation for the property taken." United States ex rel. T.V.A. v. Powelson,
Vermont statutory law defines just compensation as "the value for the most reasonable use of the property," Vt.Stat.Ann. tit. XIX, Sec. 221(2) (1973); see also id. tit. XII, Sec. 1905 (1968), and the cases have uniformly held that the "most reasonable" use need not be the current use, see, e.g., Sharp,
But the Vermont courts have carefully distinguished between this enhanced market value and lost profits from a frustrated business opportunity, which are not compensable. Id. ("Perhaps the highway project frustrated the plaintiff's plans for future development of the frontage. If so, that was not the appropriation of a compensable interest in the land taken ...."). Consequently, the Vermont Supreme Court has realized the danger of using the potential income from a potential business as an indication of the property's fair market value. See, e.g., Farr,
Federal eminent domain cases have also recognized this danger. Most illuminating is Public District No. 1 v. City of Seattle,
Moreover, the income approach is especially inappropriate here, where the condemnee was refused the license necessary to build the proposed facility. As the PUD court put it, "Common sense tells us in such a case that the multimillion dollar loss claimed by the condemnee is not due to the taking of a few acres of land but to its failure to qualify for the needed license."
The trial court was also quite correct in keeping the issue of severance damages from the consideration of the jury. While severance damages are awardable under the law of Vermont, Whitcomb v. State Highway Board,
Probably the appellant's strongest point relates to the court's charge on burden of proof. The court specifically said,
If the evidence on any issue in the case is evenly balanced, then the party having the burden has not sustained his burden of proof on that issue or question, and you should find for the opposing party on that issue or question.
In a condemnation case such as this, the burden of proof is on the land owner, in this case the Green Mountain Power Corporation, to establish the fair market value of the property at the time of the taking.
Since fair market value is found by weighing of all of the evidence, however, Petition of Mallary,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Sec. 814. Exercise by licensee of power of eminent domain
When any licensee cannot acquire by contract or pledges an unimproved dam site or the right to use or damage the lands or property of others necessary to the construction, maintenance, or operation of any dam, reservoir, diversion structure, or the works appurtenant or accessory thereto, in conjunction with an improvement which in the judgment of the commission is desirable and justified in the public interest for the purpose of improving or developing a waterway or waterways for the use or benefit of interstate or foreign commerce, it may acquire the same by the exercise of the right of eminent domain in the district court of the United States for the district in which such land or other property may be located, or in the State courts. The practice and procedure in any action or proceeding for that purpose in the district court of the United States shall conform as nearly as may be with the practice and procedure in similar action or proceeding in the courts of the State where the property is situated: Provided, That United States district courts shall only have jurisdiction of cases when the amount claimed by the owner of the property to be condemned exceeds $3,000.
