The City’s Power to Establish a Controlled-Access Street.
Cities under the home-rule amendment as implemented by statute have police power to create and lay out controlled-access streets. By art. XI, sec. 3 of the Wisconsin Constitution, cities and villages were empowered to determine their local affairs and government subject to the constitution and such enactments of the legislature of statewide concern as shall with uniformity affect every city and village. Ch. 62, Stats., confers all necessary powers on cities operating under home rule which are not enumerated as limitations upon their governmental power.
Beardsley v. Darlington
(1961),
It is probably true most controlled-access streets or highways are established or laid out under the police power and the detailed provisions and limitations relat
The control over highway or street access is not exclusively the subject matter of police power. Such control might be through the use of the law of nuisance, by negotiated purchase, or, as in this case, through the acquisition of the necessary property through the exercise of the power of eminent domain. For a discussion of the problems involved in the use of the various methods, see Netherton, Control of Highway Access (1963).
It must be noted as a preliminary matter that, contrary to the appellant’s contention, a property owner has no right of access to a road that does not exist but would abut his land if it did exist. This leads to the general rule that “where a limited-access road is constructed where no such road existed before, the landowner cannot recover damages by reason of lack of access to such new road, because no such right existed before.” 3 Nichols,
Eminent Domain,
p. 393, sec. 10.2211 (4); A. B. A. Section of Local Government Law, 1964 Report of Committee on Condemnation and Condemnation Procedure, p. 56; Annot. (1955),
Abutting owner’s right to damages or other relief for loss of access because of limited-access highway or street,
43 A. L. R. 2d 1072, 1079;
Winn v.
Likewise, many Wisconsin cases have recognized the rule that if an existing or new highway is properly declared under the police power to be a limited-access highway, any resulting damage to property through the exercise of the police power, insofar as access rights are concerned, is not compensable.
Carazalla v. State
(1955),
The access rights of an abutting property owner to an existing highway may be such that they cannot be taken by a valid exercise of the police power and in that situation resort to condemnation must be had. This court held in
Hastings Realty Corp. v. Texas Co.
(1965),
In its reply brief, the plaintiff contends, in effect, that thet city by exercise of eminent-domain powers under ch. 32, Stats., cannot establish a controlled-access street without taking away access rights and compensating the condemnee therefor. We do not agree; we think the city by ch. 32 may establish a controlled-access street without paying for access rights if no such rights existed prior to the establishment of the street by the relocation order.
Sec. 32.05, Stats., gives the city the power to condemn for streets. The first step is the laying out of the street by the adoption of a relocation order. This order takes the place of and constitutes a determination of necessity. This order must establish the street and include a map or plat showing the old and new locations and the lands and interests required. If the establishment of the controlled-access street is such that existing access rights are required, they must be acquired and are an item of damages under sec 32.09 (6) (b). We do not understand this section to mean that a city through condemnation may only establish or lay out a controlled-access street when it pays for access rights. This section means only that if there are existing access rights they are a proper item of damage when taken.
Under this new procedure of using a relocation order to establish the necessity for the taking and determining its purpose by incorporating therein engineering maps of the project, the intention of the city or condemnor to acquire or deny abutters access rights is shown by the features drawn on the map and by the statements appearing thereon. We think this is a valid procedure to lay out a street. Sec. 32.05, Stats., should not be construed as granting power only to establish a street which requires the condemnation of land and access rights. We hold that under ch. 32, a city may create a controlled-access street.
The Validity of the Condemnation Procedure.
The relocation order, which established the connector street as a nonaccess street, incorporated therein the map or plat showing the type, nature and engineering data of the highway and the designations of nonaccess. In this order the reference to and the designation of the map and of the highway could be improved by the addition of a description of the project in layman’s language, but we hold the omission is not fatal to the order’s validity.
No objection is taken by the plaintiff to the appraisal or the negotiation as steps in the condemnation process. However, the plaintiff argues the jurisdictional offer is void because it did not state the nature of the project, describe the property and the interests therein to be taken, and did not itemize “the items of damage,” all as required by sec. 32.05 (3) (a), (b) and (d), Stats. In the jurisdictional offer the nature of the project is described in highly technical terms which to a layman are unintelligible. The addition of one sentence stating that part of the owner’s property was taken for a right-of-way for a controlled-access street between Highway 30 and Highway 113 would tell infinitely more to the owner than “Phase II, (Connector) formally known as Wisconsin State Project No. T-0219 (3) Dane County,” etc.
More importantly, the jurisdictional offer misinforms the owner of what is being taken by condemnation. The
Although the appraisal “itemized the items of damages” and included nothing for “existing, future and potential rights of access,” the reference to such appraisal in the jurisdictional offer does not satisfy the call of this statute. The requirement of sec. 32.05 (3) (e), Stats., that a jurisdictional offer must make reference to the appraisal and where it may he found, is in addition to the requirement of sec. 32.05 (3) (d) that damages be itemized in the jurisdictional offer. We think the jurisdictional offer is so defective that it cannot stand and must be declared void. However, it does not follow, as contended by the plaintiff, that the condemnation process is thereby void ab initio including the layout of the street as a controlled-access street. The relocation order is a determination of necessity and of the purpose of the condemnation and remains unaffected. We think the relocation order, appraisal, and the negotiation are valid steps in the process for the purpose of compensating the plaintiff for the property taken. The city of Madison should make a new and proper jurisdictional offer to purchase the plaintiff’s land and the condemnation proceeding should continue from that point.
By the Court. — The judgment is reversed and the rights of the plaintiff Wisconsin Town House Builders, Inc., and the defendant city of Madison are declared as set forth in this opinion.
