The subjection of land to the burden of governmental use by
constantly discharging heavy guns from a battery over it in time of
peace in such manner as to deprive the owner of its profitable use
would constitute such a servitude as would amount to a taking of
the property within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment, and not
merely a consequential damage.
In order, however, to maintain an action for such a taking, it
must appear that the servitude has actually been imposed on the
property. A suit against the government must rest on contract, as
the government has not consented to be sued for torts, even though
committed by its officers in discharge of their official
duties.
Page 231 U. S. 531
A contract with the government to take and pay for property
cannot be implied unless the property has been actually
appropriated.
The mere location of a battery is not an appropriation of
property within the range of it guns.
Where it appear that the guns in a battery have not been fired
for more than eight years, and the government denies that it
intends to fire the guns over adjacent property except possibly in
time of war, this Court will not say that the government has taken
that property for military purposes.
46 Ct.Clms. 39 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the determination of whether the
establishment of a battery in connection with its military
fortifications by the United States in the vicinity of claimants'
land amounted under the circumstances of this case to a taking of
property under the Fifth Amendment, are stated in the opinion.
Page 231 U. S. 535
MR. JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Court of Claims,
dismissing petitions for compensation for land alleged to have been
taken by the United States for public use. 46 Ct.Clms. 39. Separate
suits were brought by Samuel Ellery Jennison, the owner at the time
the taking is said to have occurred, by his mortgagees, Mary R.
Peabody and the Saco & Biddeford Savings Institution, and by
his grantee, the Portsmouth Harbor, Land & Hotel Company. These
suits were consolidated and the merits were heard. The following
facts are shown by the findings:
The land in question, comprising about 200 acres, forms the
southern corner of Gerrish Island, the southernmost point on the
coast of Maine. It lies about three miles from Portsmouth,
bordering on the south and
Page 231 U. S. 536
east the Atlantic Ocean, and on the west the entrance to
Portsmouth Harbor. Its value consists almost entirely in its
adaptability for use as a summer resort, and it had been improved
for this purpose by the erection of a hotel, cottage, outbuildings,
and pier, by the construction of roads, and by the provision of
facilities for summer recreations.
In 1873, long before Jennison acquired title and improved the
property, the United States began the construction of a twelve-gun
battery upon a tract of 70 acres lying north and west of the land
in suit and abutting upon it. This battery was to be one of the
outer line of defenses of Portsmouth Harbor, for which
appropriation had been made by the Act of February 21, 1873, 17
Stat. 468, c. 175.
See also Act of April 3, 1874, 18 Stat.
25, c. 74. By the year 1876, a large sum had been expended upon the
work, which had reached an advanced stage of construction.
Operations were closed in September of that year, however, for want
of funds, and the fortification was not occupied by the United
States thereafter until work was resumed in 1898. The government
then constructed on the same site a battery consisting of three
10-inch guns and two 3-inch rapid fire guns. It was practically
completed on June 30, 1901, and was transferred to the artillery on
December 16, 1901, being named Fort Foster.
No part of the fort encroaches upon the land in suit; the fort
is within 200 feet of its northwestern corner and about 1,000 feet
from the hotel. The claimants' land lies between the fort and the
open sea to the south and southeast, and the guns have a range of
fire over all the sea front of the property. As the government
reservation on its western side borders the entrance to the harbor,
the court found that there was an available portion of the shore
belonging to the reservation which permitted the firing of the guns
in a southwesterly direction
Page 231 U. S. 537
"for practice and for all other necessary purposes in time of
peace" without the projectiles passing over the land in question.
This conclusion was reached by applying the local law governing the
boundary lines of contiguous proprietors where there is a curvature
of the shore.
Emerson v. Taylor, 9 Me. 42. It may be
noticed here that the petitioners insist that the guns could not be
fired over the narrow area thus found to be a part of the
reservation without endangering life and property along the New
Hampshire coast, and they present in their brief a map to support
their assertion. The government urges that this map has not been
identified and is wholly incompetent, and that, as the question is
one of fact, the finding must be deemed conclusive. But while thus
finding that there was a line of fire available to the government
over its own shore property, the court also found that the most
suitable field of fire for practice and other purposes in time of
peace would be over the claimants' land.
On or about June 22, 1902, two of the guns were fired for the
purpose of testing them at a target off the coast, the missiles
passing over the land in suit, and another gun was fired for the
same purpose and to the same effect on September 25, 1902, the
resulting damage to buildings and property amounting to $150.
None of the guns has been fired since, but they have been kept
in good condition by a detail from Fort Constitution, which is
situated across the Piscataqua River. The court below further
states in its findings that
"it does not appear from the evidence that there is any
intention on the part of the government to fire any of its guns now
installed, or which may hereafter be installed at said fort in time
of peace over and across the lands of the claimants so as to
deprive them of the use of the same or any part thereof, or to
injure the same by concussion or otherwise, excepting as such
intention can be drawn from the fact that the guns now installed in
said fort are so fixed as to make it possible
Page 231 U. S. 538
so to do, and the further fact that they were so fired upon the
occasions as hereinbefore found."
In the years 1903 and 1904, the hotel, which had previously been
profitable, was conducted at a loss; since 1904, it has been
closed, and the cottages have been rented only in part and at
reduced rates. It is found that the erection of the fort and the
installation of the guns have materially impaired the value of the
property, and that this impairment will continue so long as the
fort and artillery are maintained. This is found to be due to the
apprehension that the guns will be fired over the property.
The question is whether, upon this showing, the petitioners were
entitled to recover.
It may be assumed that, if the government had installed its
battery not simply as a means of defense in war, but with the
purpose and effect of subordinating the strip of land between the
battery and the sea to the right and privilege of the government to
fire projectiles directly across it, for the purpose of practice or
otherwise, whenever it saw fit, in time of peace, with the result
of depriving the owner of its profitable use, the imposition of
such a servitude would constitute an appropriation of property for
which compensation should be made. The subjection of the land to
the burden of governmental use in this manner might well be
considered to be a "taking" within the principle of the decisions
(
Pumpelly v. Green Bay
Co., 13 Wall. 166,
80 U. S.
177-178;
United States v. Lynah, 188 U.
S. 445,
188 U. S. 469;
United States v. Welch, 217 U. S. 333,
217 U. S.
339), and not merely a consequential damage incident to
a public undertaking, which must be borne without any right to
compensation (
Transportation Co. v. Chicago, 99 U. S.
635,
99 U. S. 642;
Gibson v. United States, 166 U. S. 269;
Scranton v. Wheeler, 179 U. S. 141,
179 U. S. 164;
Bedford v. United States, 192 U.
S. 217,
192 U. S. 224;
Jackson v. United States, 230 U. S.
1,
230 U. S.
23).
But, in this view, the question remains whether it
satisfactorily
Page 231 U. S. 539
appears that the servitude has been imposed -- that is, whether
enough is shown to establish an intention on the part of the
government to impose it. The suit must rest upon contract, as the
government has not consented to be sued for torts, even though
committed by its officers in the discharge of their official duties
(
Gibbons v. United
States, 8 Wall. 269,
75 U. S. 275;
Langford v. United States, 101 U.
S. 341,
101 U. S. 343;
Schillinger v. United States, 155 U.
S. 163,
155 U. S. 169;
Russell v. United States, 182 U.
S. 516,
182 U. S. 530;
Harley v. United States, 198 U. S. 229,
198 U. S.
234), and a contract to pay, in the present case, cannot
be implied unless there has been an actual appropriation of
property (
United States v. Great Falls Mfg. Co.,
112 U. S. 645,
112 U. S.
656-657).
The contention of the petitioners therefore is plainly without
merit so far as it rests upon the mere fact that there is a
suitable, or the most suitable, field of fire over their property.
Land or an interest in land cannot be deemed to be taken by the
government merely because it is suitable to be used in connection
with an adjoining tract which the government has acquired, or
because of a depreciation in its value, due to the apprehension of
such use. The mere location of a battery certainly is not an
appropriation of the property within the range of its guns.
The petitioners' argument assumes that the guns, for proper
practice, must be fired over the land in suit, and, hence, that
this burden upon it was a necessary incident to the maintenance of
the fort. The fact of the necessity of practice firing is said to
be established by the finding with respect to the line of fire over
the government's portion of the shore, in which it is said that
this would be sufficient "for purposes of practice and for all
other necessary purposes in time of peace." But, in the light of
other findings, this is far from affording a sufficient foundation
for the conclusion upon which the petitioners insist. On the
contrary, that no such necessity as is now asserted can be assumed
from the mere fact that the fort is maintained
Page 231 U. S. 540
is demonstrated by the facts of this case. This suit was tried
in the latter part of the year 1910, and it appeared that none of
the guns had been fired for over eight years. When the suit was
brought in 1905, nearly two years and a half had elapsed since the
firing of a shot. The guns have been fired only upon two occasions,
or three times in all, and this firing took place in 1902, shortly
after the installation of the guns, for the purpose of testing
them. It may be that practice in firing the guns would be highly
desirable, but it is too much to say upon this record that the fort
would be useless without it. Nor are we at liberty to conclude that
the government has taken property, which it denies that it has
taken, by assuming a military necessity in the case of this fort
which is absolutely contradicted by the facts proved.
Reduced to the last analysis, the claim of the petitioners rests
upon the fact that the guns were fired upon two occasions in 1902,
as stated, and upon the apprehension that the firing will be
repeated. That there is any intention to repeat it does not appear,
but rather is negatived. There is no showing that the guns will
ever be fired unless in necessary defense in time of war. We deem
the facts found to be too slender a basis for a decision that the
property of the claimants has been actually appropriated, and that
the government has thus impliedly agreed to pay for it.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.