1. Where establishment of a reservoir under the Reclamation Act
involved flooding part of a town, the United States had
constitutional power to take by condemnation other private land
near by, in the only practicable and available place, as a new
townsite to which the buildings affected could be moved at the
expense of the United States and new lots be provided in full or
part satisfaction for those flooded. P.
263 U. S.
81.
2. The fact that, as an incident of such a readjustment, there
may be some surplus lots of the new townsite which the government
must sell does not characterize the condemnation as a taking of one
man's property for sale to another. P.
263 U. S.
82.
3. When the award in condemnation is for the value of the
property as of the date of the summons without regard to the damage
arising from the owner's inability to sell or lease during the
proceedings, and, under the applicable state law, the government
may obtain possession promptly after bringing suit, interest from
date of summons to judgment may be allowed on the award, even
though the owner remained in possession, cultivating and gathering
crops meanwhile. P.
263 U. S. 84.
,
4. While,
semble, the Act of 1888, in directing federal
courts to conform their practice and procedure in condemnation "as
near as may be" to that of the state where the property is does not
bind them to follow state statutes allowing interest on the award,
interest in this case at 7% was properly included in fixing just
compensation. P.
263 U. S.
86.
279 F. 168 affirmed.
Writs of error by both sides to review a judgment of the
district court in a condemnation case.
Page 263 U. S. 79
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
Page 263 U. S. 80
These are cross-writs of error to a judgment of the District
Court of Idaho in a condemnation case. The plaintiffs in error are
owners of a tract of 120 acres which was the object of the suit by
the United States. The jury rendered a verdict of $6,250 for the
plaintiffs, and the court added $328 as interest at seven percent
from the date of the issuing of the summons to that of the
judgment. The plaintiffs denied the power of the Congress under the
federal Constitution to condemn the land because not taken for a
public use. This entitled them to come to this Court under §
238 of the Judicial Code, and so the United States sued out a
cross-writ of error to question the legality of including in the
judgment the interest item.
Plaintiffs' tract lies just outside the present limits of
American Falls in Idaho. The town has 1,500 people and is so
situate in the valley of the Snake River that three-fourths of the
town, or 640 acres, will be flooded by the waters of a reservoir
which the United States proposes to create, for irrigation of its
arid public land by damming the waters of the river.
The Sundry Civil Act of March 4, 1921, c. 161, 41 Stat. 1367,
1403, appropriates $1,735,000 in addition to an unexpended balance
for the continuation of the construction and extension of the
irrigation system called the Minidoka Project,
"with authority in connection with the construction of American
Falls reservoir to purchase or condemn and to improve suitable land
for a new townsite to replace the portion of the town of American
Falls which will be flooded by the reservoir and to provide for the
removal of buildings to such new site and to plat and to provide
for appraisal of lots in such new townsite, and to exchange and
convey such lots in full or part payment for property to be flooded
by the reservoir, and to sell for not less than the appraised
valuation any lots not used for such exchange. "
Page 263 U. S. 81
The United States has purchased 410 acres for the new townsite,
and needs 165 acres more, of which plaintiffs' tract of 120 acres
is part. Negotiations for purchase from the plaintiffs failed, as
they demanded $24,000.
The plaintiffs contend that the power of eminent domain does not
extend to the taking of one man's property to sell it to another,
that such an object cannot be regarded as for a public use of the
property, and, without this, appropriation can have no
constitutional validity. The district court held that the
acquisition of the townsite was so closely connected with the
acquisition of the district to be flooded and so necessary to the
carrying out of the project that the public use of the reservoir
covered the taking of the townsite. We concur in this view.
The circumstances of this case are peculiar. An important town
stood in the way of a necessary improvement by the United States.
Three-quarters of its streets, alleys, and parks, and of its
buildings, public and private, would have to be abandoned. The
buildings could not be moved, except to the gradually rising ground
east of the Snake river. There was a bluff 100 feet high on the
other side of the river. The tract of 475 acres selected for the
new townsite was the only practical and available place to which
the part of the town to be flooded could be moved so as to be
united with the one-quarter of the old town which would be left.
American Falls is a large settlement for that sparsely settled
country, and it was many miles from a town of any size in any
direction. It was a natural and proper part of the construction of
the dam and reservoir to make provision for a substitute town as
near as possible to the old one.
No one would say that a legislative act authorizing a railway
company to build a railroad exceeds the constitutional limit by
reason of a specific provision that the
Page 263 U. S. 82
company may condemn land not only for the right of way, but also
additional land adjacent thereto for use as borrow pits in making
fills and embankments, or for use as spoil banks or dumps for the
earth excavated from tunnels and cuts. Such adjacent land would
certainly be devoted to the public use for which the railway was
being constructed. If so, then the purchase of a townsite on which
to put the people and buildings of a town that have to be ousted to
make the bed of a reservoir would seem to be equally within the
constitutional warrant. The purchase of a site to which the
buildings of the town can be moved and salvaged, and the
dispossessed owners be given lots in exchange for their old ones,
is a reasonable adaptation of proper means toward the end of the
public use to which the reservoir is to be devoted The transaction
is not properly described as the condemnation of the land of one
private owner to sell it to another. The incidental fact that, in
the substitution and necessary adjustment of the exchanges, a mere
residuum of the townsite lots may have to be sold does not change
the real nature of what is done, which is that of a mere transfer
of the town from one place to another at the expense of the United
States. The usual and ordinary method of condemnation of the lots
in the old town, and of the streets and alleys as town property,
would be ill adapted to the exigency. It would be hard to fix a
proper value of homes in a town thus to be destroyed without
prospect of their owners' finding homes similarly situate on
streets in another part of the same town, or in another town near
at hand. It would be difficult to place a proper estimate of the
value of the streets and alleys to be destroyed and not to be
restored in kind. A town is a business center. It is a unit. If
three-quarters of it is to be destroyed by appropriating it to an
exclusive use like a reservoir, all property owners, both those
ousted and those in the remaining quarter, as well as the state,
whose subordinate agency of government is the municipality,
Page 263 U. S. 83
are injured. A method of compensation by substitution would seem
to be the best means of making the parties whole. The power of
condemnation is necessary to such a substitution.
The circumstances of this case are so peculiar that it would not
be surprising if no precedent could be found to aid us as an
authority. There is one, however, which presents a somewhat close
analogy. In
Pitznogle v. Western Maryland R. Co., 119 Md.
673, a railroad company condemned a piece of land for its tracks
and yards, and in doing so appropriated a private right of way
which was the only access of certain other landowners to the public
highway. It was held that the railway company could condemn an
additional strip of land for a substitute right of way to be
furnished to these landowners. In reaching this conclusion the
court said:
"The condemnation of a part of this land, here sought to be
condemned, for a substitute private road or way is incident to and
results from the taking, by reason of public necessity, of the
existing private road for public use, and the use of it for such
purposes should, we think, be regarded as a public use within the
meaning of the Constitution."
Our conclusion is not in conflict with that class of cases with
which the justices of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
dealt in the
Opinion of Justices, 204 Mass. 607. It was
there proposed that the city of Boston, in building a street
through a crowded part of the city, should be given power to
condemn lots abutting on both sides of the proposed street, with a
view to sale of them after the improvement was made for the
promotion of the erection of warehouses, mercantile establishments,
and other buildings suited to the demands of trade and commerce.
The justices were of opinion that neither the development of the
private commerce of the city nor the incidental profit which might
enure to the
Page 263 U. S. 84
city out of such a procedure could constitute a public use
authorizing condemnation. The distinction between that case and
this is that here, we find that the removal of the town is a
necessary step in the public improvement itself, and is not sought
to be justified only as a way for the United States to reduce the
cost of the improvement by an outside land speculation.
The remaining question in this case arises on the cross-writ of
error of the United States, by which exception is taken to the
court's having included in the judgment interest at seven percent
on the value of the property as found by the jury from the date of
the issuing of the summons until the date of the judgment. The land
remained in the possession of the owners up to the date of the
judgment, and they cultivated the land meantime and gathered crops
therefrom.
The district court, in directing the jury, followed the law of
the state (§ 7415, Complied St. Idaho, 1919; § 5221,
Revised Codes Idaho 1908) in which the land lay and the court was
sitting, as follows:
"For the purpose of assessing compensation and damages, the
right thereto shall be deemed to have accrued at the date of the
summons, and its actual value at that date, shall be the measure of
compensation for all property to be actually taken. . . . No
improvements put upon the property subsequent to the date of the
service of summons shall be included in the assessment of
compensation or damages."
The Idaho statute has been construed by the Circuit Court of
Appeals of the Ninth Circuit to justify the court in adding
interest upon the value fixed by the jury from the date of the
summons until the judgment.
Weiser Valley Land & Water Co.
v. Ryan, 190 F. 417, 424. The court said:
"Having such right to compensation at a given time, it would
seem that the owner ought to have interest upon
Page 263 U. S. 85
the amount ascertained until paid. In the meanwhile, he can
claim nothing for added improvements, nor is he entitled to any
advance that might affect the value of the property."
Counsel for the United States cite against such a ruling the
case of
Shoemaker v. United States, 147 U.
S. 282,
147 U. S. 321,
wherein, in a District of Columbia condemnation, there being no
specific statute on the subject, it was held that no interest
should be paid to the owner until the taking. The Court said:
"It is true that, by the institution of proceedings to condemn,
the possession and enjoyment by the owner are to some extent
interfered with. He can put no permanent improvements on the land,
nor sell it, except subject to the condemnation proceedings. But
the owner was in receipt of the rents, issues, and profits during
the time occupied in fixing the amount to which he was entitled,
and the inconveniences to which he was subjected by the delay are
presumed to be considered and allowed for in fixing the amount of
the compensation. Such is the rule laid down in cases of the
highest authority."
This was followed in
Bauman v. Ross, 167 U.
S. 548,
167 U. S. 598,
in which Mr. Justice Gray, speaking for the Court in reference to
the validity of a statute providing for condemnation proceedings in
the District of Columbia, said:
"The payment of the damages to the owner of the land and the
vesting of the title in the United States are to be
contemporaneous. The Constitution does not require the damages to
be actually paid at any earlier time; nor is the owner of the land
entitled to interest pending the proceedings."
In these cases, the value found was at the time of taking or
vesting of title, and the presumption indulged was that the
valuation included the practical damage arising from the inability
to sell or lease after the blight of the
Page 263 U. S. 86
summons to condemn. Where the valuation is as of the date of the
summons, however, no such elements can enter into it, and the
allowance of interest from that time is presumably made to cover
injury of this kind to the landowner pending the proceedings. It
often happens that, in the delays incident to condemnation suits,
the loss to the owner arising from the delay between the summons
and the vesting of title by judgment is a serious one. The interest
charge under the Idaho statute has the wholesome effect of
stimulating the plaintiff in condemnation to prompt action.
Moreover, the plaintiff may reduce to a minimum the rents and
profits enjoyed by the defendant because, under the Idaho statute,
the plaintiff may have a summary preliminary hearing before
commissioners to fix probable damages, and, by depositing the
amount so fixed with the clerk of the court, if the defendant will
not accept it, the plaintiff may obtain immediate possession.
Within less than a month after bringing suit, he can thus
appropriate to himself the rents and profits of the land, and in
enjoyment of them can await the final judgment. Compiled Statutes
Idaho 1919, vol. 2, § 7420; Revised Codes Idaho 1908, vol. 2,
§ 5226.
It is urged, however, that the federal conformity statute as to
condemnation suits which directs federal courts to conform the
practice and procedure "as near as may be" to that of the courts of
the state where the land is does not require or authorize the
federal courts to allow interest to the property holder except
according to the rule laid down in the
Shoemaker case, the
Bauman case,
Seaboard Air Line Ry. Co. v. United
States, 261 U. S. 299,
261 U. S. 305,
and
United States v. Rogers, 255 U.
S. 163, in all of which interest was allowed only from
the time of taking or vesting of title, that this is a matter of
substance, which a conformity statute was not intended to cover, as
appears from the language of the opinions in the last two cases. It
will be observed, however, that in these two cases, the
Page 263 U. S. 87
allowance of interest did conform to the state statutes, and
that this was given by the court as an additional reason for
sustaining its conclusion. It is doubtless true that the conformity
provision of the Act of 1888 does not bind the federal courts to
follow the state statute in the matter of interest. But the
disposition of federal courts should be to adopt the local rule if
it is a fair one, and, as already indicated, we are not able to say
that, with the value fixed as of the date of summons, and the
opportunity afforded promptly, thereafter to take possession,
interest allowed from the date of the summons is not a provision
making for just compensation.
North Coast Railroad Co. v.
Aumiller, 61 Wash. 271, 274. In
United States v.
Sargent, 162 F. 81, the government condemned land in Minnesota
for a post office. Under the statute of that state, the hearing was
before three commissioners, who were to report the damages
sustained on account of the taking. Unless this resulted in payment
and settlement, a hearing before a court or jury followed, and
judgment was entered on that, and possession was given on payment
of the judgment, which included costs and interest from the time of
filing the commissioners' report. The commissioners' report was
filed June 12, 1907, the report was confirmed August 19, 1907, and
interest was allowed from June 12th until the date when the damages
were paid into the registry of the court. The circuit court of
appeals thought the rule a fair one. Speaking by Judge Adams (162
F. 84, 89 C.C.A. 84), it said:
"Considerable time may elapse after the commissioners fix the
value of the land before it is ultimately paid for. They can only
fix it as of the time they act. They cannot say what it will be at
any indefinite time in the future. The value may for many reasons
change, and the rental value may be materially affected by the
tenure of the owner rendered uncertain by possible protracted
litigation. Considerations like these doubtless
Page 263 U. S. 88
prompted the legislature of the state to provide that the amount
of the award should bear interest until paid as the best and
fairest available method of providing against the possible
consequences just suggested. Without holding that the requirement
for payment of interest is one of the 'modes of proceeding' which,
by § 2 of the Act of August 1, 1888, is made compulsory upon
the courts of the United States, we are satisfied to conform to it
as a palpably fair and reasonable method of performing the
indispensable condition to the exercise of the right of eminent
domain -- namely, of making 'just compensation' for the land as it
stands at the time of taking. 'The time of taking' under the
Minnesota statute,
supra, is when payment is made for it.
. . . It is better, when possible, to act in harmony, rather than
in conflict, with the established policy of a state."
In the last opinion of this Court on the question of interest in
the appropriation of land by the United States, that in
Seaboard Air Line Ry. v. United Stated, 261 U.
S. 299,
261 U. S. 306,
the case of
United States v. Sargent and part of the
language above quoted is cited with approval.
Judgment affirmed.