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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
KIRBY FOREST INDUSTRIES, INC. v. UNITED STATES, 467 U.S. 1 (1984)
467 U.S. 1
KIRBY FOREST INDUSTRIES, INC. v. UNITED STATES
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
No. 82-1994.
Argued February 22, 1984
Decided May 21, 1984
Petitioner manufacturer of forest products owns substantial
timberland in Texas. On August 21, 1978, after negotiations to acquire
over 2,000 acres of this land for a national preserve had broken down,
the United States filed a "straight-condemnation" complaint under 40
U.S.C. 257. Shortly thereafter, the United States filed a notice of
lis pendens, notifying the public of the institution of the
proceeding. The District Court referred the matter to a special
commission to ascertain the compensation due petitioner. Trial before
the commission began on March 6, 1979, and after hearing competing
testimony as to the fair market value of the land, the commission
entered a report recommending compensation in the amount of
$2,331,202. The District Court entered judgment awarding petitioner
compensation for that amount, plus 6% interest for the period from the
date the complaint was filed to the date the Government deposited the
adjudicated value of the land with the court. On March 26, 1982, the
United States deposited the amount of the judgment in the District
Court's registry, and, on that same date, acquired title to the land.
The Court of Appeals reversed the award of interest to petitioner,
holding that the date of the taking should be deemed the date on which
the compensation award was paid and that hence no interest was due on
that award. The court also ruled that the commission inadequately
explained its valuation of the land, and accordingly remanded the case
to the District Court for further findings regarding the value.
[467 U.S. 1, 2]
Held:
1. The taking of petitioner's land occurred on March 26, 1982,
and because the award was paid on that date, no interest was due
thereon. Pp. 9-16.
(a) That the date of taking in "straight-condemnation"
proceedings must be deemed the date on which the United States
tenders payment to the landowner is amply supported by this Court's
prior decisions and by indications of congressional intent derived
from the structure of the pertinent statutory scheme and Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 71A. Rule 71A(i) permits the United States
to dismiss a condemnation suit at any time before compensation has
been determined and paid, unless the United States has previously
acquired title or taken possession. The Government's capacity in
this fashion to withdraw from the proceeding would be difficult to
explain if a taking were effectuated prior to tendering of payment.
And the option given to the Government in 40 U.S.C. 258a of
peremptorily appropriating land prior to final judgment would have
been superfluous if a taking occurred upon the filing of a complaint
in a 257 suit. Pp. 11-13.
(b) Prior to payment of the condemnation award in this case,
there was no interference with petitioner's property interests
severe enough to give rise to a taking entitling petitioner to just
compensation under the Fifth Amendment. Until title passed to the
United States, petitioner was free to make whatever use of its
property it pleased. The Government never forbade petitioner to cut
trees on the land or develop it in some other way. Nor did the
Government abridge petitioner's right to sell the land. While the
initiation of condemnation proceedings, publicized by the lis
pendens notice, may have reduced the selling price of the land,
impairment of the market value of property incident to otherwise
legitimate governmental action ordinarily does not result in a
taking, and did not do so here. Pp. 13-16.
2. Petitioner's constitutional entitlement to the value of its
land on the date of the taking can be accommodated by allowing
petitioner, on remand, to present evidence pertaining to change in
the market value of the property during the substantial delay
between the date of valuation and the date the Government tendered
payment. Other condemnees who find themselves in petitioner's
position may avail themselves of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
60(b), which empowers a district court, upon motion of a party, to
withdraw or amend a final judgment for "any . . . reason justifying
relief from the operation of the judgment." Pp. 16-19.
696 F.2d 351, affirmed.
MARSHALL, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
[467 U.S. 1, 3]
Joe G. Roady argued the cause and filed briefs for petitioner.
Harriet S. Shapiro argued the cause for the United States. With her
on the brief were Solicitor General Lee, Assistant Attorney General
Habicht, Deputy Assistant Attorney General Liotta, Raymond N. Zagone,
and Jacques B. Gelin.
*
[
Footnote * ] Jerrold A. Fadem and Michael M. Berger filed a brief
for Laughlin Recreational Enterprises, Inc., as amicus curiae urging
reversal.
JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court.
Title 40 U.S.C. 257, in conjunction with Rule 71A of the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure, prescribes a procedure pursuant to which the
United States may appropriate privately owned land by eminent domain.
The central issue in this case is whether the manner in which the
value of the land is determined and paid to its owner under that
procedure comports with the requirement, embodied in the Fifth
Amendment, that private property not be taken for public use without
just compensation.
I
A
The United States customarily employs one of three methods when it
appropriates private land for a public purpose. The most frequently
used is the so-called "straight-condemnation" procedure prescribed in
40 U.S.C. 257. Under that statute, an "officer of the Government" who
is "authorized to procure real estate for the erection of a public
building or for other public uses"
1 makes an application to the Attorney General who, within 30
days, must initiate condemnation proceedings. The form of those
proceedings is [467 U.S.
1, 4] governed by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 71A.
2 In brief, Rule 71A requires the filing in federal district court
of a "complaint in condemnation," identifying the property and the
interest therein that the United States wishes to take, followed by a
trial - before a jury, judge, or specially appointed commission - of
the question of how much compensation is due the owner of the land.
The practical effect of final judgment on the issue of just
compensation is to give the Government an option to buy the property
at the adjudicated price. Danforth v. United States,
308 U.S. 271, 284 (1939). If the Government wishes to exercise
that option, it tenders payment to the private owner, whereupon title
and right to possession vest in the United States. If the Government
decides not to exercise its option, it can move for dismissal of the
condemnation action. Ibid.; see Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 71A(i)(3).
A more expeditious procedure is prescribed by 40 U.S.C. 258a.
3 That statute empowers the Government, "at any time before
judgment" in a condemnation suit, to file "a declaration of taking
signed by the authority empowered by law to acquire the lands [in
question], declaring that said lands are thereby taken for the use of
the United States." The Government is obliged, at the time of the
filing, to deposit in the court, "to the use of the persons entitled
thereto," an [467 U.S. 1,
5] amount of money equal to the estimated value of the
land.
4 Title and right to possession thereupon vest immediately in the
United States. In subsequent judicial proceedings, the exact value of
the land (on the date the declaration of taking was filed) is
determined, and the owner is awarded the difference (if any) between
the adjudicated value of the land and the amount already received by
the owner, plus interest on that difference.
Finally, Congress occasionally exercises the power of eminent
domain directly. For example, when Congress thinks that a tract of
land that it wishes to preserve inviolate is threatened with imminent
alteration, it sometimes enacts a statute appropriating the property
immediately by "legislative taking" and setting up a special procedure
for ascertaining, after the appropriation, the compensation due to the
owners.
5
In addition to these three statutory methods, the United States is
capable of acquiring privately owned land summarily, by physically
entering into possession and ousting the owner. E. g., United States
v. Dickinson,
331 U.S. 745, 747 -749 (1947). In such a case, the owner has a
right to bring an "inverse condemnation" suit to recover the value of
the land on the date of the intrusion by the Government. United States
v. Dow,
357 U.S. 17, 21 -22 (1958).
6
The Government's selection amongst and implementation of these
various methods of acquiring property is governed,
[467 U.S. 1, 6]
to some extent, by the Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real
Property Acquisition Policies Act of 1970, 42 U.S.C. 4601 et seq. That
statute enjoins federal agencies, inter alia, to attempt to acquire
property by negotiation rather than condemnation, and whenever
possible not to take land by physical appropriation. 4651(1), (4),
(8). In addition, the statute requires a court with jurisdiction over
a condemnation action that is dismissed or abandoned by the Government
to award the landowner an amount that will reimburse him for "his
reasonable costs, disbursements, and expenses" incurred in contesting
the suit. 4654(a).
7 The statute does not, however, regulate decisions by the
Government whether to employ the "straight-condemnation" procedure
prescribed in 257 or the "declaration of taking" procedure embodied in
258a.
B
Petitioner, a manufacturer of forest products, owns substantial
tracts of timberland in Texas. This case arises out of a protracted
effort by the United States to appropriate 2,175.86 acres of that
land.
In the mid-1960's, several studies were made of the desirability of
establishing a national park or preserve to protect an area of
relatively untrammeled wilderness in eastern Texas. One of those
studies, conducted in 1967 by the National Park Service, recommended
the creation of a 35,500-acre Big Thicket National Park. The Texas
Forestry Association, of which petitioner is a member, endorsed that
proposal and declared a voluntary moratorium on logging in the
designated area. Since 1967, petitioner has observed that moratorium
and has not cut any trees on its property lying within the area
demarked by the Park Service.
8 [467 U.S. 1, 7]
After seven years of desultory consideration of the matter,
Congress rejected the Park Service proposal and enacted legislation
creating a much larger Big Thicket National Preserve. Act of Oct. 11,
1974, Pub. L. 93-439, 88 Stat. 1254, 16 U.S.C. 698 et seq. The statute
directed the Secretary of the Interior to acquire the land within the
boundaries of the Preserve. 16 U.S.C. 698(c). The Senate Report made
clear that, though the Secretary had the authority to acquire
individual tracts by declaration of taking, pursuant to 40 U.S.C.
258a, such a peremptory procedure should be employed only when
necessary to protect a parcel from destruction. S. Rep. No. 93-875, p.
5 (1974). It was understood that, in the absence of such an emergency,
the Secretary would purchase the land using the straight-condemnation
method prescribed in 40 U.S.C. 257.
9
The Government initially attempted to acquire the acreage owned by
petitioner through a negotiated purchase. On August 21, 1978, after
those negotiations had broken down, the United States filed a
complaint in condemnation in the District Court for the Eastern
District of Texas. Shortly thereafter, the Government filed a notice
of lis pendens, notifying the public of the institution of the
condemnation proceeding. The District Court referred the matter to a
special commission to ascertain the compensation due petitioner.
Trial before the commission began on March 6, 1979. On that day,
the parties stipulated that "today is the date of taking." After
hearing competing testimony pertaining to the fair market value of
petitioner's land, the commission
[467 U.S. 1, 8] entered a report recommending
compensation in the amount of $2,331,202.
Both parties filed objections to the report in the District Court.
On August 13, 1981, after holding a hearing to consider those
objections, the District Court entered judgment awarding petitioner
compensation in the amount recommended by the commission, plus
interest at a rate of six percent for the period from August 21, 1978
(the date the complaint had been filed), to the date the Government
deposited the adjudicated value of the land with the court. United
States v. 2,175.86 Acres of Land, 520 F. Supp. 75, 81 (1981). The
court justified its award of interest on the ground that the
institution of condemnation proceedings had "effectively denied
[petitioner] economically viable use and enjoyment of its property"
and therefore had constituted a taking. Id., at 80.
10 On March 26, 1982, the United States deposited the total amount
of the judgment in the registry of the District Court. On the same
date, the Government acquired title to the land.
Both parties appealed. A panel of the Court of Appeals for the
Fifth Circuit unanimously ruled that the commission's report failed to
meet the standards enunciated in United States v. Merz,
376 U.S. 192 (1964), and remanded the case for further findings
regarding the value of petitioner's land. United States v. 2,175.86
Acres of Land, 696 F.2d 351, 358 (1983). More importantly for present
purposes, the Court of Appeals, by a vote of two to one, reversed the
District Court's award of interest to petitioner. Reasoning that "the
mere commencement of straight condemnation proceedings, where the
government does not enter into possession . . ., does not constitute a
taking," id., at 355, the court held that,
[467 U.S. 1, 9]
in this case, the date of the taking should be deemed the date
on which the compensation award was paid.
11 Consequently, no interest was due on that award.
12
We granted certiorari to resolve a conflict in the Circuits
regarding the date on which the taking, in a "straight-condemnation"
proceeding, should be deemed to occur and the constitutional
obligation of the United States to pay interest on the adjudicated
value of the property.
13
464 U.S. 913 (1983). We now affirm.
II
The United States has the authority to take private property for
public use by eminent domain, Kohl v. United States,
91 U.S. 367, 371 (1876), but is obliged by the Fifth Amendment to
provide "just compensation" to the owner thereof.
[467 U.S. 1, 10]
"Just compensation," we have held, means in most cases the fair
market value of the property on the date it is appropriated. United
States v. 564.54 Acres of Land,
441 U.S. 506, 511 -513 (1979).
14 "Under this standard, the owner is entitled to receive `what a
willing buyer would pay in cash to a willing seller' at the time of
the taking." Id., at 511 (quoting United States v. Miller,
317 U.S. 369, 374 (1943)).
15
If the Government pays the owner before or at the time the property
is taken, no interest is due on the award. See Danforth v. United
States,
308 U.S., at 284 . Such a mode of compensation is not
constitutionally mandated; the Fifth Amendment does not forbid the
Government to take land and pay for it later. Sweet v. Rechel,
159 U.S. 380, 400 -403 (1895). But if disbursement of the award is
delayed, the owner is entitled to interest thereon sufficient to
ensure that he is placed in as good a position pecuniarily as he would
have occupied if the payment had coincided with the appropriation.
[467 U.S. 1, 11]
Phelps v. United States,
274 U.S. 341, 344 (1927); Seaboard Air Line R. Co. v. United
States,
261 U.S. 299, 306 (1923).
16
From the foregoing it should be apparent that identification of the
time a taking of a tract of land occurs is crucial to determination of
the amount of compensation to which the owner is constitutionally
entitled. The Government contends that, in straight-condemnation
proceedings like that at issue here, the date of taking must be deemed
the date the United States tenders payment to the owner of the land.
The Government's position is amply supported by prior decisions by
this Court and by indications of congressional intent derivable from
the structure of the pertinent statutory scheme and the governing
procedural rule.
In Danforth v. United States, supra, we were called upon to
determine the date on which the Government, in an exercise of its
eminent domain power under the Flood Control Act of 1928, ch. 569, 45
Stat. 534, as amended, 33 U.S.C. 702a et seq., appropriated the
petitioner's property. We held that, "[u]nless a taking has occurred
previously in actuality or by a statutory provision . . ., we are of
the view that the taking in a condemnation suit under this statute
takes place upon the payment of the money award by the condemnor."
308 U.S., at 284 .
17 In response to the contention
[467 U.S. 1, 12] that such a procedure was
unfair, we observed, "`[t]he owner is protected by the rule that title
does not pass until compensation has been ascertained and paid . . .
.'" Id., at 284-285 (quoting Albert Hanson Lumber Co. v. United
States,
261 U.S. 581, 587 (1923)).
That all straight-condemnation proceedings under 257 should operate
in the fashion described in Danforth is strongly suggested by the
structure of Rule 71A, which now governs the administration of the
statute. Rule 71A(i) permits the United States to dismiss a
condemnation suit at any time before "compensation has been determined
and paid," unless the Government previously has "acquired the title or
a lesser interest . . . or taken possession."
18 The Government's capacity to withdraw from the proceeding in
this fashion would be difficult to explain if a taking were
effectuated prior to tendering of payment.
Finally, Congress' understanding that a taking does not occur until
the termination of condemnation proceedings brought under 257 is
reflected in its adoption of 258a for the purpose of affording the
Government the option of peremptorily appropriating land prior to
final judgment, thereby permitting immediate occupancy and improvement
of the property.
19 Such an option would have been superfluous if, as
[467 U.S. 1, 13]
petitioner contends, a taking occurred upon the filing of the
complaint in a 257 suit.
20
Petitioner's principal objection to the position advocated by the
Government is that such a reading of 257 and Rule 71A is precluded by
the Fifth Amendment. Petitioner contends that, at least when the
subject of a straight-condemnation proceeding is unimproved land, the
owner is effectively deprived of all of the significant interests
associated with ownership long before the Government tenders payment.
The filing of a complaint in condemnation and a notice of lis pendens,
petitioner contends, has the effect of preventing the owner of
unimproved land thereafter from making any profitable use of it, or of
selling it to another private party. At the same time, the owner
remains liable for property taxes.
21 Such a thoroughgoing abrogation of the owner's rights,
petitioner submits, surely constitutes a taking as soon as the
abrogation is effective, regardless of when the land is officially
appropriated under the terms of the statute.
If petitioner's depiction of the impairment of its beneficial
interests during the pendency of the condemnation suit were
[467 U.S. 1, 14]
accurate, we would find its constitutional argument compelling.
We have frequently recognized that a radical curtailment of a
landowner's freedom to make use of or ability to derive income from
his land may give rise to a taking within the meaning of the Fifth
Amendment, even if the Government has not physically intruded upon the
premises or acquired a legal interest in the property. Thus, we have
acknowledged that a taking would be effected by a zoning ordinance
that deprived "an owner [of] economically viable use of his land."
Agins v. Tiburon,
447 U.S. 255, 260 (1980). And we have suggested that, under some
circumstances, a land-use regulation that severely interfered with an
owner's "distinct investment-backed expectations" might precipitate a
taking. Penn Central Transportation Co. v. New York City,
438 U.S. 104, 124 (1978). The principle that underlies this
doctrine is that, while most burdens consequent upon government action
undertaken in the public interest must be borne by individual
landowners as concomitants of "`the advantage of living and doing
business in a civilized community,'"
22 some are so substantial and unforseeable, and can so easily be
identified and redistributed, that "justice and fairness" require that
they be borne by the public as a whole.
23 These considerations are as applicable to the problem of
determining when in a condemnation proceeding the taking occurs as
they are to the problem of ascertaining whether a taking has been
effected by a putative exercise of the police power.
However, we do not find, prior to the payment of the condemnation
award in this case, an interference with petitioner's
[467 U.S. 1, 15]
property interests severe enough to give rise to a taking under
the foregoing theory. Until title passed to the United States,
petitioner was free to make whatever use it pleased of its property.
The Government never forbade petitioner to cut the trees on the land
or to develop the tract in some other way. Indeed, petitioner is
unable to point to any statutory provision that would have authorized
the Government to restrict petitioner's usage of the property prior to
payment of the award.
24
Nor did the Government abridge petitioner's right to sell the land
if it wished. It is certainly possible, as petitioner contends, that
the initiation of condemnation proceedings, publicized by the filing
of a notice of lis pendens, reduced the price that the land would have
fetched, but impairment of the market value of real property incident
to otherwise legitimate government action ordinarily does not result
in a taking. See, e. g., Agins v. Tiburon, supra, at 263, n. 9;
Danforth v. United States,
308 U.S., at 285 ; Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co.,
272 U.S. 365 (1926). At least in the absence of an interference
with an owner's legal right to dispose of his land,
25 even a substantial reduction of the attractiveness of the
property to potential purchasers does not entitle the owner to
compensation under the Fifth Amendment.
It is true that any effort by petitioner to develop the land
probably would have prompted the Government to exercise its authority,
under 40 U.S.C. 258a, to file a declaration of
[467 U.S. 1, 16]
taking and thereby peremptorily to appropriate the tract in
order to protect it from alteration. But the likelihood that the
United States would have responded in that fashion to an attempt by
petitioner to make productive use of the land weakens rather than
strengthens petitioner's position, because it suggests that petitioner
had the option, at any time, to precipitate an immediate taking of the
land and to obtain compensation therefor as of that date, merely by
informing the Government of its intention to cut down the trees.
We conclude, in sum, that petitioner has failed to demonstrate that
its interests were impaired in any constitutionally significant way
before the Government tendered payment and acquired title in the usual
course.
26 Accordingly, we approve the finding of the Court of Appeals
that the taking of petitioner's land occurred on March 26, 1982.
Because the award was paid on that date, no interest was due thereon.
III
The foregoing conclusion does not dispose of this case. We still
must determine whether the award itself satisfied the strictures of
the Fifth Amendment. As indicated above, petitioner is
constitutionally entitled to the fair market value of its property on
the date of the taking. See supra, at 10. Petitioner points out that
$2,331,202 represents the commission's best estimate of the value of
the land on March 6, 1979. To the extent that that figure is less than
the value of the land on March 26, 1982, the date of the taking,
petitioner contends, it has been denied just compensation.
The Government attempts to meet this objection by emphasizing the
pragmatic constraints on determination of the value of real property.
The Government contends that it is imperative that the trier of fact
in a condemnation action be given a fixed date as of which the value
of the land is to be assessed. At the time of trial, no one knows when
the [467 U.S. 1, 17]
United States will exercise its option to purchase the
property, so adoption of the date of payment as the date of valuation
is infeasible. Moreover, prediction of the value of land at a future
time is notoriously difficult. Under these circumstances, courts and
commissions understandably have adopted the convention of using the
date of the commencement of the trial as the date of the valuation.
The Government's argument provides a plausible explanation for the
valuation procedure used in this case and other cases, but it does not
meet petitioner's constitutional claim. However reasonable it may be
to designate the date of trial as the date of valuation, if the result
of that approach is to provide the owner substantially less than the
fair market value of his property on the date the United States
tenders payment, it violates the Fifth Amendment.
We are left with the problem of prescribing a solution to this
difficulty. Petitioner suggests that we mandate an award of interest,
at least for the period from the date of valuation to the date of
taking, as a rough proxy for the increase in the value of the land
during that period. We decline the invitation. Change in the market
value of particular tracts of land over time bears only a tenuous
relationship to the market rate of interest. Some parcels appreciate
at rates far in excess of the interest rate; others decline in value.
27 Thus, to require the Government to pay interest on the basis
proposed by petitioner would only sometimes improve the fit between
the value of condemned land on the date of its appropriation and the
amount paid to the owner of such land.
Solution of the problem highlighted by petitioner requires, not a
rule compelling payment of interest by the Government, but rather a
procedure for modifying a condemnation
[467 U.S. 1, 18] award when there is a
substantial delay between the date of valuation and the date the
judgment is paid, during which time the value of the land changes
materially. In the case before us, such a procedure is readily
available. In view of the inadequacy of the commission's explanation
for its valuation of petitioner's land, the Court of Appeals remanded
for reconsideration of the value of the property. On remand, the
District Court can easily adduce evidence pertaining to alteration in
the value of petitioner's tract between March 6, 1979, and March 26,
1982.
28 In our view, such a reassessment is both necessary and
sufficient to provide petitioner just compensation.
In other cases, such an option may not be available. However, the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure contain a procedural device that
could do tolerable service in this cause. Rule 60(b) empowers a
federal court, upon motion of a party, to withdraw or amend a final
order for "any . . . reason justifying relief from the operation of
the judgment." This provision seems to us expansive enough to
encompass a motion, by the owner of condemned land, to amend a
condemnation award. The evidence adduced in consideration of such a
motion would be very limited. The parties would not be permitted to
question the adjudicated value of the tract as of the date of its
original valuation; they would be limited to the presentation of
evidence and arguments on the issue of how the market value of the
property altered between that date and the date on which the judgment
was paid by the Government. So focused, the consideration of such a
motion would be expeditious and relatively inexpensive for the
[467 U.S. 1, 19]
parties involved.
29 Further refinement of this procedural option we leave to the
courts called upon to administer it.
30
IV
For the reasons set forth above, we agree with the Court of Appeals
that no interest was due on the condemnation award paid to petitioner.
Petitioner's meritorious contention that it is constitutionally
entitled to the value of its land on the date of the taking, not on
the date of the valuation, can be accommodated by allowing petitioner,
on remand, to present evidence pertaining to change in the market
value of the tract during the period between those two dates. On the
understanding that petitioner will be afforded that opportunity, the
judgment is
Footnotes
[
Footnote 1 ] Such authorization generally is derived from some
independent statute that vests the officer with the power of eminent
domain but does not prescribe the manner in which that power should be
exercised. See, e. g., 16 U.S.C. 404c-11.
[
Footnote 2 ] Suits under 257 originally were required to "conform,
as near as may be, to the practice, pleadings, forms and proceedings
existing at the time in like causes in the courts of record of the
State" in which the suits were instituted. Act of Aug. 1, 1888, ch.
728, 2, 25 Stat. 357. The adoption in 1951 of Rule 71A capped an
effort to establish a uniform set of procedures governing all federal
condemnation actions. See Advisory Committee's Notes on Rule 71A,
Original Report, 28 U.S.C. App., p. 644.
[
Footnote 3 ] Section 258a was enacted in 1931, for the principal
purpose of enabling the United States, when it wished, peremptorily to
appropriate property on which public buildings were to be constructed,
making it possible for the Government to begin improving the land,
thereby stimulating employment during the Great Depression. See H. R.
Rep. No. 2086, 71st Cong., 3d Sess. (1930).
[
Footnote 4 ] The owner is entitled to prompt distribution of the
deposited funds. 40 U.S.C. 258a; Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 71A(j).
[
Footnote 5 ] See, e. g., 16 U.S.C. 79c(b) (vesting in the United
States "all right, title, and interest" in the land encompassed by the
Redwood National Park as of the date of the enactment of the statute).
[
Footnote 6 ] Such a suit is "inverse" because it is brought by the
affected owner, not by the condemnor. United States v. Clarke,
445 U.S. 253, 257 (1980). The owner's right to bring such a suit
derives from "`the self-executing character of the constitutional
provision with respect to condemnation. . . .'" Ibid. (quoting 6 P.
Nichols, Eminent Domain 25.41 (3d rev. ed. 1972)).
[
Footnote 7 ] We have held that the last-mentioned provision for
the reimbursement of costs is a matter of legislative grace, not
constitutional entitlement. United States v. Bodcaw Co.,
440 U.S. 202, 204 (1979) (per curiam).
[
Footnote 8 ] Testimony at trial by one of petitioner's officers
suggested that, regardless of the existence of the moratorium,
petitioner would not have cut any trees on that land, which it had
held as a "reserve logging area" since the 1950's. Brief for United
States 8, citing 1 Tr. 52. For the purpose of our decision, we place
no weight on that testimony; we assume that petitioner voluntarily
forwent an opportunity to make profitable use of its land.
[
Footnote 9 ] The House bill had contained a provision
appropriating the land by a legislative taking. H. R. 11546, 93d
Cong., 1st Sess., 2 (1973). The Senate rejected this method on the
ground that it was unnecessary to protect the land and would be unduly
expensive. S. Rep. No. 93-875, pp. 5-6 (1974). The House acceded to
the Senate's position.
[
Footnote 10 ] The District Court did not expressly rule upon
petitioner's contention that the stipulation entered into by the
parties on the opening day of trial established the date of the
taking. But, by awarding interest as of the date of the filing of the
complaint, the court implicitly rejected petitioner's submission on
that issue.
[
Footnote 11 ] The Court of Appeals agreed with the District Court
that the parties' stipulation regarding the "date of taking" was not
controlling, see n. 10, supra. After reviewing the record, the Court
of Appeals determined that the stipulation pertained only to the date
as of which the land was to be valued, not the date on which the
Government was deemed to have appropriated the land. 696 F.2d, at 356.
We see no reason to question that determination.
[
Footnote 12 ] Judge Jolly dissented on this issue, arguing that
the owner of unimproved land subject to condemnation proceedings under
40 U.S.C. 257 is entitled to interest on the award at least for the
period beginning with entry of judgment by the district court, because
during that period the owner is "shackled from making economically
viable use of his property." 696 F.2d, at 358-359.
[
Footnote 13 ] In two cases, panels of the Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit have rejected the position taken by the Fifth Circuit in
this case, holding that, when the United States condemns unimproved
property using the method prescribed in 40 U.S.C. 257, it must award
interest to the owner for some period prior to the date the award is
paid and title passes. United States v. 15.65 Acres of Land, 689 F.2d
1329 (1982), cert. denied sub nom. Marin Ridgeland Co. v. United
States,
460 U.S. 1041 (1983); United States v. 156.81 Acres of Land, 671
F.2d 336, cert. denied,
459 U.S. 1086 (1982). Similar confusion exists in the District
Courts. See, e. g., United States v. 59.29 Acres of Land, 495 F. Supp.
212 (ED Tex. 1980) (date of taking is date of announcement of the
award by the commission).
[
Footnote 14 ] Other measures of "just compensation" are employed
only "when market value [is] too difficult to find, or when its
application would result in manifest injustice to owner or public. . .
." United States v. Commodities Trading Corp.,
339 U.S. 121, 123 (1950).
[
Footnote 15 ] We have acknowledged that, in some cases, this
standard fails fully to indemnify the owner for his loss. Particularly
when property has some special value to its owner because of its
adaptability to his particular use, the fair-market-value measure does
not make the owner whole. United States v. 564.54 Acres of Land,
441 U.S. 506, 511 -512 (1979). We are willing to tolerate such
occasional inequity because of the difficulty of assessing the value
an individual places upon a particular piece of property and because
of the need for a clear, easily administrable rule governing the
measure of "just compensation." Ibid.
None of the discussion in this opinion is intended to modify either
the manner in which the fair-market-value standard is interpreted and
applied or the test for determining when the fair-market-value
standard must be supplanted by other formulae, see n. 14, supra. In
particular, we express no view on the question of how the value of
land condemned under 40 U.S.C. 257 should be assessed when activities
of the Government during the pendency of the condemnation proceedings
have so altered the condition of the property as to reduce the price
it could fetch on the open market on the date of the taking.
[
Footnote 16 ] The last-mentioned principle underlies the provision
in 40 U.S.C. 258a for the payment of interest on any difference
between the estimated value of land appropriated through a declaration
of taking and its subsequently adjudicated actual value as of that
date. See supra, at 5. The principle also underlies several decisions
by Courts of Appeals, holding that the six percent rate of interest
prescribed by 258a is not a ceiling on the amount that can and must be
paid by the Government. See, e. g., United States v. 329.73 Acres of
Land, 704 F.2d 800, 812, and n. 18 (CA5 1983) (en banc). The United
States has acquiesced in those decisions. Brief for United States 14,
n. 13.
[
Footnote 17 ] Petitioner's contention that our decision in
Danforth pertained only to takings effected pursuant to the Flood
Control Act is unpersuasive. Though the Flood Control Act contained a
provision (analogous to 40 U.S.C. 258a) empowering the United States
to appropriate land expeditiously by filing a special petition and
depositing an estimated award,
[467 U.S. 1, 12] ch. 569, 4, 45 Stat. 536
(incorporating by reference 5 of the River and Harbor Act of 1918, ch.
155, 40 Stat. 911), when the Government appropriated the land at issue
in Danforth, it apparently did not invoke its special statutory
authority but instead took the property in the usual fashion as
authorized by 40 U.S.C. 257. The holding of the case is thus on point.
[
Footnote 18 ] After commencement of the valuation hearing, the
Government may dismiss the suit only pursuant to a stipulation with
the owner, Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 71A(i)(2), or with the approval of the
district court, Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 71A(i)(3). The Rule does not
suggest that a court order dismissing a suit has the effect of
nullifying a taking that has already occurred. Indeed, to the
contrary, the Rule forbids the district court to dismiss an action
(without awarding just compensation) if the Government has acquired
any "interest" in the property. Ibid.
[
Footnote 19 ] See n. 3, supra.
[
Footnote 20 ] It must be admitted that the adoption of 258a does
not compel the conclusion that Congress in 1931 understood that the
taking in a 257 suit did not occur until the date payment was tendered
by the condemnor, because 258a by its terms only empowers the
Government to file a declaration of taking prior to "judgment." The
language of 258a is thus consistent with a congressional understanding
that the taking occurred upon entry of final judgment in a
straight-condemnation action. However, the fact that Congress did not
empower the Government to file a declaration of taking anytime prior
to the tender of payment does not undercut our construction of 257,
because the Government has no need of special authority to appropriate
land after judgment and before payment in a straight-condemnation
suit; after entry of judgment, the Government can acquire the land
merely by paying the owner the adjudicated value of the property.
[
Footnote 21 ] Cf. United States v. 15.65 Acres of Land, 689 F.2d,
at 1334 (arguing that the initiation of a condemnation action leaves
"[t]he owner of unimproved land . . . with the liabilities which
follow title but none of the benefits, save the right ultimately to be
paid for the taking").
[
Footnote 22 ] Andrus v. Allard,
444 U.S. 51, 67 (1979) (quoting Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon,
260 U.S. 393, 422 (1922) (Brandeis, J., dissenting)).
[
Footnote 23 ] See Agins v. Tiburon,
447 U.S. 255, 260 -262 (1980); Penn Central Transportation Co. v.
New York City,
438 U.S. 104, 123 -128 (1978); Armstrong v. United States,
364 U.S. 40, 49 (1960); Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon, supra, at
413, 415-416; Michelman, Property, Utility, and Fairness: Comments on
the Ethical Foundations of "Just Compensation" Law, 80 Harv. L. Rev.
1165, 1214-1224 (1967).
[
Footnote 24 ] The question of the Government's authority to
dictate to petitioner the manner in which it could use the land is
preeminently a question of law, not of fact. Thus, we find no merit in
petitioner's contention that the Court of Appeals erred in not
adhering to the strictures of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a)
when examining the District Court's finding that the Government denied
petitioner economically viable use of the land during the pendency of
the suit.
[
Footnote 25 ] We have no occasion here to determine whether
abrogation of an owner's right to sell real property, combined with a
sufficiently substantial diminution of its utility to the owner, would
give rise a taking. Cf. Andrus v. Allard, supra, at 66-68.
[
Footnote 26 ] Had petitioner made such a showing, complex
questions would have arisen regarding the measure of "just
compensation." We defer resolution of those questions to a case in
which they are fairly presented.
[
Footnote 27 ] For example, it appears that the market value of
timberland of the sort owned by petitioner was much higher in March
1979 than in March 1982. See Vardaman's Green Sheet, Index of Pine
Sawtimber Stumpage and Timberland Prices (Jan. 15, 1983), reprinted in
App. to Brief for United States 1a.
[
Footnote 28 ] Though the value of timberland of the kind contained
in petitioner's tract seems to have declined during this period, see
n. 27, supra, petitioner contends that the value of its parcel
nevertheless increased because of the expansion of the residential
areas surrounding nearby Beaumont, Tex., and the susceptibility of the
parcel to rural subdivision or recreational usage. The District Court
can and should assess these contentions on remand.
[
Footnote 29 ] The procedure would not be free, of course, but that
fact may well have a healthy effect in deterring frivolous pleas for
relief from final judgments. That he would be obliged to bear some
litigation costs in contesting a Rule 60(b) motion should dissuade a
landowner from filing such a motion unless he had good reason to
believe that the value of his property changed materially between
valuation and payment.
[
Footnote 30 ] We do not mean to suggest that the constitutional
difficulty discussed in this section can be solved only by affording a
condemnee in petitioner's position an opportunity to file a motion to
amend the judgment under Rule 60(b). Either Congress or a lower court
might perceive a more easily administrable way of ensuring that the
compensation paid to the owner of condemned land does not fall
substantially below the fair market value of the property on the date
of the taking. [467 U.S.
1, 20]
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