In connection with the construction of a dam and reservoir on a
navigable river, the United States acquired by condemnation a
flowage easement over a tract of fast land adjacent to one of its
navigable tributaries. That tract included a smaller tract of fast
land over which respondent owned a perpetual and exclusive flowage
easement, which was destroyed by the Government's
appropriation.
Held:
1. Respondent is entitled to compensation for the value of its
easement which is not attributable to the flow of the stream but to
the depreciative impact of the easement upon the nonriparian uses
of the land. Pp.
365 U. S.
627-631.
2. The value of respondent's easement is the nonriparian value
of the subservient land discounted by the improbability of the
easement's exercise, and, in assessing this improbability, no
weight should be given to the prospect of governmental
appropriation. Pp.
365 U. S.
631-636.
270 F.2d 707, judgment vacated and cause remanded.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 1944, Congress authorized the construction of a dam and
reservoir on the Roanoke River in Virginia and North Carolina. For
purposes of that project, the Government
Page 365 U. S. 625
acquired by condemnation a flowage easement over 1840 acres of
fast lands adjacent to the Dan River, a navigable tributary of the
Roanoke. This 1840-acre tract was part of a 7400-acre estate. The
respondent owned a perpetual and exclusive flowage easement over
1540 acres within the easement taken by the Government. The only
question presented by this case concerns the compensation awarded
to the respondent for the destruction of its easement.
The respondent's easement had been purchased from the owner of
the estate and had been conveyed to the respondent's predecessors
in title by various deeds over a period of many years, beginning in
1907. Along with the easement, the fee owner had also expressly
granted by deed the release of all claims for damage to the residue
of the estate resulting from the exercise of rights under the
easement.
In 1951, after extended negotiations, the owner of the estate
agreed to convey to the Government a flowage easement over the
1840-acre tract in return for the payment of one dollar. [
Footnote 1] This agreement was
expressly made subject to "such water, flowage, riparian and other
rights, if any," as the respondent owned in the tract. The
agreement also provided that the Government could elect to acquire
its easement by a condemnation proceeding, in which event the
agreed consideration of one dollar would be "the full amount of the
award of just compensation inclusive of interest." Exercising this
election, the Government instituted condemnation proceedings in the
District Court to acquire a flowage easement over the 1840 acres in
question, depositing one dollar as the estimated just compensation
for the property to be taken.
Page 365 U. S. 626
The fee owner acknowledged the settlement contract previously
made, and agreed to the one dollar compensation. The respondent,
whose easement was to be destroyed, intervened in the proceedings
to contest "the issue of just compensation."
The District Court made a substantial award to the respondent as
compensation for the taking of its flowage easement. The judgment
was affirmed by the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit on the
authority of that court's decision in
United States v. Twin
City Power Co., 215 F.2d 592. 218 F.2d 524. After the judgment
in the
Twin City case was reversed by this Court,
350 U. S. 350 U.S.
222, we vacated the judgment in this litigation and remanded the
case to the Court of Appeals for further consideration in the light
of our Twin City decision. 350 U.S. 956. The Court of Appeals in
turn remanded the case to the District Court with instructions
that, in computing the amount of compensation to be awarded for the
taking of the respondent's easement, there should be eliminated
"any element of value arising from the availability of the land for
water power purposes due to its being situate on a navigable
stream." 235 F.2d 327, 330,
rehearing denied, 237 F.2d
165.
On remand, the District Court proceeded in accordance with these
directions. Commissioners were appointed and given detailed
instructions to follow in computing the compensation to be awarded
the respondent. These instructions included an explicit direction
to exclude from the computation any element of value arising from
the availability of the land for water power purposes attributable
to its location on a navigable stream. [
Footnote 2] The Commissioners found that, under the
criteria imposed by the
Page 365 U. S. 627
court, the value of the respondent's easement was $65,520. The
district judge accepted these findings, and in accordance with them
awarded the respondent that sum. On appeal the judgment was
affirmed. 270 F.2d 707.
We granted certiorari to consider the Government's claim that
the respondent's easement had no compensable value when
appropriated by the United States. 362 U.S. 947. For the reasons
that follow, we reject that argument in the extreme form it has
been presented, but we have concluded that the judgment must
nonetheless be set aside for a redetermination of the compensation
award.
It is indisputable, as the Government acknowledges, that a
flowage easement is "property" within the meaning of the Fifth
Amendment.
See United States v. Welch, 217 U.
S. 333;
Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co. v. State
Highway Commission, 294 U. S. 613,
294 U. S. 618;
Western Union Tel. Co. v. Pennsylvania R. Co.,
195 U. S. 540,
195 U. S. 570.
Similarly, there can be no question that the Government's
destruction of that easement would ordinarily constitute a taking
of property within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment.
See Pumpelly v. Green Bay
Co., 13 Wall. 166,
80 U. S. 181;
United States v. Cress, 243 U. S. 316,
243 U. S.
327-329;
United States v. Kansas City Life Ins.
Co., 339 U. S. 799,
339 U. S.
809-811. Nevertheless, it is argued that the Government
cannot be required to pay compensation for the destruction of the
easement in the present case, because the easement was subject to
the overriding navigational servitude of the United States.
This navigational servitude -- sometimes referred to as a
"dominant servitude,"
Federal Power Commission v. Niagara
Mohawk Power Corp., 347 U. S. 239,
347 U. S. 249,
or a "superior navigation easement,"
United States v. Grand
River Dam Authority, 363 U. S. 229,
363 U. S. 231
-- is the privilege to appropriate without compensation which
attaches to the exercise of the "power of the government to control
and
Page 365 U. S. 628
regulate navigable waters in the interest of commerce."
United States v. Commodore Park, 324 U.
S. 386,
324 U. S. 390.
The power "is a dominant one which can be asserted to the exclusion
of any competing or conflicting one."
United States v. Twin
City Power Co., 350 U. S. 222,
350 U. S.
224-225;
United States v. Willow River Power
Co., 324 U. S. 499,
324 U. S. 510.
A classic description of the scope of the power and of the
privilege attending its exercise is to be found in the Court's
opinion in
United States v. Chicago, M., St. P. & P. R.
Co.:
"The dominant power of the federal Government, as has been
repeatedly held, extends to the entire bed of a stream, which
includes the lands below ordinary high water mark. The exercise of
the power within these limits is not an invasion of any private
property right in such lands for which the United States must make
compensation. [Citing cases.] The damage sustained results not from
a taking of the riparian owner's property in the stream bed, but
from the lawful exercise of a power to which that property has
always been subject."
312 U. S. 312 U.S.
592,
312 U. S.
596-597.
Since the privilege or servitude only encompasses the exercise
of this federal power with respect to the stream itself and the
lands beneath and within its high-water mark, the Government must
compensate for any taking of fast lands which results from the
exercise of the power. This was the rationale of
United States
v. Kansas City Life Ins. Co., 339 U.
S. 799, where the Court held that when a navigable
stream was raised by the Government to its ordinary high-water mark
and maintained continuously at that level in the interest of
navigation, the Government was liable "for the effects of that
change [in the water level] upon private property beyond the bed of
the stream." 339 U.S. at
339 U. S.
800-801.
See also United States v. Willow River
Power Co., 324 U. S. 499,
324 U. S.
509.
Page 365 U. S. 629
But though the Government's navigational privilege does not
extend to lands beyond the high-water mark of the stream, the
privilege does affect the measure of damages when such land is
taken. In
United States v. Twin City Power Co.,
350 U. S. 222, we
held that the compensation awarded for the taking of fast lands
should not include the value of the land as a site for
hydroelectric power operations. It was pointed out that such value,
derived from the location of the land, is attributable in the end
to the flow of the stream -- over which the Government has
exclusive dominion. 350 U.S. at
350 U. S.
225-227. Thus, just as the navigational privilege
permits the Government to reduce the value of riparian lands by
denying the riparian owner access to the stream without
compensation for his loss,
United States v. Commodore
Park, 324 U. S. 386,
324 U. S.
390-391;
Scranton v. Wheeler, 179 U.
S. 141,
179 U. S.
162-165;
Gibson v. United States, 166 U.
S. 269,
166 U. S. 276, it
also permits the Government to disregard the value arising from
this same fact of riparian location in compensating the owner when
fast lands are appropriated.
The Government's argument is that the rationale of
Twin
City makes payment of any compensation for the destruction of
the respondent's easement unnecessary in the present case. This
argument is based on the theory that the respondent's easement had
no value save in conjunction with water power development. The
respondent acknowledges that the courts below were correct in
excluding any value of the easement derived from the availability
of the land for water power purposes. It argues, however, that the
easement had other value, derived from uses of the land not
dependent upon the flow of the stream. If the easement did have
such value, then the Government must compensate for the easement's
destruction under the rule of
Kansas City Life Ins. Co.,
supra, since the easement was a property right in fast lands.
The basic issue is thus whether the respondent's easement
Page 365 U. S. 630
might be found to have value other than in connection with the
flow of the stream.
We think such a finding might be warranted. The evidence was
that the highest and best use of the servient land (unconnected
with riparian uses) was for agriculture, timber and grazing
purposes. The respondent had an exclusive and perpetual property
right to destroy those uses and the value which they created. This
right was an attribute of a transferable, commercial easement with
intrinsic value. It had been acquired for a valuable consideration.
It had a marketability roughly commensurate with the marketability
of the subservient fee. Only an adventurous purchaser would have
acquired the underlying fee interest in the 1540-acre tract for any
purpose whatever without also purchasing the easement.
If easements to flood fast lands were worthless as a matter of
law when taken by the United States, it would follow that, when the
Government took such an easement from the owner of an unencumbered
tract of land, the Government would have to pay the owner nothing.
That is not the law.
United States v. Kansas City Life Ins.
Co., 339 U. S. 799. The
Government itself acknowledges that it must pay such a landowner
for the value of the property which does not stem from the flow of
the stream, the value based upon the nonriparian uses of the
property.
It follows that the Government must likewise compensate the
easement owner for that aspect of the easement's value which is
attributable not to water power, but to the depreciative impact of
the easement upon the nonriparian uses of the property. The
valuation of an easement upon the basis of its destructive impact
upon other uses of the servient fee is a universally accepted
method of determining its worth.
See e.g., Olson v. United
States, 292 U. S. 246,
292 U. S. 253;
Karlson v. United States, 82 F.2d 330, 337; Jahr, Eminent
Domain 252 and n. 6 (collecting cases); 4 Nichols, Eminent Domain,
§ 12.41(2), n. 27
Page 365 U. S. 631
(collecting cases) (1951 ed.); 1 Orgel, Valuation under Eminent
Domain, § 106 at 454 (2d ed.); Saxon, Appraising Flowage Easements,
24 Appraisal Journal 490, 494.
But the Government contends that the market value of the
easement to those interested in developing the nonriparian uses of
the fee can be ignored. It is claimed that, despite the general
principle of indemnification underlying the Fifth Amendment,
see Olson v. United States, 292 U.
S. 246,
292 U. S. 255,
no compensation should be allowed for this value, because it
represents the "destructive function" of the easement.
Cf.
Roberts v. New York, 295 U. S. 264,
295 U. S. 283.
It is argued that equitable principles prohibit compensation for
such value. But equity works the other way. At the very least, the
Government's argument would mean, in a case like this one, that
compensation could be denied the fee owner because he had already
conveyed the flowage easement,
cf. United States v.
Sponenbarger, 308 U. S. 256,
308 U. S.
265-266, and denied the owner of the easement because it
was valueless against condemnation by the United States. The
Government would thus destroy the entire property interest in fast
lands without compensation. "The word "just" in the Fifth Amendment
evokes ideas of
fairness' and `equity.' . . ." United
States v. Commodities Trading Corp., 339 U.
S. 121, 339 U. S. 124;
see Monongahela Navigation Co. v. United States,
148 U. S. 312,
148 U. S.
324-326. The result contended for by the Government
would hardly comport with those standards. The District Court and
the Court of Appeals were correct in holding that a flowage
easement over fast lands adjoining a navigable stream is property
which cannot be appropriated without compensating the
owner.
The remaining question is whether the District Court's method of
determining the amount of compensation to be awarded was correct.
The court was clearly right in excluding all value attributable to
the riparian location of the land.
United
States v. Twin City Power Co.,
Page 365 U. S. 632
350 U. S. 222.
There can be no quarrel, either, with the Court's procedure in
directing the Commissioners to appraise first the easement taken by
the Government, and then to apportion its value between the
respondent and the owner of the subservient fee. [
Footnote 3]
United States v.
Dunnington, 146 U. S. 338,
146 U. S.
343-345,
146 U. S.
350-354. And the court adopted an acceptable method of
appraisal, indeed, the conventional method, in valuing what was
acquired by the Government by taking the difference between the
value of the property before and after the Government's easement
was imposed.
See Olson v. United States, 292 U.
S. 246,
292 U. S. 253.
[
Footnote 4] For these reasons,
we think that the court followed an entirely acceptable procedure
in valuing the totality of what was appropriated by the
Government.
In apportioning the respondent's share of this value, however,
we think that the court erred. [
Footnote 5] The court
Page 365 U. S. 633
apparently was of the view that the subservient fee interest in
the 1540 acres was without value, and accordingly awarded to the
respondent the entire value of what the Government appropriated in
that acreage. The respondent was thus compensated as though it were
the owner not of an easement, but of an unencumbered fee, as the
Court of Appeals recognized. 270 F.2d at 712. The record does not
support such an apportionment.
The guiding principle of just compensation is reimbursement to
the owner for the property interest taken.
"He is entitled to be put in as good a position pecuniarily as
if his property had not been taken. He must be made whole, but is
not entitled to more."
Olson v. United States, 292 U.
S. 246,
292 U. S. 255.
In many cases, this principle can readily be served by the
ascertainment of fair market value -- "what a willing buyer would
pay in cash to a willing seller."
United States v. Miller,
317 U. S. 369,
317 U. S. 374.
See United States v. Commodities Trading Corp.,
339 U. S. 121,
339 U. S. 123;
United States v. Cors, 337 U. S. 325,
337 U. S. 333.
But this is not an absolute standard, nor an exclusive method of
valuation.
See United States v. Commodities Trading Corp.,
supra, at
339 U. S. 123;
United States v. Cors, supra, at
337 U. S. 332;
United States v. Miller, supra, at
317 U. S.
374-375;
United States v. Toronto Nav. Co.,
338 U. S. 396.
The record in the present case, as might be expected, contains
no evidence of a market in flowage easements of the type here
involved. In the absence of such evidence, the court valued the
flowage easement as the equivalent of the value of the servient
lands for agricultural, forestry, or grazing use. The court thus
ascribed a maximum value to the respondent's easement, a value not
supported by the record.
We think the correct approach to the problem of valuation in a
case of this kind was formulated by the Court of Appeals for the
Fifth Circuit in
Augusta Power
Page 365 U. S. 634
Co. v. United States, 278 F.2d 1. The basic issues in
that case were virtually indistinguishable from those presented
here. [
Footnote 6] We are
content to adopt the language of Judge Rives' opinion with respect
to the standard to be followed in valuing flowage easements of this
character:
"If [the] Power Company had been successful in assembling the
necessary lands, and in securing approval of the Federal Power
Commission, and thereafter had actually exercised its easements by
permanently flooding the lands, their value for agricultural and
forestry purposes would have been destroyed. If, with that status,
the United States had condemned the lands, the compensation due
would be payable to [the] Power Company. That compensation would
not include the hydroelectric power value, but it would embrace
[the Power Company's] property right to destroy the value of the
lands for agricultural and forestry purposes."
"At the other extreme, if factors such as difficulty of
assemblage of all necessary lands, the increasing economic
advantage of steam plants over hydroelectric plants, the need for
additional power in the particular area, etc., had made it certain
that the flowage easements would never be exercised by the . . .
Power Company or its assigns, excluding the United States, then
such compensation as might be due would be payable to the owners of
the fee title and nothing to the . . . Power Company. "
Page 365 U. S. 635
"Between the two extremes just illustrated, the respective
values of the fee and of the easement would fluctuate from time to
time, depending on the probability or improbability of actual
exercise of the easement by the . . . Power Company or its assigns.
If all interested parties were before the Court, the
maximum which the United States would be required to pay
would be the value of the lands, not including their value for
hydroelectric power purposes. That is, however, a
maximum,
and not necessarily the measure of what the United States would
have to pay under any and all circumstances. . . ."
"
* * * *"
". . . It seems to us that the
maximum compensation
payable for the flowage easement under any conceivable
circumstances is so much of the value of the lands for agricultural
and forestry purposes and for any other uses, not including
hydroelectric power value, as the easement owner has a right to
destroy or depreciate. That
maximum is more simply
expressed in the criterion adopted by the Commission,
i.e., 'the difference in the value of the land with and
without the flowage easement.' Subject to that
maximum,
the actual
measure of compensation payable for he flowage
easement is the value of the easement to its owner. 'The question
is, What has the owner lost? not, What has the taker gained?' 1
Orgel on Valuation Under Eminent Domain, p. 352."
Augusta Power Co. v. United States, 278 F.2d 1, 4-5.
(Footnotes omitted.)
In a word, the value of the easement is the nonriparian value of
the servient land discounted by the improbability of the easement's
exercise. It is to be emphasized that, in assessing this
improbability, no weight should be given
Page 365 U. S. 636
to the prospect of governmental appropriation. The value of the
easement must be neither enhanced nor diminished by the special
need which the Government had for it.
United States v.
Cors, 337 U. S. 325,
337 U. S.
332-334;
United States v. Miller, 317 U.
S. 369;
Olson v. United States, 292 U.
S. 246,
292 U. S. 261;
United States v. Chandler-Dunbar Water Power Co.,
229 U. S. 53,
229 U. S. 76.
The court must exclude any depreciation in value caused by the
prospective taking once the Government "was committed" to the
project.
United States v. Miller, supra, at
317 U. S.
376-377;
see United States v. Cors, supra, at
337 U. S. 332.
Accordingly, the impact of that event upon the likelihood of actual
exercise of the easement cannot be considered. As one writer has
pointed out,
"[i]t would be manifestly unjust to permit a public authority to
depreciate property values by a threat . . . [of the construction
of a government project] and then to take advantage of this
depression in the price which it must pay for the property"
when eventually condemned. 1 Orgel, Valuation under Eminent
Domain, § 105 at 447 (2d ed.);
see Congressional School of
Aeronautics, Inc. v. State Roads Commission, 218 Md. 236,
249-250, 146 A.2d 558, 565.
The judgment is vacated, and the case remanded to the District
Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
The record indicates that the owner was willing to accept this
nominal amount because of her interest in developing the balance of
the estate as a wild game preserve, a use which presumably would be
enhanced by a contiguous artificial lake.
[
Footnote 2]
The detailed instructions were otherwise based upon a
traditional method of valuing what the Government appropriated,
i.e., the difference in the value of the servient land
before and after the Government's easement was imposed.
[
Footnote 3]
The owner of the fee, having agreed to convey her interest for
one dollar, would, of course, not receive any larger amount
apportioned to her interest.
See Albrecht v. United
States, 329 U. S. 599.
[
Footnote 4]
In determining the value of the Government's easement, the court
assumed its proportions to be limited to 1540 acres, rather than to
the 1840 acres actually taken. This was entirely permissible. Since
the owner of the fee was making no claim, the only objective of the
proceedings in the District Court was to determine the amount of
compensation to be awarded the respondent. It was quite logical,
therefore, to appraise only that part of the Government's easement
which coincided with the respondent's property interest, and
thereafter to apportion to the respondent its share of what was
taken by that much of the Government's appropriation.
[
Footnote 5]
The court did not err, however, in including in the award to the
respondent an amount for damages to the residue of the estate. The
respondent was the record owner of the right to damage the residue,
a right which the owner had expressly conveyed by separate deed for
a valuable consideration. This was a property right in the residue,
measurable by a monetary award to cover damages to the same. The
amount of this portion of the award would depend upon the
probability of the respondent's easement's being exercised.
See accompanying text,
infra.
[
Footnote 6]
In that case, the Government had also argued upon the basis of
our
Twin City decision, that a private flowage easement
over fast lands is valueless as a matter of law when taken by the
Government for navigational purposes. The argument was
unambiguously rejected:
"Very clearly, the United States is in error when it claims . .
. that it 'has a dominant servitude which it can exercise in its
discretion and without compensation.'"
278 F.2d at 4.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, concurring.
If the 1,840 acres in question lay between low and high water,
the United States, by keeping the water level at the ordinary
high-water contour, would not, in my view, appropriate any private
property. For that is use of the bed of the stream pursuant to the
navigation servitude. Most of our cases deal with that. It was in
that domain
Page 365 U. S. 637
that
United States v. Kansas City Life Ins. Co.,
339 U. S. 799,
arose.
If the 1,840 acres were a dam site, any of their value for such
a purpose would be noncompensable within the ruling of
United
States v. Twin City Power Co., 350 U.
S. 222. Dam site value is water power value. And the
flow of the stream in its natural state or through a structure that
is low or high provides "a head of water" (
United States v.
Willow River Co., 324 U. S. 499,
324 U. S. 502)
that often has great value. But when it is in a navigable stream,
it is not a property right subject to private ownership and
compensation under the Fifth Amendment. There is "no private
property in the flow" of this navigable stream.
United States
v. Appalachian Power Co., 311 U. S. 377,
311 U. S.
427.
Yet if the Federal Government builds a dam that raises the water
above the ordinary high-water mark by a foot, by a hundred feet, or
by five hundred feet, it asserts dominion over property not within
its navigational servitude. As we said in
United States v.
Willow River Co., supra, 324 U. S. 509,
"High-water mark bounds the bed of the river. Lands above it are
fast lands, and to flood them is a taking for which compensation
must be paid."
It is in the latter domain that the present controversy lies.
The flowage rights being condemned are rights to flood a part of
the 1,840-acre tract that lies above the "usual water line," which
I understand to mean land above the ordinary high-water mark.
Whatever may be the reason why this particular interest in the
uplands was acquired, the owner stands in the shoes of his
predecessor in title. The owner of the easement is entitled, as the
Court holds, to no water-power value. The owner is, in other words,
entitled to nothing that gains value from the flow of the stream,
from any head of water, or from the strategic location of his
land
Page 365 U. S. 638
for hydroelectric development of the river. But the owner of the
easement and the owner of the subservient fee have all the other
parts of the bundle of rights that represent "property" within the
meaning of the Fifth Amendment.
Hence, I join the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE WHITTAKER, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR.
JUSTICE BLACK join, dissenting.
In the hope that it might eventually acquire from the Federal
Government a license to construct a power dam across a navigable
river, the power company acquired, by conveyances from the fee
owners, easements permanently to flood 1,540 acres of fast lands
adjacent to the river. It did not own any other estate or interest
in those lands, and the exercise of its easement to flood them was,
of course, necessarily subject to the prior issuance of a federal
license authorizing the private damming of the river, for, without
such a license, the power company could not dam the river,
see § 4 of the Federal Power Act, 41 Stat. 1065, 16 U.S.C.
§ 797, and thus back its waters upon those lands, and it had no
right to use the lands for any other purpose.
No federal license to dam the river at or near this point was
ever issued. Instead, the Federal Government itself determined to
construct a power dam at this point in the river, and, as a
necessary consequence, to inundate these lands as a part of the
resulting reservoir. To that end, it brought this condemnation
action against the power company, and therein filed its declaration
of taking, and took, the latter's easement to back flow these
lands, and the question here is: what value, if any, did that
easement have
to the power company at the time the
Government took it?
We think that, as a matter of fact and of law, it did not have
any value whatever at that time. This is so because: (1) the sole
and only right the power company ever had
Page 365 U. S. 639
in these lands was the right to dam and back the river's waters
upon them; (2) the exercise of that right was always contingent and
dependent upon the prior issuance of a federal license authorizing
the private damming of the river (16 U.S.C. § 797(e)), for the
Government's power over the flow of a navigable stream "is a
dominant one which can be asserted to the exclusion of any
competing or conflicting one,"
United States v. Twin City Power
Co., 350 U. S. 222,
350 U. S.
224-225; and (3) when the Government determined to
construct the power dam and appurtenant facilities for its own
benefit, it necessarily "displace[d] all competing interests and
appropriate[d] the entire flow of the river for the declared public
purpose,"
United States v. Twin City Power Co., supra, at
350 U. S. 225.
(4) Therefore, at the time the Government took this easement, there
was no possibility that the power company could ever dam and back
the river's waters upon these lands, and, inasmuch as it had no
estate in or right to use the lands for any other purpose, it must
follow that the easement was wholly without value to the power
company for any purpose at the time the Government took it.
However, the Court, after adverting to the power company's
argument that "the easement had other value, derived from uses of
the land not dependent upon the flow of the stream," says: "We
think such a finding might be warranted." It finds such value to
exist in the "right to destroy [agricultral, timber and grazing]
uses and the value which they created."
But the right to "destroy" agricultural uses, although a proper
consideration in determining the damages to be paid to the owner of
the unencumbered fee when an easement to flow is being condemned
and taken from him,
United States v. Kansas City Life Ins.
Co., 339 U. S. 799;
Olson v. United States, 292 U. S. 246,
292 U. S.
253-254, is not a thing of value -- even of recognizable
"hold up" value -- to the owner of the easement,
United
States v. Chandler-Dunbar
Page 365 U. S. 640
Water Power Co., 229 U. S. 53,
229 U. S. 79-80,
except for the authorized flooding use, or possibly as against the
owner of the subservient fee who might be willing to pay for the
riddance of the easement and restoration of his original right to
make agricultural uses of the land.
See Roberts v. New York
City, 295 U. S. 264,
295 U. S.
282-283. At all events, the clincher is that any right
of the power company to "destroy" agricultural uses of these lands
consisted solely of its right to dam and back the river's waters
upon them, and, when the Government determined to construct the dam
for its own benefit, even that nebulous "right" was gone. Hence,
the easement had no possible value -- not even a nuisance value --
to the power company at the time the Government took it.
It is settled that the "just compensation" required by the Fifth
Amendment to be paid for the taking of private property for public
use is the value at the very time of the taking to the person from
whom taken.
"The value should be fixed as of the date of the proceedings and
with reference to the loss the owner sustains, considering the
property in its condition and situation at the time it is taken,
and not as enhanced by the purpose for which it was taken.
Kerr
v. South Park Commissioners, 117 U. S. 379,
117 U. S.
387;
Shoemaker v. United States, 147 U. S.
282,
147 U. S. 304, 305."
United States v. Chandler-Dunbar Water Power Co.,
supra, at
229 U. S.
76.
The Fifth Amendment
"merely requires that an owner of property taken should be paid
for what is taken from him. . . . And the question is what has the
owner lost, not what has the taker gained."
Boston Chamber of Commerce v. Boston, 217 U.
S. 189,
217 U. S. 195.
See also United States v. Twin City Power Co., supra, at
350 U. S. 228.
At the time of this taking, the Government had determined to build
the dam itself, thus precluding any possibility that the power
company could ever dam and back the river's waters upon these
lands, and, inasmuch as it had no right
Page 365 U. S. 641
to use them for any other purpose, it must follow that the
easement had no possible value to the power company at the time the
Government took it. Surely "the government cannot be justly
required to pay for an element of value which did not [then] inhere
in [the easement]."
United States v. Chandler-Dunbar Water
Power Co., supra, at
229 U. S.
76.
Nor does the Fifth Amendment contemplate a disregard of separate
estates and interests in land. It contemplates only that the
condemnee shall be paid "just compensation" for the particular
estate or interest that he owned and that was taken from him. In
Boston Chamber of Commerce v. Boston, supra, the city
condemned for public street purposes a part of a tract of land
owned in fee by the Chamber of Commerce, but, over a large portion
of the part condemned, a wharf company owned "an easement of way,
light and air." The Chamber of Commerce and the wharf company
agreed between themselves to claim, and they sought, damages to
both estates "in a lump sum." If this could be done, it was agreed
that the estate, considered as the sole unencumbered estate of a
single person, was worth 12 times more than if the damage should be
assessed according to the condition of the title at the time. The
city's contention that the several estates should be separately
valued was sustained by the trial court, and this Court, speaking
through Mr. Justice Holmes, affirmed, saying:
"But the Constitution does not require a disregard of the mode
of ownership, of the state of the title. It does not require a
parcel of land to be valued as an unencumbered whole when it is not
held as an unencumbered whole. It merely requires that an owner of
property taken should be paid for what is taken from him. . . . And
the question is what has the owner lost, not what has the taker
gained."
217 U.S. at
217 U. S.
195.
Page 365 U. S. 642
The Government cannot here, just as the city could not there,
"be made to pay for a loss of theoretical creation, suffered by no
one in fact,"
id., 217 U.S. at
217 U. S. 194,
for there is "no justice in [requiring the Government to pay] for a
loss suffered by no one in fact."
United States v.
Chandler-Dunbar Water Power Co., supra, at
229 U. S.
76.
Here, the power company rests solely upon a claimed right to
back the river's waters upon these lands. It thus necessarily
depends upon and claims a right in and to use the waters of the
river for that purpose. This Court held in the
Twin City case,
supra, that the owner of adjoining fast lands has no interest
in the waters of a navigable river, and that those waters do not,
as against the Government, attribute to the value of such lands. It
said:
"If the owner of the fast lands can demand water power value as
part of his compensation, he gets the value of a right that the
Government, in the exercise of its dominant servitude, can grant or
withhold as it chooses. The right has value or is an empty one
dependent solely on the Government. What the Government can grant
or withhold and exploit for its own benefit has a value that is
peculiar to it. and that no other user enjoys."
350 U.S. at
350 U. S. 228.
The Government, by determining to exploit its stream for its own
benefit, "displace[d] all competing interests and appropriate[d]
the entire flow of the river for the declared public purpose."
Id., at
350 U. S. 225.
In these circumstances, "[t]o require the United States to pay for
this water power value would be to create private claims in the
public domain."
Id., at
350 U. S.
228.
The
Twin City and
Chandler-Dunbar cases,
supra, seem clearly to require the conclusion, on the
facts here, that the easement to flood these lands had no value to
the power company at the time the Government took it.
Page 365 U. S. 643
It was its failure to obtain a federal license to dam the river
-- not the taking of its easement to flow -- that hurt the power
company, for once the Government determined to construct the power
dam for its own use and benefit, no possibility remained that the
power company could ever use the easement, and hence its entire
value was gone.
To the Court's observation that
"the Government's argument would mean, in a case like this one,
that compensation could be denied the fee owner because he had
already conveyed the flowage easement, . . . and denied the owner
of the easement because it was valueless against condemnation by
the United States,"
the law requires us to say: exactly so. The fee owners had sold
and conveyed, for consideration satisfactory to them, the right
permanently to flood these lands, and no longer owned any interest
in that estate. Indeed, they claim none. That estate in these lands
was not taken by the Government from them. Not having taken
anything from the fee owners, the Government does not owe them
"just compensation" for anything. This also demonstrates the
Court's further error in remanding the case for "apportionment" of
the "damages" between the owner of the easement and the owners of
the fee. In no event could there be anything to apportion to the
fee owners. What the Government took was the easement. It belonged
solely to the power company, and, if it had any value at the time
it was taken by the Government, that value belonged solely to the
power company. But the easement had no value to the power company
at the time it was taken by the Government. The power company's
sole estate in these lands was an easement to back the river's
waters upon them. The exercise -- and hence the value -- of that
easement was always contingent upon the prior issuance of a federal
license authorizing the private damming
Page 365 U. S. 644
of the river. No such license was ever issued. Instead, the
Government determined to construct the dam and appurtenant
facilities for its own benefit. This left no possibility that the
power company could ever dam and back the river's waters upon these
lands, and, inasmuch as it had no right to use them for any other
purpose, it seems clearly to follow that the easement was wholly
without value to the power company for any purpose at the time the
Government took it.
It is, of course true, as already stated, that, if the
Government had taken the right to flow these lands from the owner
of the unencumbered fee, the law would require it to pay his
damages resulting from that deprivation of his right to make
agricultural and similar surface uses of these lands.
United
States v. Kansas City Life Ins. Co., supra. From that premise,
it is argued that the owner of the easement to flow, having
acquired it from the owner of the unencumbered fee, "stands in the
shoes of his predecessor in title," and is thus entitled to like
damages from the Government when it takes that easement from him.
But that premise is erroneous. The error lies in the obvious fact
that the power company never acquired or owned any right to make
agricultural uses of these lands. Hence, it did not suffer, and is
not entitled to recover, any damages for the destruction of such
uses. Quite distinguishable from an unencumbered fee, the only
estate of the power company in these lands was the right to store
the river's waters upon them. Once the Government determined to
construct the power dam for its own use, no possibility remained
that the power company could ever use the lands for that purpose,
and, having no right to use the lands for any other purpose, it
must follow that the easement was wholly without value to the power
company for any purpose at the time the Government took it.
Page 365 U. S. 645
We believe that the Fifth Amendment's command that "private
property [shall not] be taken for public use, without out just
compensation" should be liberally construed in favor of the
condemnee, but that does not mean that the Government should be
required to pay something for nothing.
For these reasons, we think the judgment should be reversed with
directions to enter judgment for the Government.