Government of Virgin Islands v. 19.623 Acres of Land, 76-1452

Decision Date26 May 1976
Docket NumberNo. 76-1452,76-1452
Citation536 F.2d 566
PartiesGOVERNMENT OF the VIRGIN ISLANDS, Appellant, v. 19.623 ACRES OF LAND, Etc.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Third Circuit

Verne A. Hodge, Atty. Gen., Gov't of Virgin Islands, William L. Neff, Deputy Asst. Atty. Gen., St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, for appellant.

John D. Merwin, Merwin, Alexander & O'Brien, Frederiksted, St. Croix, Virgin Islands, for appellees.

Before VAN DUSEN, ADAMS and ROSENN, Circuit Judges.

OPINION OF THE COURT

ADAMS, Circuit Judge.

In this appeal, the Government of the Virgin Islands challenges the ruling of the district court that held improper the attempted condemnation of certain St. Croix properties for highway purposes.

A.

As a preliminary step in its efforts to extend the Cross-Island Highway, which is planned to go from Christiansted to Frederiksted on the island of St. Croix, the Government of the Virgin Islands filed a condemnation complaint in June 1975. 1 The government contemplated the acquisition of several enumerated properties pursuant to its complaint, through the exercise of the power of eminent domain. In their answers, the owners of the parcels of land objected to the taking for three reasons: the price offered by the government was inadequate; the route chosen for the portion of the highway involved in this case was such that the value of the land for its pre-existing farming purposes would be destroyed; and alternative routing of the highway would result in less damage to the utility of the property sought to be condemned.

Although the contention was not set forth in the answers to the condemnation complaint, the landowners also argued in the district court that the condemnation was improper because they had never received notice of the hearings that were held to assess public reaction to the proposed route. 2

The district court ruled that the condemnation proceedings were invalid, and therefore of no effect. 3 It rested its decision on two propositions. The first was that the failure of the government to give each landowner personal notice of the public hearings, prior to depriving him of his property, violates the due process clause of the federal constitution. Specifically, the district court held that once the government decides that a hearing will be held to air public views regarding a particular proposal for a public project, it must give personal notice of the hearing to those individuals whose properties are scheduled to be condemned for inclusion in the project. 4

As its second reason for invalidating the condemnation, the district court, reaching the question sua sponte, ruled that the government did not have the requisite legislative authorization to condemn land for the Cross-Island Highway. Reading the statutes that provide the Government of the Virgin Islands with general authority to condemn land for public purposes 5 to require further legislation authorizing a particular project, the court found such legislation lacking. 6 The district court therefore held that the land in question had been condemned without authority, and that the condemnation was a "nullity."

In its appeal from the trial court's ruling, the government asserts that property owners have no due process right to a hearing regarding the necessity of condemning their land, and thus no right to be notified of a hearing should one be held. Further, the government urges that the property owners waived their right to claim that the condemnation was not legislatively authorized, and that the trial judge had no discretion to raise a defense so waived. In any event, the government states, the condemnation was legislatively authorized. Controverting the government's contentions, the landowners maintain that the district court's decision was correct in all respects, and should be affirmed.

For the reasons set forth below, we vacate and remand to the district court.

B.

If either of the bases relied upon by the district court was sufficient for reaching its conclusion, the judgment must be affirmed. We first address the question whether there existed sufficient legislative authorization for the condemnation, since, if there was not, the constitutional issue posed by the parties need not be reached. 7

In its condemnation complaint, the government averred that "(t)he authority for the taking is Act No. 3242, Ninth Legislature of the Virgin Islands, 1972, Regular Session, and 28 V.I.C. §§ 411 and 413." 8 In its brief filed in this Court, the government additionally asserts that authority for the condemnation existed by virtue of 20 V.I.C. § 3 9 and 20 V.I.C. §§ 41 and 43. 10

As an alternative position, the government claims that the landowners waived any objections bottomed upon the absence of legislative authorization by failing to raise such objections in their answers. This argument is predicated upon the language of Rule 71A(e) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which provides that "(t)he answer shall . . . state all (the landowner's) objections and defenses to the taking of his property. A defendant waives all defenses and objections not so presented. . . ." The government further maintains that the district court had no discretion to raise the question sua sponte, as it did, since the objection had been waived by the landowners.

It is true, first, that the landowners did not state in their answers that no legislative authorization for the takings existed. That defense was thus waived, under the clear mandate of Rule 71A(e). The matter thus reduces to whether the district court, in the circumstances of this case, had power to address the issue in view of the defendants' waiver.

One of the major purposes of Rule 71A is to simplify condemnation proceedings so that the rights of the parties may be determined promptly and with assurance. 11 Although those interests are important ones in most litigation, they are especially substantial in the condemnation area, where the right of the government to proceed with construction projects, often of major proportion and always devoted to public use, is paramount.

The primacy of these factors where condemnation is concerned is reflected by the structure of Rule 71A. The rule contemplates a two-step procedure. In the first step, the government announces what land it needs, and the landowners are given a full opportunity to present, in their answers, objections or defenses they have to the taking. Any defenses so raised are ruled upon by the court. But in the interest of promptness, no preliminary motions or other pleadings are allowed, 12 unlike the procedure in other civil actions. 13 "The prohibition of other pleadings clearly ha(s), as its purpose, an early joinder of issue and the elimination of the possibility of extended delay through the presentation of preliminary pleadings with resultant hearings and orders. One pleading to raise all objections and defenses to the taking and one hearing to dispose of them are contemplated. . . ." 14

The amount to be paid, which generally does not impinge upon the public interest in a quick resolution of the government's right to condemn the land, is determined only in the second stage of the procedure. A separate trial is held to adjudicate the item of remuneration, 15 and a landowner "may present evidence as to the amount of the compensation to be paid for his property," regardless of "whether or not he has previously appeared or answer- ed. . . ." 16 This is wholly unlike the procedure during the first stage, when all defenses and objections must be carefully preserved.

If defenses waived by a landowner through his failure to include them in the answer could be later raised by the trial court, the weighty policies represented in Rule 71A would be undermined. The procedures required by the rule were adopted after more extended deliberation than that given the other rules of civil procedure, 17 and they reflect the thoughtful judgment of the Advisory Committee regarding the most effective method of dealing with rather complex problems. 18 In view of these considerations, it was inappropriate, and, we now hold, incorrect for the trial court here to have raised a defense not claimed by the landowners in their answers. 19 The condemnations in this case therefore cannot be voided on the basis of a contention that they were not legislatively authorized. 20

C.

Since the nonconstitutional objection to the condemnation is not available to permit affirmance of the judgment of the district court, we move to the landowners' second argument, which is grounded upon the constitutional guarantee of due process of law.

It has long been the rule that the due process clause does not require that a landowner whose property is to be condemned be given a hearing in advance to determine whether the taking is necessary. 21 Recognizing that decisions of the Supreme Court had reached that result, the district court nonetheless held that when a hearing is to be conducted, notice of the hearing must be provided to the property holders whose land is in question. It reached this result because it viewed several recent Supreme Court decisions 22 as representing the current state of the law with regard to the requirements of notice and a hearing when a person's property is at stake. Thus, although the older cases in the area of eminent domain have not been expressly overruled, the district court believed such to be the implicit result wrought by the more recent ones.

Although it may be contended that there is considerable persuasiveness to the rationale utilized by the district court, we are foreclosed from adopting it. In its recent order in Joiner v. City of Dallas, 23 the Supreme Court reaffirmed that no hearing need be provided by the state prior to the condemnation of land.

The Joiner decision was a one-sentence order, without an accompanying opinion, affirming the judgment of a three-judge district court. The lower court had...

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