Redevelopment Commission of Greensboro v. Hagins, 600
Decision Date | 12 December 1962 |
Docket Number | No. 600,600 |
Citation | 258 N.C. 220,128 S.E.2d 391 |
Court | North Carolina Supreme Court |
Parties | REDEVELOPMENT COMMISSION OF GREENSBORO, Petitioner, v. Bernice T. HAGINS, (Hagan) and husband J. G. Hagins, Respondents (two cases). REDEVELOPMENT COMMISSION OF GREENSBORO, Petitioner, v. Bernice T. HAGINS (Hagan) and husband, J. G. Hagins, Respondents. |
Cannon & Wolfe, by J. Archie Cannon, Jr., Greenboro, for petitioner, appellee.
Major S. High, Greensboro, C. O. Pearson, Durham, for respondents, appellants.
The power of eminent domain is one of the attributes of a sovereign state. The right to take private property for public use exists independently of constitutional provisions. In fact, such provisions are limitations on the state's power to exercise the right. 18 Am.Jur., p. 634; 29 C.J.S. Eminent Domain § 3, p. 781; DeBruhl v. State Highway & Public Works Comm., 247 N.C. 671, 102 S.E.2d 229; 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States; Article I, Section 17, Constitution of North Carolina.
When the State of North Carolina, or one of its subdivisions or agencies thereto lawfully authorized by proper legislation, undertakes to condemn private property, the court will determine as a matter of law whether the proposed use is for a public purpose. Charlotte v. Heath, 226 N.C. 750, 40 S.E.2d 600, 169 A.L.R. 569. This Court, in Redevelopment Commission of Greensboro v. Security National Bank, 252 N.C. 595, 114 S.E.2d 688, has determined that lands acquired for the purposes and in the manner set forth in Chapter 160, Article 37, General Statutes, meet the public purpose test. Justice Parker's well documented opinion in Redevelopment Commission of Greensboro v. Security National Bank, supra, permits no other conclusion. See especially, Berman v. Parker, 348 U.S. 26, 75 S.Ct. 98, 99 L.Ed. 27.
Having determined that slum clearance as contemplated by G.S. § 160, Article 37, qualifies as a public purpose, we hold the act fixes safeguards and standards sufficiently definite to enable the petitioner, the City of Greensboro and its agencies, to set up and establish a slum clearance project embracing blighted areas in the city. In order to establish petitioner's right to take the respondents' property by condemnation, the petition must affirmatively show compliance with the statutory requirements. These requirements are set forth in the act. They are fully discussed in Redevelopment Commission of Greensboro v. Security National Bank, supra. Among the requisites are: a properly approved redevelopment plan showing the boundaries of the area, existing uses, proposed uses, population density, proposed changes in zoning ordinances, street layouts, a feasible plan for the relocation of displaced families, and '(7) A statement of the estimated cost and method of financing of acquisition of the redevelopment area, and of all other costs necessary to prepare the area for redevelopment.' G.S. § 160-463, 1961 Cumulative Supplement.
Subsection (c) provides: 'A commission shall not acquire real property for a development project unless the governing body of the community in which the redevelopment project area is located has approved the redevelopment plan, as hereinafter prescribed.' The section then sets out what the plan must include.
The adoption of the plan is equivalent to a cease and desist order preventing any development, rental, or sale of the property within the area. In order that property owners may be protected against threatened taking which is never consummated, the act wisely requires a showing that the acquiring agency has a lawful plan by which, among other things, it may lawfully finance the whole area. Each landowner has the right to know that the taking agency has on hand the money to pay for his property or, in lieu thereof, has present authority to obtain it. Having held the acquisition is for a public purpose, we must not be understood as holding that the acquisition is for a necessary public purpose.
The petitions in these proceedings fall far short of the showing required. This Court considered a similar deficiency in the case of Durham & N. R. R. Co. v. Richmond & D. R. R. Co., 106 N.C. 16, 10 S.E. 1041: ...
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