State Ex Rel. State Highway Department v. Morris

93 A.2d 523 (1952)

STATE ex rel. STATE HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT
v.
MORRIS et al.

Superior Court of Delaware, Sussex.

November 24, 1952.

Ralph S. Baker, of Georgetown, for plaintiff.

James M. Tunnell, of Tunnell & Tunnell, of Georgetown, for defendants.

HERRMANN, Judge, charged the Commissioners, in part, as follows:

The compensation to which the defendants are entitled is the difference between the market value of their property as a whole immediately before and unaffected by the taking and the market value of the remainder of their property immediately after and as affected by the taking. In adjusting this difference, the parties are entitled to have you consider the value of the property for all available uses and purposes, including the best and most valuable use.[1]

In deciding the issue of just compensation, you should take into consideration the benefits and advantages to the landowners, if any, resulting from the highway improvement and you should set off the value of any such benefit or advantage against whatever loss, detriment or disadvantage you may find the owners have sustained or will sustain by reason of the taking and the highway improvement.[2]

NOTES

[1] The Court thus adopted the "before and after" formula for measuring just compensation in a partial-taking case and rejected formulas prevailing in other jurisdictions. See Orgel on Valuation under Eminent Domain, Chapter IV, especially pp. 158, 161, 209 et seq.

[2] See 1935 Code, § 5730; Huber v. Steel, 14 Del. Ch. 302, 125 A. 673; Whiteman's Ex'x v. Wilmington & S. R. R. Co., 2 Har. 514.