IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
MELPAR, LLC, §
§ No. 9, 2022
Defendant Below, §
Appellant, § Court Below: Superior Court
§ of the State of Delaware
v. §
§ C.A. No. S21C-03-017
THE STATE OF DELAWARE, §
UPON THE RELATION OF THE §
SECRETARY OF THE §
DEPARTMENT OF §
TRANSPORTATION, §
§
Plaintiff Below, §
Appellee. §
Submitted: January 19, 2022
Decided: January 27, 2022
Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA and TRAYNOR, Justices.
ORDER
After consideration of the notice and supplemental notice of appeal from an
interlocutory order and the documents attached thereto, it appears to the Court that:
(1) The appellant, Melpar, LLC, has petitioned this Court, pursuant to
Supreme Court Rule 42, to accept an appeal from a Superior Court opinion and order
and a Superior Court order of possession, both dated December 9, 2021. The
December 9 decisions denied Melpar’s motion to dismiss and granted the motion of
the appellee, the Delaware Department of Transportation (“DelDOT”), for
possession in a condemnation proceeding.
(2) DelDOT initiated condemnation proceedings for a partial acquisition of
property that Melpar owns at the intersection of John Williams Highway and Long
Neck Road in Sussex County. A tenant currently operates a gas station and
convenience store on the site. DelDOT seeks to acquire an eight-foot-wide strip of
land along the property frontage, two temporary construction easements, and two
light poles (the “Subject Property”) for the purpose of completing highway-safety
improvements. Among other changes, the project will prevent left turns in and out
of one entrance to the site to alleviate a documented crash problem at that entrance.
Right turns in and out of that entrance will remain after the project is completed, and
the project will not affect the other entrance to the site.
(3) Under 10 Del. C. § 6110(a), an entity with the power of eminent
domain1 may obtain an order from Superior Court for possession of property after
filing a condemnation proceeding and notice of intention to take possession of the
property and depositing with the court “the sum of money estimated by plaintiff to
be just compensation for the property or the part thereof taken.”2 Delaware’s Real
Property Acquisition Act (the “RPAA”)3 establishes policies governing the
1
See 10 Del. C. § 6101 (“This chapter shall govern the procedure for all condemnations of real
and personal property within this State under the power of eminent domain exercised by any
authority whatsoever, governmental or otherwise.”).
2
10 Del C. § 6110(a). See also id. § 6110(c) (“In any case where possession has been so taken the
obligation of the plaintiff to pay the amount ultimately determined as just compensation in the
cause shall be absolute. Title shall vest in plaintiff on the date of payment of the final award.”).
3
29 Del. C. § 9501 et seq.
2
acquisition of real property by state agencies. Section 9505 of the RPAA “requires
state agencies to comply with fifteen policies when acquiring real property.”4 Those
fifteen policies, or “guidelines,” are “directory rather than mandatory.”5 Thus,
“failure to comply with them is not a jurisdictional defect requiring automatic
dismissal whenever it is raised.”6 Rather, “[o]nce a defendant in a condemnation
proceeding establishes noncompliance with the RPAA, the condemning agency may
attempt to demonstrate a valid excuse for its failure to follow the RPAA’s policies.
Valid excuses include the agency’s good faith efforts to comply with the policies or
a showing that compliance would have been futile.”7
(4) In June 2019, DelDOT obtained an appraisal of the Subject Property
prepared by W.R. McCain & Associates that valued the Subject Property at $76,900
(the “McCain Appraisal”). The McCain Appraisal used the “strip” valuation method
because it determined that the project would not cause any damages to the remainder
parcel.8 Under the strip method, “the appraiser estimates the value of the entire
property (less improvements) and calculates the value of the portion to be taken on
4
Lawson v. State, 72 A.3d 84, 88 (Del. 2013).
5
Id. at 89 (internal quotations omitted).
6
Id. (internal quotations omitted).
7
Id. (cleaned up).
8
State ex rel. Sec’y of Dep’t of Transp. v. Melpar, LLC, 2021 WL 5903311, at *2 (Del. Super. Ct.
Dec. 9, 2021).
3
the basis of the ratio of the size of the portion to be taken compared to the size of the
entire parcel.”9
(5) In September 2019, DelDOT sent to Melpar a written offer to acquire
the Subject Property based on the McCain Appraisal. The parties began negotiating
in writing and by phone. Melpar was dissatisfied with the McCain Appraisal, and
in August 2020 Melpar obtained an appraisal that valued the Subject Property at
$848,100 (the “Tidewater Appraisal”). The Tidewater Appraisal used the “before
and after” valuation method.10 The before and after method “requires determining
the value of the entire parcel before the taking and the value of the remaining parcel
after the taking. The difference between the two is the compensation to which the
landowner is entitled.”11 After DelDOT completed an internal review of the
Tidewater Appraisal and rejected it, the parties continued to negotiate. DelDOT
eventually determined that negotiations were at an impasse, and in March 2021 it
initiated condemnation proceedings, deposited $76,900 with the Superior Court, and
noticed its intention to take possession of the Subject Property.
(6) Melpar moved to dismiss the condemnation action and opposed the
State’s effort to take possession, arguing that DelDOT had failed to comply with
various policies in Section 9505 of the RPAA by relying on an appraisal that used
9
State v. Teague, 2009 WL 929935, at *6 (Del. Super. Ct. Apr. 3, 2009).
10
Melpar, 2021 WL 5903311, at *2.
11
Teague, 2009 WL 929935, at *6.
4
the strip valuation method rather than one that used the before and after method.
More specifically, Melpar argued that DelDOT was required as a matter of law to
use the before and after method in a partial taking situation.12
(7) The Superior Court denied Melpar’s motion to dismiss and held that
DelDOT could take possession of the Subject Property. The court determined that
Melpar had not sustained its burden of showing that DelDOT’s use of the strip-
method McCain Appraisal was not a good-faith effort to comply with the RPAA’s
policies.13 It held that the parties had a good-faith dispute about whether the strip
method or the before and after method of valuation should be used and that, in that
context, the issue did not go to whether the taking complied with the RPAA’s
policies—and thus whether immediate possession was authorized—but rather was a
question for resolution during the just compensation phase of the litigation.14 The
court therefore entered an order authorizing DelDOT to take immediate possession
of the Subject Property.
(8) Melpar asked the Superior Court to certify an interlocutory appeal. The
Superior Court denied the application for certification.15 The court held that its
12
State ex rel. Sec’y of Dep’t of Transp. v. Melpar, LLC, C.A. No. S21C-03-017 FJJ, Defendant
Melpar, LLC’s Motion to Dismiss and Opposition to Motion for Possession, ¶¶ 8, 13-15, 20, 22 &
Wherefore Clause (Del. Super. Ct. filed Apr. 14, 2021).
13
Melpar, 2021 WL 5903311, at *5.
14
Id.
15
State ex rel. Sec’y of Dep’t of Transp. v. Melpar, LLC, 2022 WL 103483 (Del. Super. Ct. Jan.
10, 2022).
5
opinion and order decided a substantial issue of material importance but that
appellate review before a final judgment was not necessary.16 The court further held
that the application for certification did not satisfy any of the criteria of Rule
42(b)(iii).17
(9) Applications for interlocutory review are addressed to the sound
discretion of this Court.18 After careful consideration, and in the exercise of its
discretion, this Court has concluded that the application for interlocutory review
should be refused. Contrary to DelDOT’s contention, a decision regarding
possession in a condemnation proceeding typically will satisfy the requirement that
the trial court’s order decided a substantial issue of material importance. As this
Court recognized in 1967, before the adoption of Rule 42, an interlocutory appeal
from an order of possession will often be the property owner’s best opportunity to
object to the taking itself and to retain the property in its original condition.19 This
Court therefore has accepted interlocutory appeals in which the property owner
16
Id. at *2. See DEL. SUPR. CT. R. 42(b)(i) (“No interlocutory appeal will be certified by the trial
court or accepted by this Court unless the order of the trial court decides a substantial issue of
material importance that merits appellate review before a final judgment.”).
17
Melpar, 2022 WL 103483, at *2-3.
18
DEL. SUPR. CT. R. 42(d)(v).
19
See 1.67 Acres of Land v. State, 225 A.2d 763, 765 (Del. 1967) (“If the owner prevails [in
appealing an order of possession], further proceedings are unnecessary; if the condemnor prevails
and is given the right to possession prior to the award, it may at once make changes in the property
which would render impossible its surrender in its original condition. . . . We suggest, for the
benefit of litigants in future cases, that an appeal from such order ought to be filed promptly after
its entry, in order that the right to take may be finally settled before the hearing on damages. Failure
to do so may constitute an abandonment of the defense on subsequent appeal.”).
6
challenged the authority of the taking agency to take a property for a particular
purpose20 or contended that the acquiring agency’s appraisal was fundamentally
flawed because it failed to recognize that the project would prevent the remainder
from being used for its highest and best use, on which use the remainder value was
based.21
(10) In this case, Melpar does not assert such a fundamental flaw in
DelDOT’s process, nor does it contend that DelDOT lacks authority to take the
Subject Property for the purpose of improving road safety. Indeed, it does not appear
that Melpar genuinely contests the taking itself at all. Instead, the dispute centers on
the appropriate valuation methodology to apply in this situation, a matter that will
best be resolved in the just compensation phase of the litigation. Considering the
essence of this dispute and balancing Melpar’s important property rights against
DelDOT’s important interest in promptly moving forward with road-safety
improvements, the Court has concluded that exceptional circumstances that would
merit interlocutory review of the Superior Court’s decision do not exist in this case,22
and the potential benefits of interlocutory review do not outweigh the inefficiency,
disruption, and probable costs caused by an interlocutory appeal.23
20
Cannon v. State, 807 A.2d 556 (Del. 2002).
21
Lawson v. State, 72 A.3d 84 (Del. 2013).
22
DEL. SUPR. CT. R. 42(b)(ii).
23
Id. R. 42(b)(iii).
7
NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS ORDERED that the interlocutory appeal is
REFUSED.
BY THE COURT:
/s/ Collins J. Seitz, Jr.
Chief Justice
8