IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
THE STATE OF DELAWARE, UPON )
THE RELATION OF THE SECRETARY )
OF THE DEPARTMENT OF )
TRANSPORTATION, )
)
Plaintiff, )
) C.A. No.: S21C-03-017 FJJ
v. )
)
MELPAR, LLC, 1,7761995 SQUARE )
FEET (0.0408 ACRES) OF LAND, )
711.9788 SQUARE FEET (0.0163 ACRES) )
OF LAND, 3,598.7712 SQUARE FEET )
(0.0826 ACRES) PART OF TAX MAP )
AND PARCEL NUMBER )
234-23.00-269.14 SITUATED IN INDIAN )
RIVER HUNDRED, and DASH-IN )
FOOD STORES, INC. )
)
Defendants. )
Submitted: January 27, 2022
Decided: February 7, 2022
ORDER ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO CERTIFY AN
INTERLOCUTORY APPEAL - DENIED
Brady Eaby, Esquire, Deputy Attorney General, Department of Justice, Wilmington,
Delaware. Attorney for the State of Delaware,
Richard A. Forsten, Esquire, Saul, Ewing, Arnstein & Lehr, LLP, Wilmington,
Delaware. Attorney for Defendant Dash In Food Services, Inc.
Richard L. Abbott, Esquire, Abbott Law Firm, Hockessin, Delaware. Attorney for
Defendant Melpar, LLC.
Jones, J.
The instant matter is a condemnation action. The State seeks to take a portion
of the Defendant’s property (“Melpar, LLC”) which is located at the intersection of
John Williams Highway and Long Neck Road in Sussex County, Delaware. At the
present time, the use of the property is as a “Dash In” convenience store. The State
seeks to limit the egress and ingress to and from the property from Long Neck Road.
Under the taking, traffic leaving the Dash In could only turn right onto Long Neck
Road northbound. Similarly, access to the property from Long Neck Road could
only be done by traffic traveling northbound on Long Neck Road. The stated
necessity for the project, that has not been seriously challenged in this litigation, is
safety. On December 9, 2021, the Court entered an Order granting the State’s
Motion for Possession, Denying Melpar’s Motion to Dismiss and a related Motion
for an Evidentiary Hearing. A number of arguments were raised by Melpar, but the
dispute boiled down to one central issue. The central issue is whether the State was
required as a matter of law to utilize the Before and After method of appraisal in
this partial taking or could the State rely upon a strip method form of appraisal under
the facts as presented.
In a December 9, 2021 Opinion and Order, this Court determined that
Delaware Law does not require the utilization of a Before and After appraisal
methodology and the question of which appraisal methodology was appropriate
under the instant set of facts would be determined as part of the compensation phase
of the proceedings. Additionally, the December 9, 2021 order specifically addressed
2
Melpar’s application for an evidentiary hearing which was denied and also
addressed the legal standard under Superior Court Rule 71.1.
Melpar filed a Motion for Reargument of the Court’s December 9, 2021
Opinion and Order and the Order of Possession entered the same day. Melpar’s
Motion for Reargument contained several arguments, among them were that the
Superior Court had errored in not holding an evidentiary hearing and that the
Superior Court had applied the wrong legal standard. The Motion for Reargument
was denied on January 10, 2022. The Court’s decision on the Motion for Reargument
contained no detailed analysis other than that the requirements of Rule 59 had not
been met.
On December 20, 2021, Melpar filed a first Application for Interlocutory
Appeal with this Court. The State filed a response on January 4, 2022. On January
7, 2022, Melpar filed a Notice of Appeal of this Court’s December 9, 2021 Opinion
and Order and the Court’s December 9, 2021 Order of Possession.
On January 10, 2022, this Court denied Melpar’s request for an Interlocutory
Appeal. On January 27, 2022, the Delaware Supreme Court entered an order denying
Melpar’s Application for an Interlocutory Appeal. In denying Melpar’s request the
Supreme Court wrote:
(9) Applications for interlocutory review are addressed to the sound
discretion of this Court.1 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
1
DEL. SUPR. CT. R. 42(d)(v).
3
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.2 This Court therefore has accepted
interlocutory appeals in which the property owner challenged the
authority of the taking agency to take a property for a particular
purpose3 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.4
(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 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,5 and the potential benefits of
interlocutory review do not outweigh the inefficiency, disruption, and
probable costs caused by an interlocutory appeal.6
The Mandate from the Supreme Court was issued on January 27, 2022.
2
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.”).
3
Cannon v. State, 807 A.2d 556 (Del. 2002).
4
Lawson v. State, 72 A.3d 84 (Del. 2013).
5
Del. Supr. Ct. R. 42(b)(ii).
6
Id. R. 42(b)(iii).
4
On January 20, 2022, Melpar filed the instant, and second, Application for
Interlocutory Appeal with this Court. The second application relates to this Court’s
January 10, 2022 Rule 59 Order denying Melpar’s Motion for Reargument. The
instant application addresses all the same issues that were raised in the original
application for Interlocutory Appeal.
To the extent that Melpar’s arguments in this second application for
interlocutory appeal are the same as those made in the first application this Court
summarily rejects these arguments. These arguments have already been rejected by
both this Court and the Delaware Supreme Court as not constituting appropriate
reasons under Rule 42 for this Court to certify the Interlocutory Appeal and for the
Delaware Supreme Court to accept an Interlocutory Appeal. To the extent that this
second request for an Interlocutory Appeal raises arguments not raised in the first
application, this Court summarily rejects those arguments as they should have been
included in the first application. The failure to include them until the second
application given the above constitutes a waiver of those arguments.
Even if Melpar somehow gets two bites at the apple in this second request for
a certification of an interlocutory appeal of the Court’s decision on the Motion for
Reargument, this Court DENIES Melpar’s application. This Court adopts and
incorporates by reference in this order its January 10, 2022 decision denying the
request for an Interlocutory Appeal. No new arguments have been advanced by
Melpar that were either not considered the first time around, or would lead this Court
5
to certify this second request this time around.7 Any reasons advanced by Melpar
have either already been considered or were subsumed within this Court’s January
10, 2022 decision and in the Delaware Supreme Court’s January 27, 2022 decision
on which this Court relies in denying the instant motion. Melpar’s application is
DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
/s/ Francis J. Jones, Jr.
Francis J. Jones, Jr., Judge
cc: File&ServeXpress
7
See Hudson v. Hudson, 540 A.2d 113 at *2 (Del. 1988).
6