Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-1807-84
Frank F. Ramey, M.D. (Plaintiff)
v.
The Queen in right of Canada (Defendant)
INDEXED AS: RAMEY v. CANADA
Trial Division, McNair J.—Fredericton, May 27, 28, 29 and 30; Ottawa, October 27, 1986.
Air law — Action for compensation for injurious affection caused by enactment of Fredericton Airport Zoning Regula tions — Flightway easement reserved — Validity thereof — Easement neither vague nor uncertain — Beyond doubt height servitude restriction running for benefit of airport — Plaintiff entitled, as incident of ownership, to use of subjacent property re buildings and trees — Property value decreased — Com pensation allowed — Aeronautics Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. A-3, s. 6(1)(j),(10) — Fredericton Airport Zoning Regulations, SOR/81-452, ss. 4, 5, 6.
Expropriation — Injurious affection — Fredericton Airport Zoning Regulations — Property value decreased due to enact ment of Regulations — Appraisal evidence in conflict — Compensation set at $22,600 — Fredericton Airport Zoning Regulations, SOR/81-452, ss. 4, 5, 6.
Real property — Easements — For flightway and to enter for removal of trees — Whether void for uncertainty — Abandonment — Non-user not giving rise to presumption of abandonment — Obtaining permission to cut trees and pay ment of compensation not conclusive easement abandoned.
The plaintiff claims compensation for injurious affection to his property occasioned by the enactment of the Fredericton Airport Zoning Regulations. The plaintiff is the owner of a 54.3-acre property situated near the end of runway 27 of the Fredericton Airport. The property was acquired in 1951 by the plaintiffs brother from the City of Fredericton, owner of the municipal airport, and subsequently conveyed to the plaintiff in 1962. The deed of sale reserved unto the grantor a flightway easement and a right to enter upon the premises to remove obstructive trees. It also prohibited the grantee from construct ing any building that would interfere with use of the easement. In 1962, the City conveyed the airport to the federal Crown. The latter's servants entered the premises on a number of occasions to do some tree topping. The operation was con sidered necessary in order to comply with the 2% slope approach which had been a policy requirement since the exten sion of the runway in 1957.
The plaintiffs case is that subdivision development potential of his land was sterilized by the enactment of the zoning regulations and that the 2% slope approach policy was made
known neither to him nor to the general public until notice of the zoning regulations was published in the newspaper in October 1982. It was further argued that the flightway ease- ment of 1951 was void for uncertainty or had been abandoned. The defendant says that enactment of the zoning regulations changed nothing. The value of the land was not decreased since its highest and best use was for agricultural purposes. The defendant further urges that plaintiff had no proprietory right to the air space comprising the 2% approach slope over hisland, citing in support Lacroix, Jean v. The Queen, [1954] Ex.C.R. 69.
Held, the plaintiff should have judgment for compensation in the amount of $22,600 plus costs.
It follows from Lacroix v. The Queen that while the plaintiff cannot claim physical ownership of the air space, he would have some proprietary right, as an incident of ownership, to the use and enjoyment of his subjacent property with respect to the buildings and trees thereon and the height to which these can be extended or permitted to grow. The question of the validity of the flightway easement thus assumes some importance.
The easement imposes a servitude not on the air space but on the servient lands which were specifically described in the deed. In the case of an express grant or reservation of easement the nature and extent of the right conferred is a question of construction. In the present case, the parties' intention was to create a legal easement. The restrictive covenant identified the subject-matter of the grant; it put beyond question that the general height restriction servitude was to run for the benefit of the Fredericton Airport lands. Given the context and consider ing the operative words of the grant in their ordinary and grammatical sense, it could not be said that the reservation of the easement was void for uncertainty.
With respect to the question of abandonment, the principle is clear: an easement created by express grant can only be lost by non-user where such non-user raises a presumption of a release, and the onus is on the person alleging abandonment to establish such presumed non-user. There had been no abandonment by defendant of the flightway easement.
The matter of compensation for injurious affection to prop erty resulting from the enactment of airport zoning regulations had been canvassed in several cases. Compensation was allowed in all of them. As stated in Roberts and Bagwell v. The Queen, [1957] S.C.R. 28, "Vertical regulation is necessary in the vicinity of airports .... It becomes at once a burden on the land and the resulting diminution in value is a proper subject for compensation". The plaintiff's property had suffered a decrease in value but the appraisal evidence was conflicting so that the Court had to make a determination as to the quantum of compensation to be awarded.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Roberts and Bagwell v. The Queen, [1957] S.Ç.R. 28; Canada Steamship Lines Ltd. v. The Queen, [1956-1960]
Ex.C.R. 277; C.J.R.T. Developments Ltd. v. The Queen, [1983] 2 F.C. 410; 145 D.L.R. (3d) 416 (T.D.).
CONSIDERED:
Lacroix, Jean v. The Queen, [1954] Ex.C.R. 69; Lis - combe v. Maughan, [1928] 3 D.L.R. 397 (Ont. S.C.); Vyricherla Narayana Gajapatiraju (Raja) v. Vizagapa- tam, Revenue Divisional Officer, [1939] A.C. 302 (P.C.).
REFERRED To:
Ellenborough Park, In re. In re Davies, decd. Powell v. Maddison, [1956] Ch. 131 (C.A.); Ward v. Ward (1852), 7 Ex. 838; 155 E.R. 1189; Crossley & Sons, Limited v. Lightowler (1867), L.R. 2 Ch. 478; Lamb v. Manitoba Hydro-Electric Board, [1966] S.C.R. 229; 55 D.L.R. (2d) 654.
COUNSEL:
David R. Oley for plaintiff.
A. R. Pringle and Martin Ward for
defendant.
SOLICITORS:
Mockler, Allen & Dixon, Fredericton, for plaintiff.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendant.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
McNAIR J.: This is an action brought under subsection 6(10) of the Aeronautics Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. A-3, (the "Act") wherein the plaintiff claims compensation for injurious affection to his property occasioned by the operation of the Fred- ericton Airport Zoning Regulations, SOR/81-452 dated June 8, 1981 (the "Regulations").
Subsection 6(10) of the Act reads:
6....
(10) Every person whose property is injuriously affected by the operation of a zoning regulation is entitled to recover from Her Majesty, as compensation, the amount, if any, by which the property was decreased in value by the enactment of the regulation, minus an amount equal to any increase in the value of the property that occurred after the claimant became the owner thereof and is attributable to the airport.
Plans and descriptions of the lands affected by the zoning regulation and copies of the Regula tions were filed in the Registry Offices for the
counties of York and Sunbury on September 20, 1982. It is common ground that this date can be taken as the effective date of the Regulations for purposes of the case.
The plaintiff, Dr. Frank Ramey, is the owner of the Belmont property, so-called, containing approximately 54.3 acres, situated in the Parish of Lincoln in the County of Sunbury and Province of New Brunswick, near the end of runway 27 of the Fredericton Airport. The property comprises two parcels of land fronting on either side of provincial Highway 102. The larger parcel of some 48.2 acres extends back from the highway in a northerly direction to the Saint John River. The remaining triangular parcel of some 6.07 acres lies on the southerly side of the highway. An Irving service station is located at the southeasterly corner of the larger parcel, having been subdivided therefrom some years previously. All of the buildings are contained on the larger, northerly portion of the Belmont property. These comprise a main house of two storeys, designated as an historic site, ma chinery shed, workshop, warehouse and small dwelling house or cottage. There were apple orchards on the Belmont property when the plain tiff first acquired it. This agricultural use has been continued and developed over the years and there are presently four apple orchards under cultivation in the northerly parcel, having a total area of approximately 11.9 acres.
The lands for the municipal airport were assem bled by the City of Fredericton by compulsory acquisition over the period from 1948 to 1951. In the spring of 1951, the City authorized the sale by tender of the Belmont property, subject to a flight- way easement. Pursuant to subsequent resolution of council, Roy A. Ramey purchased the Belmont property for himself and his brother, Frank F. Ramey, at the tendered price of $9,000. Title was taken in Roy's name alone. The two Belmont parcels were described by metes and bounds in the deed of conveyance, the larger parcel being described as Lot No. 2 of Parcel E and the smaller one as Parcel D, both as shown on a plan of Fredericton Municipal Airport prepared by J. Brown Maxwell, N.B.L.S., in March 1951. The deed dated June 6, 1951 reserved the following flightway easement:
RESERVING unto the Grantor, its Successors and Assigns for ever an easement over the said lands and premises hereinbefore described adequate and necessary for the operation of the said Airport, together with the right to enter upon the lands and premises hereinbefore conveyed and by its agents, servants, workmen or contractors to remove from the said lands and premises all trees and bushes which may interfere in any way with the said easement.
The deed also contained the following restrictive covenant on the part of the grantee, Roy A. Ramey, viz.:
AND THE GRANTEE, for himself, his Heirs, Executors, Administrators and Assigns, covenants and agrees that he will not construct nor permit to be constructed upon the lands hereinbefore described any buildings or erections of any kind whatsoever or do any act or thing that will in any way interfere with the enjoyment or use of the said easement hereinbefore reserved.
The Fredericton Airport was in active operation at the time of the Ramey deed. Runway 27 was well under way, if not then in existence. An aerial photograph of October 10, 1951 shows that runway 27 was in actual existence at that time.
By deed of June 9, 1951 Roy A. Ramey con veyed the Belmont property to his sister, Mary Ramey, subject to the same reservation of flight- way easement. The deed also exacted a warranty covenant from the grantee to keep and observe the restrictive covenant in the deed from the City of Fredericton to Roy A. Ramey and to indemnify the latter from any and all claims and demands whatsoever in respect thereof.
Pursuant to an agreement of March 31, 1960 with the Department of Transport, the City of Fredericton conveyed the municipal airport prop erty to Her Majesty the Queen in right of Canada by deed dated April 11, 1962. The Belmont prop erty was excepted, inter alia, from the lands there by conveyed.
Mary Ramey conveyed Belmont to her brother, Dr. Frank F. Ramey, by deed dated July 15, 1963, subject to the same reservation of flightway ease- ment and the restrictive covenant contained in the initial deed from the City of Fredericton to Roy A. Ramey.
Dr. Ramey left private practice in 1952 to accept an overseas medical posting with the Department of Health and Welfare. He served abroad for the next twenty years, mostly in Rome. The plaintiff returned to Fredericton in 1972.
During the period of the plaintiff's absence abroad, the dwelling house and small cottage on the Belmont property were rented to various ten ants. The apple orchard was rented for a few years to a commercial grower and thereafter was managed for the plaintiff. The rental and manage ment arrangements were looked after in the main by the plaintiff's family members, initially by his sister, Mary Ramey, and afterwards for the most part by the plaintiffs daughter, Nancy Findlay and her husband, Dr. John A. Findlay. The small cottage on the property was vacant on many occa sions over the years because of the difficulty in finding tenants who would tolerate the noise of aircraft landing on and departing from runway 27. The plaintiff sold the service station parcel in 1960 for $11,000 with a view to establishing an indica tor of fair market value for the whole Belmont property. The apple orchard earned a respectable profit for most of the years.
The plaintiff purchased the Belmont property as an investment but he took no active steps to de velop it as a housing development or residential subdivision. At one time he had some discussion with his son-in-law, Dr. Findlay, about the possi bility of contracting stone dwelling houses on the property. This seems to have been primarily dependent on the prospect of purchasing a nearby stone quarry. Matters never got beyond the stage of discussion. Any plans for ultimate residential development remained in his mind. The reasons given for this were his long period of overseas service, the fact that his children were not interest ed in pursuing developmental plans, and a marked deterioration in his health beginning about 1976.
In 1957, the defendant's servants went on the plaintiffs property without permission and cut down some obstructive trees. These comprised a row of ornamental cedars leading from the high way to the main dwelling house and some large elms on the property. The plaintiff was outraged. The services of a solicitor were retained and the claim was eventually settled. The defendant had futher occasion in 1967, 1974, 1975 and 1984 to cut or top trees on the plaintiffs property for which it obtained permission and paid compensa tion, at his insistence. This tree topping was con sidered necessary by the defendant in order to
comply with the 2% slope approach, which had been operative as a policy requirement since before 1957. Runway 27 was extended by some 1,150 feet in 1957. This extension had the effect of lowering the existing 2% slope by 26 feet over the plaintiffs property.
The whole matter of the flightway easement and the compensation payable to the plaintiff for entry on his property and cutting of trees had been the subject of discussion and negotiation between the Department of Transport and the plaintiffs solici tor, H. A. Hanson, Q.C., starting in 1957 and extending over the next several years. In 1960, the plaintiff's daughter, Shirley Rayes, was serving articles with Mr. Hanson. At her principal's request, she attended a meeting between him and two officials from the Department of Transport, Messrs. Cormier and MacLeod, who acknowl edged at one stage of the discussions that the flightway easement in the City of Fredericton deed was void for uncertainty. In 1961 the Department of Transport acquired from the plaintiff an approach light easement near the small cottage on the Belmont property. The plaintiff was fully aware of the prior flightway easement over the property from the time of the sale by the City to his brother and himself in 1951.
The volume of air traffic at the Fredericton Airport has steadily increased over the years, sub ject to short-term fluctuations, and the aircraft utilizing the same have become larger and noisier. Jet aircraft have been landing and taking off at the airport since about 1974. The largest aircraft using the airport before that was the Viscount. The plaintiffs lands and premises are immediately adjacent to the Fredericton Airport and are within and beneath the approach surface to runway 27.
In February 1983, Dr. Ramey gave permission to the defendant to have an appraisal done of his property with a view to establishing its fair market value. There had been some suggestion that the defendant might be interested in purchasing the property as a means of assuring the safe operation of the airport. David F. Hildebrand, A.A.C.I., inspected the larger parcel of the Belmont prop erty on February 10, 1983 and shortly thereafter submitted his appraisal to Public Works Canada. The appraisal put the fair market value of this
parcel at $140,000, inclusive of buildings and a separate valuation of $19,000 for the orchard. Nothing came of this and at a meeting between the parties on or about November 22, 1983 the defendant advised that it was not interested in purchasing the plaintiff's property.
Action was instituted by the plaintiff's solicitors on August 28, 1984 claiming "damages" for injurious affection to the plaintiff's property by the enactment and operation of the Fredericton Air port Zoning Regulations. Damages is obviously a misnomer. The statutory right afforded is one to compensation for injurious affection to property by the operation of a zoning regulation where the measure of compensation, leaving aside any increase in value, is the amount by which the injuriously affected property was decreased in value by the enactment of the regulation.
In July 1985 Mr. Hildebrand was commissioned by Public Works Canada to make a separate valuation of the triangular parcel on the southerly side of Highway 102 and also to provide a supple mental report on the highest and best use of the Ramey property from the standpoint of prospec tive residential development. He submitted sepa rate reports on these topics under date of August 29, 1985.
The plaintiff engaged the services of Clifford W. Lawrence, A.A.C.I., of deStecher, Miller & Associates Limited, for his appraisal. Mr. Law- rence submitted an interim report dated August 23, 1984 which set the damages for injurious affection to the subject property at the figure of $36,000. The plaintiff and his family were insist ent that the property had been undervalued. By November 1984 Lawrence yielded to the extent of recognizing minor deficiencies, particularly with regard to misinformation about the purchase price of the Breen property. He increased this compa rable by 60% and revised his compensation figure upward to $45,000. His final report of May 8, 1986 confirmed the figure for damages for injuri ous affection at $45,000.
The empowering provision for the zoning regu lation in this case is paragraph 6(1)(j) of the Aeronautics Act, which reads substantially as follows:
6. (1) Subject to the approval of the Governor in Council, the Minister may make regulations ... with respect to
(j) the height, use and location of buildings, structures and objects, including objects of natural growth, situated on lands adjacent to or in the vicinity of airports, for purposes relating to navigation of aircraft and use and operation of airports, and including, for such purposes, regulations restricting, regulating or prohibiting the doing of anything or the suffer ing of anything to be done on any such lands, or the construction or use of any such building, structure or object;
The provisions of the Fredericton Airport Zoning Regulations that are germane to the issue are as follows:
General
4. No person shall erect or construct on any land to which these Regulations apply, any building, structure or object or any addition to any existing building, structure or object, the highest point of which will exceed in elevation at the location of that point, any
(a) approach surface;
(b) outer surface; or
(c) transitional surface.
Natural Growth
5. Where an object of natural growth on any land to which these Regulations apply exceeds in elevation any of the surfaces referred to in section 4, the Minister may make a direction that the owner or occupier of the land on which that object is growing remove the excessive growth.
Disposal of Waste
6. No owner or occupier of any land to which these Regula tions apply shall permit that land or any part of it to be used for the disposal or accumulation of any waste, material or substance edible by or attractive to birds.
The basic issue in the case is whether and to what extent, if any, the plaintiff's lands have been decreased in value by the enactment of the Fred- ericton Airport Zoning Regulations.
The central theme of the plaintiff's argument is that his land had a prospective advantage for ultimate subdivision development in the foresee able future which was completely sterilized by the enactment of the zoning regulations. Counsel for the plaintiff maintains that the 2% slope was never made known to the plaintiff or the public generally until the enactment of the zoning regulations and
the publication of notice thereof in the local news paper on October 25, 1982. Until then its existence was known only to the bureaucracy of the Depart ment of Transport. The only zoning regulation which prejudicially affected the subject lands was the one enacted on June 8, 1981. In support of this, plaintiff's counsel advances the corollary argument that the flightway easement over the plaintiff's land, going back to the deed of 1951, was void for uncertainty or, failing that, was inef fectual by reason of abandonment.
The defendant's case in a nutshell is that noth ing was changed by the enactment of the zoning regulations. The highest and best use of the plain tiff's property immediately before their enactment was the use to which it was being put, namely, agricultural and the zoning regulations did nothing to change that. Hence, there was no decrease in value. Counsel for the defendant made the further submission in the course of argument that the plaintiff had no proprietary right to the air space comprising the 2% approach slope over his prop erty, citing in support Lacroix, Jean v. The Queen, [1954] Ex.C.R. 69.
With respect, I consider that this submission is irrelevant to the case at bar, save only in so far as it may have some bearing on the highest and best use of the plaintiff's property as determinative of its market value at the material time. The plaintiff never laid claim to the air space over his land. What he complains of is the decrease in value of his property by the enactment of the zoning regulations.
Lacroix v. The Queen, supra, granted compen sation for the expropriation of an approach light easement to runway 24 of the Dorval Airport and injurious affection to the suppliant's remaining land but denied the suppliant's claim for damages for a flightway easement through the air space over his land. Mr. Justice Fournier implicitly rejected the cujus est solum maxim of the Middle Ages, which being literally translated means that whoever owns the soil owns all that lies above it, and went on to state the applicable principle at page 76 as follows:
In my view, air and space are not susceptible of ownership and fall in the category of res omnium communis, which does not mean that the owner of the soil is deprived of the right of using his land for plantations and constructions or in any way which is not prohibited by law or against the public interest.
It seems to me that the owner of land has a limited right in the air space over his property; it is limited by what he can possess or occupy for the use and enjoyment of his land. By putting up buildings or other constructions the owner does not take possession of the air but unites or incorporates something to the surface of his land. This which is annexed or incorpo rated to his land becomes part and parcel of the property.
It follows that while the plaintiff cannot claim physical ownership to the air space above his property he would have some proprietary right, as an incident of his ownership, to the use and enjoy ment of his subjacent property with respect to the buildings and the trees or other objects of natural growth situate, lying and being thereon and the height to which these can be extended or permitted to grow. This is why the question of the validity of the flightway easement of 1951 assumes some importance.
It is said that the easement is void for uncertain ty. Wherein lies the uncertainty? It is true that the easement does not purport to specifically define a column or segment of the air space lying over the servient lands of the plaintiff in the same sense as the 2% slope was defined or made ascertainable by the zoning regulations enacted on June 8, 1981. The easement imposes a servitude not on the air space but rather on the servient lands and premises themselves in terms of what was "adequate and necessary for the operation of the said Airport". The easement also gives a right of entry on the said lands with the right to remove all trees and bushes which might interfere in any way with the easement. The restrictive covenant in the deed of 1951 enjoined against the construction of buildings or the doing of anything that would "in any way interfere with the enjoyment or use of the said easement hereinbefore reserved". The servient lands were specifically described in the deed.
Ellenborough Park, In re. In re Davies, decd. Powell v. Maddison, [1956] Ch. 131 (C.A.) held that the grant of "the full enjoyment of the pleas ure ground" comprising a garden park was a right known to law and a valid easement.
In the case of an express grant or reservation of easement the nature and extent of the right there by conferred becomes a question of construction. It appears from the conveyance that the parties intended at least to create a legal easement. The
right was described in terms as an easement. Moreover, the restrictive covenant further identi fies and buttresses the subject-matter of the grant of easement and puts beyond question that the general height restriction servitude was to run for the benefit of the Fredericton Airport lands. Taking the easement in its entire context and construing the operative words of grant according to their ordinary and grammatical sense, I find nothing that would make the reservation of the flightway easement void for uncertainty.
What of the question of abandonment?
There is no presumption of abandonment of easement arising from the mere fact of non-user. The principle is clear that an easement created by express grant can only be lost by non-user where such non-user raises a presumption of release, and the onus is on the person alleging abandonment to establish such presumed non-user; Ward v. Ward (1852), 7 Ex. 838; 155 E.R. 1189; Crossley & Sons, Limited v. Lightowler (1867), L.R. 2 Ch. 478, at page 482; and Liscombe v. Maughan, [1928] 3 D.L.R. 397 (Ont. S.C.).
Grant J.A., stated the principle in Liscombe at page 402:
The onus of establishing the loss of extinction of the right of way by abandonment or non-user rests upon the defendants. The authorities are reviewed in Goddard on the Law of Ease- ments, 8th ed., pp. 520, et seq. The author sums up the effect of the authorities in the following words (p. 520):—"From this it is apparent that the only way in which an easement can be extinguished by the act of the parties interested is by release, actual or presumed; that non-user will not have that effect unless a release can be implied from such non-user and the surrounding circumstances; and that when an easement is spoken of as having been lost by abandonment, it is intended that the circumstances are such that a release is to be pre sumed." Non-user may be explained by showing that the owner of an easement had for the time no occasion to use it, he having other and more convenient means of employing his land than
when the easement was of use:
On the basis of this authority, I find that there was no abandonment of the flightway easement by the defendant. The only scintilla of evidence to suggest the contrary is the obtaining of permission to cut and top the trees from the plaintiff's prop erty and the payment of compensation therefor, starting in 1957. In my opinion, that is not only entirely inconclusive but rather is quite explicable
by the fact that the easement itself made no provision for compensation.
There are several leading authorities dealing with the matter of compensation for injurious affection to property resulting from the enactment of airport zoning regulations: see Roberts and Bagwell v. The Queen, [1957] S.C.R. 28; Canada Steamship Lines Ltd. v. The Queen, [1956-1960] Ex.C.R. 277; and C.J.R.T. Developments Ltd. v. The Queen, [1983] 2 F.C. 410; 145 D.L.R. (3d) 416 (T.D.). In all of them compensation for injuri ous affection was allowed.
In the Roberts and Bagwell case, Nolan J., said at page 38:
The purpose of the statute is clear. Vertical regulation is necessary in the vicinity of airports and the vesting of the powers mentioned operates with an immediate effect on the use and value of the land. It becomes at once a burden on the land and the resulting diminution in value is a proper subject for compensation.
Thorson P., made this significant statement in Canada Steamship Lines Ltd. v. The Queen, supra, at pages 284-285:
It is for the decrease of such value by the enactment of a zoning regulation that the owner of property injuriously affected by its operation is entitled to compensation under section 4(8) of the Act. Put in other terms, the decrease in value for which he is entitled to compensation is the difference between the amount which the prudent purchaser referred to would have been willing to pay for the property after the enactment of the regulation and that which he would have been willing to pay for it before its enactment.
And it is axiomatic that the suppliant is entitled to have such value and its decrease determined on the basis of the most advantageous use, whether present or prospective, to which its property could have been put immediately prior to the enact ment of the Regulations. It is also clear that in determining such most advantageous use the Court must not limit itself to the actual use to which the owner has put his property. It is the most advantageous use to which it could have been put that is to be considered. In my opinion, the best statement of the applicable principle was made in Nichols on Eminent Domain, 2nd Edition at page 665, where the author said:
In determining the market value of a piece of real estate for the purpose of a taking by eminent domain, it is not merely the value of the property for the use to which it has been applied by the owner that should be taken into consider ation, but the possibility of its use for all purposes present and prospective, for which it is adapted and to which it might in reason be applied, must be considered, and its value for the use to which men of prudence and wisdom and having adequate means would devote the property if owned by them must be taken as the ultimate test.
While this statement was expressly applicable to the determina tion of market value for the purpose of a taking by eminent
domain I consider it equally applicable to the determination of the value and decrease of value referred to in section 4(8) of the Act and I so find.
Lord Romer made a classic statement about future potentiality in Vyricherla Narayana Gajapatiraju (Raja) v. Vizagapatam, Revenue Divisional Officer, [1939] A.C. 302 (P.C.), cited with approval in Lamb v. Manitoba Hydro-Elec tric Board, [ 1966] S.C.R. 229; 55 D.L.R. (2d) 654, when he said at page 313:
For it has been established by numerous authorities that the land is not to be valued merely by reference to the use to which it is being put at the time at which its value has to be determined ... but also by reference to the uses to which it is reasonably capable of being put in the future. No authority indeed is required for this proposition. It is a self-evident one. No one can suppose in the case of land which is certain, or even likely, to be used in the immediate or reasonably near future for building purposes, but which at the valuation date is waste land or is being used for agricultural purposes, that the owner, however willing a vendor, will be content to sell the land for its value as waste or agricultural land as the case may be. It is plain that, in ascertaining its value, the possibility of its being used for building purposes would have to be taken into account. It is equally plain, however, that the land must not be valued as though it had already been built upon, ... sometimes expressed by saying that it is the possibilities of the land and not its realized possibilities that must be taken into consideration. [Emphasis added.]
In C.J.R.T. Developments Ltd., supra, Marceau J., summed up the effect of the statutory provision in this way at pages 422 F.C.; 425-426 D.L.R.:
Subsection 6(10) of the Act gives the landowner a right to recover as compensation the amount by which his property has been decreased in value by the enactment of some airport zoning regulations. The right created by this provision is obvi ously meant to exist and be enforceable as soon as the regula tions referred to are enacted ... .
The expert appraisers for the parties were in substantial agreement on matters pertaining to the nature and general location of the subject property and the relevant zoning requirements in relation to its present or prospective use. Interestingly enough, each of them utilized the same sales com- parables. Both were agreed that the value of the property in its present agricultural use was in the range of $45,000. They were in agreement as to their definitions of highest and best use but their criteria for determining the same differ markedly. The plaintiff's expert, Mr. Lawrence, placed more
emphasis on the prospective use to which a prop erty might be reasonably put in the foreseeable future rather than its actual use at the time of valuation. He viewed the matter more from the standpoint of future use potentiality. The defendant's expert, Mr. Hildebrand, was less ven turesome in this regard. He considered that the use must be within the realm of likely possibility and not be one which was merely speculative or conjec tural. In addition, the demand for such a use must presently exist. Both experts were generally agreed that the proximity of the subject property to the Fredericton Airport would have something of a detrimental effect on its subdivision potentiality.
Mr. Lawrence's favoured approach was to divide the Belmont property into eleven residential build ing lots of the requisite acreage and road frontage. He then determined that these lots could yield a net return of $88,000 or $8,000 per lot, after development costs had been deducted. He based this result in the main on his highest sales compa rable equivalent of $1,621 per acre.
Taking his four sales comparables, Lawrence estimated the after-value of the land at $800 per acre on 54.3 acres, or $43,400. The deduction of this value from the prospective residential value of $88,000 gave the rounded figure of $45,000 as the measure of compensation for injurious affection attributable to the zoning regulations. Mr. Law- rence admitted under cross-examination that the nearby airport would diminish the value of the property for residential purposes but nevertheless he held to the view that the property still had some residential potential. It was a basic premise of the Lawrence appraisal that the flightway easement of 1951 was invalid. It came out on cross-examina tion that he had been so instructed by the plain tiff's solicitor.
Mr. Hildebrand's first report was submitted as .a fair market valuation of the land, buildings and orchards of the Belmont property, excluding the triangular portion on the southerly side of the highway. He subsequently valued this parcel at $3,500. His second look at the Belmont parcel led him to conclude that there was no foreseeable subdivision potentiality because the supply of supe rior residential building lots in the surrounding area was amply sufficient to satisfy the current
housing demand. The highest and best use of Belmont continued to be agricultural. In his opin ion, nothing had changed. He amplified this in his affidavit of opinion by averring that the presence of the airport and the use of runway 27 for many years, coupled with the availability of superior land, "prevented the existence of any potential for the residential development of the property". The affidavit further opined that the enactment of the zoning regulations did nothing to change what had existed previously. Hildebrand admitted on cross- examination that he had no reason to doubt the efficacy of the Lawrence scheme of subdividing the property into eleven building lots. He qualified this by asserting that he did not believe that any significant demand would exist for such subdivided lots. He also admitted under cross-examination that any subdivided lots could have a present value of $12,000 per lot, absent the airport, but that a very significant reduction factor would have to be applied to backdate this value to the time of enactment of the zoning regulations because of the recessive economic conditions then pertaining. Hildebrand was unshaken by cross-examination from his adamant belief that with or without the zoning regulations the highest and best use of the subject property was agricultural use.
Mr. Lawrence did an analysis of the actual impact of the zoning regulations in terms of height restrictions. He noted that the airspace remaining to the property owner ranged from 16 feet to 120 feet over the property area with the result that the available building heights range from 17 feet to 47 feet over the southerly triangular portion and from 16 feet to 70 feet over the front 24.2 acres of the northerly tract of Belmont between the high way and the river. He concluded from this that while the actual building height limitations did not preclude residential construction over more than a relatively small portion of the property the pub lished heights were so low as to discourage such construction for the foreseeable future. This led him to the conclusion that the highest and best use of the property after enactment of the zoning regulations was continuing agricultural use. I accept his evidence in this regard.
As often happens with appraisals, we have the case of two proficient expert witnesses arriving at
totally different conclusions. I must either accept one or the other or endeavour to reconcile the differences as best I can.
It seems to me that Mr. Hildebrand overempha sized the factors of present demand and current economic conditions in his appraisal of the prop erty and ignored or glossed over the essential element of advantageous prospective use in the foreseeable future. Shortly stated, he viewed the problem in terms of actuality rather than poten tiality. With respect, I consider that he erred in his approach of overplaying the actual and downplay ing the potential. Undoubtedly, the proximity of the property to the airport had to have a deleteri ous effect which, together with the availability of superior residential lots, would make the subdivi sion potentiality far less attractive to a prospective developer than would otherwise have been the case. Nonetheless, it is my opinion that these limiting factors were not so overpowering immedi ately prior to the enactment of the zoning regula tions as to lead men of prudence and wisdom and having adequate means at their disposal to rule out any possibility of prospective subdivision develop ment in the foreseeable future. Consequently, I am unable to accept Mr. Hildebrand's conclusion that nothing was changed by the enactment of the Fredericton Airport Zoning Regulations.
On the other hand, I cannot accept Mr. Law- rence's compensation amount of $45,000 for sever al reasons. Firstly, he premised his appraisal, through no fault of his own, on the mistaken assumption that the flightway easement of 1951 was invalid. I have found to the contrary so the supporting foundation for this postulate is swept away. I am sure that he would be the first to admit that this would have to affect his appraisal figure. Secondly, he chose his $8,000 per lot price from the highest but one of the six sale prices for residential building lots indicated in his report. A comparable lot on the Nevers Road requiring fill and a 200-foot well sold in September 1983 for $6,000. This is closer to the subject property than the lot in Lincoln Park Gardens, which sold in May 1982 for $8,000 and fell within Mr. Hilde- brand's category of a superior type building lot. Finally, and perhaps least important, Mr. Law-
rence yielded to pressure from his client to upgrade his valuations.
In the result, I find that the plaintiff's property suffered a decrease in value by the enactment of the Fredericton Airport Zoning Regulations and that he is entitled to recover compensation for the injurious affection thereto. I am unable to accept the final conclusions of the two appraisers for the reasons already stated. It therefore becomes my task to determine, somewhere between the poles of the two varying opinions, the just measure of compensation to which the plaintiff is entitled for the injurious affection sustained.
The simplest and best approach, in my opinion, is to apply a discount factor to the Lawrence sale price of $8,000 per subdivided lot. I consider that a 25% discount would be appropriate in the circum stances, which reduces the price per residential lot to $6,000. This is in line with the $6,000 sales comparable on the Nevers Road. Multiplying this by eleven gives $66,000 for the value of the Bel- mont property immediately before the enactment of the zoning regulations. Deduct the after valua tion figure of $43,400 and you obtain the result of $22,600. The application of the 25% discount to the Lawrence valuation figure of $88,000 natural ly equates to the same result. If any reconciliation is needed it can be found in the evidence of Mr. Hildebrand. Take his present subdivided lot value of $12,000 without the airport and, assuming that 50% is the fair equivalent of his very significant reduction factor, the adjusted result is $6,000 per lot.
For the foregoing reasons, I assess $22,600 as compensation to the plaintiff for the decrease in value caused to his property by the enactment of the Fredericton Airport Zoning Regulations. No interest is allowable on the amount of compensa tion by reason of the established rule that there cannot be a valid claim for interest against the Crown unless interest is payable under a contract providing for it or as authorized by statute, which is not the case here. There will therefore be judg ment in favour of the plaintiff for compensation in the amount of $22,600, with costs to be taxed.
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