Here’s one we’ve been meaning to post up for a while. Not because it isn’t an important decision, but because other things intervened.
In State of West Virginia ex rel. West Virginia Dep’t of Transportation v. Burnside, No. 15-1112 (June 13, 2016), the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia held that under the statutory quick-take scheme, the condemnor has the total discretion to determine the amount of the deposit, an estimate of just compensation. In that case, the DOT took land formerly occupied by a service station, which needed some environmental clean up due to old gas and oil storage tanks buried on the land.
The DOT calculated the deposit supporting the quick-take by adding up the overall value of the land, the severance damages to the remainder, and the value of the fixtures and the temporary construction easement, and then subtracting the cost of the clean up which
Continue Reading W Virginia: Govt, Not Judge, Gets To Determine Quick-Take Deposit
