Welcome to The Home Equity Theft Reporter, a blog dedicated to informing the consumer public and the legal profession about Home Equity Theft issues. This blog will consist of information describing the various forms of Home Equity Theft and links to news reports & other informational sources from throughout the country about the victims of Home Equity Theft and what government authorities and others are doing about it.
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Idaho Supremes: Right To Be Seen From Roadway Not A Compensable Property Right In Condemnation Proceeding
In Boise, Idaho, The Associated Press reports:
The Idaho Supreme Court has upheld a lower court’s ruling favoring the state in an eminent domain case where a business contended it lost customers because the loss of land resulted in the loss of visibility of signs to passing motorists.
The Idaho Business Review in a story published Wednesday reports the court ruled June 29 that businesses in the state can’t seek damages from the state for a loss of visibility.
The owners of the former airport Holiday Inn in Boise sought $7.5 million in compensation following the Vista Avenue widening project that included a sound wall. The state offered about $40,000.(1)
Justice Jim Jones wrote that the lower court was correct in its ruling, which read: “The existence of a ‘right of visibility’ has not yet been expressly recognized as a property right in Idaho. Neither the legislature nor any Idaho cases have expressly recognized a compensable property interest in ‘visibility’ or a right ‘to be seen’ from a roadway.”
Thomas J. Lloyd III, the attorney for the former Holiday Inn owners, known as HI Boise, said the ruling could harm businesses that rely on locations to attract customers. “A company that invests in location and visibility in the present may, in the future, find itself with neither the visibility bargained for nor any recourse from the political entity that destroys that property benefit,” Lloyd said in a written statement.
HI Boise filed the lawsuit in 2009, and has since lost the hotel in foreclosure.
(1) According to the ruling, the dimensions of the strip of land that was condemned and taken by the state of Idaho from the HI Boise was approximately 7 feet wide and 133 feet long, totaling approximately 960 square feet. It was pointed out in the litigation (see footnote 3 of the ruling) that the condemned land equated to 0.24% of HI Boise’s 398,574-square-foot property.
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