51 Minn. 153 | Minn. | 1892
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal from an order refusing a new trial, after a verdict for plaintiff on the second trial of an appeal from the award of commissioners in proceedings to condemn land for railway purposes. The principal facts, except such as bear upon the defendant’s rights in and to the strip of land extending east and west, and used for the line of the Southern Minnesota division, appear in the opinion heretofore rendered on a former appeal, 42 Minn. 75, (43 N. W. Rep. 785,) and the alleged errors now presented for review pertain solety to portions of the charge to the jury.
For the sake of convenience, we will take up the third assignment of error at the outset. The court refused to instruct the jury, as requested by defendant corporation, that they could not award any damages on account of that portion of plaintiff’s farm lying north of the strip of land before mentioned. This request was in part founded upon defendant’s contention, that through a certain deed from plaintiff to it, and by means of the proceedings and a judgment entered in an action of ejectment brought by plaintiff and in which it was defendant, it had conclusively established its ownership in fee simple of this
The refusal of the trial court to charge as requested by the appellant would then have been erroneous, for a judgment upon the merits, with such allegations in the pleadings, would have estopped the present respondent from again asserting right or title of possession. But the answer in question was not in that condition. By means of its allegations in respect to the error and misdescription in the deed from this respondent, which error and misdescription it demanded should be corrected and reformed in that action, the appellant corporation qualified its previous assertion as to title, and admitted that, at most, it held an equitable title only, the legal title being in its adversary. Certainly the judgment of dismissal on the merits did not have the effect of correcting or reforming the erroneous description and deed, and, as a necessary result, the legal title to the strip of land still remains in this respondent; his premises east of the Iowa & Minnesota division being apparently but one tract. The judgment, conceding that it was on the merits, amounts to nothing more than an adjudication that the appellant company had such an interest in the land over which its road was constructed as to give it the right of possession for railway purposes, — an easement for the purpose for which it appropriated and used the same, namely, for right of way. The judgment seems to have been so considered, for upon the trial it was shown that for several years the railway com-
But we are of the opinion that there was reversible error elsewhere in the charge, as to the rule by which respondent’s compensation was to be determined. His proofs were specially directed towards showing that the tract of land sought to be condemned was very valuable as a gravel pit, and that its greatest value was for use as such pit. The jury would have been justified by the testimony in concluding that it could be used more advantageously for such a purpose than for any other, and that its greatest value was for the gravel therein contained. If the jury so concluded, they could take the proofs in respect to its value for this special purpose as a basis for determining the amount to be awarded the respondent as compensation, and the court so charged. It went beyond this, and, in effect, charged that to this amount the jury might add such sum as the testimony showed the taking of the premises in question had injured and depreciated the remainder of respondent’s farm. And on appeal, respondent’s counsel contend that this was a correct exposition of the law; that their client was not only entitled to receive compensation for the acres actually taken, equal to their market value for any special or distinct purpose to which they might be applied, but that, in addition, he was entitled to be compensated for such damages as resulted to the residue of his farm by reason of the taking. Or, to put it differently, that the respondent, because to his advantage, might practically set apart this tract from the remainder of his farm by devoting it to a purpose distinct from and foreign to that of farming, and for such purpose have it valued, and then insist upon having it regarded as a part of the farm, that his damages might be increased. If the land under consideration was of greater value as a gravel pit, or, to illustrate, for an elevator or hotel site, than it was for agricultural purposes, the owner could so insist when the railway company attempted its appropriation. But this increased value attached solely because the tract was adapted to and capable of separate and independent use, and this use contemplated and re
Order reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting.) While the portion of the charge referred to, if taken by itself, is apparently misleading, yet, when considered in connection with the evidence and the remainder of the charge, we do not think it amounted to prejudicial error. The two uses, and the only two, for which it was claimed that the land taken had any peculiar or special value, were as a gravel pit and as a building site; and the only way in which it was pretended or claimed that the taking would injuriously affect the value of the balance of the tract was that it would déprive the farm of its only desirable building site. But the court expressly instructed the jury that the two uses (a gravel pit and a building site) were inconsistent, and therefore it would not be proper or right for them to take both into account in making up the damages. In view of this instruction, which contains a proposition, the correctness of which would be evident .to any layman on its mere suggestion, we do not think that the appellant could have been prejudiced by the part of the charge held in the opinion of the court to have been error.
We therefore think the order should be affirmed.
(Opinions published 53 N. W. Rep. 199.)