51 Kan. 408 | Kan. | 1893
This was an appeal in the court below by Mary S. Parsons from condemnation proceedings instituted by the Chicago, Kansas & Western Railroad Company to lay off its route, side tracks, depot grounds, etc. In her petition filed in the court below, she claimed damages in the sum of $17,-650, with interest from May 7, 1887. Mrs. Parsons owned 25 to 30 acres of land lying north of Eastman’s addition to Scott City, in Scott county, which was separated from the original site of Scott City by one tier of blocks of that addition. In 1886, she had this tract surveyed and platted into blocks, half blocks, fractional blocks and lots, as an addition to the city. The lots were 25 by 100 feet, and fronted east and west. Her plat was filed for record in the office of register of deeds in Scott county on March 29, 1887. The railroad ran through this (Parsons’s) addition to Scott City, and appropriated 120 entire lots and portions of 21 other lots. Notice of condemnation proceedings was given March 24, 1887, but the report of the commissioners was not filed until May 7,1887. The commissioners appraised the value of the property taken and assessed the damages at $3,087. Upon the trial the jury returned a verdict for Mrs. Parsons, assessing her damages at $3,184, and $401.71 as interest, aggregating $3,585.71. The railroad company complains of the rulings of the trial court and the judgment rendered upon the verdict.
Among other things, the court instructed the jury that
“It is the fair market price of the land in question that is to be ascertained in estimating the damage. The market value of a thing is the value, the rate, at which the thing is sold when placed upon the market. To make a market, there must be buying and selling, a purchase and sale; and if you are satisfied from the evidence that there was, on.the 7th day of May, 1887, a market value for the land in and near the land in question, you must be governed by it; and if the evidence is doubtful or conflicting as to the market price, and witnesses vary as to their statements, you should adopt that which best accords with the proof in the case. And in considering the market value of said real estate, the jury will take into consideration the actual state of the market at the time of the appropriation.”
In this instruction, value and price are treated as equivalents. The phrase “market value” is the best, however, and it is used most frequently in the instructions. The primary meaning of value is worth, and “price” is not really a synonym of value, but frequently “market value” and “market price” are used alike.
Again, the court instructed the jury that
“ In case they should find with reference to any of such half*414 blocks, that the same or a portion thereof owned by plaintiff at the date of the appropriation constituted one entire tract or parcel, which was used and was suitable to be profitably used for a single purpose, and that only a part thereof was actually taken, the proper measure of damages would be the difference between the fair market value of such entire tract 'or parcel just before taking by defendant, and the fair market value of the residue not taken of such entire parcel just after such taking.”
Further, the court instructed the jury that—
“If they found the residue not taken, or any part of such residue, constituted a distinct piece or parcel of property, then the proper measure of damages would be the fair market value at the time of such appropriation of the portion of said half block which was actually included in the appropriation, and in that case they were not to consider any injury done by such taking to any contiguous property outside of the limits of such appropriation. . . . When the whole of a lot or parcel of land is taken and appropriated by condemnation proceedings, the fair market value of the land at the time of the taking is the true measure of damages. In determining the value of land appropriated, the same considerations are to be regarded as in the sale of property between private parties at the time of the appropriation.”
The court also instructed the jury as follows:
“The building of railroads by corporations is a legitimate enterprise for the purposes of commerce and trade, and the law gives to such corporations the right to take private property for the use and right-of-way of the railroad; but when private property is thus taken, the owners of such property must be fairly compensated for the lpss of the use of such property so taken; and in estimating the compensation, the estimates of values must be made on the fair market value of such property at the time the same is appropriated, and these market values must be the actual and not the conjectural or imaginary, but is the fair prices for which such, property actually is selling at the time.”
It is unfortunate, perhaps, for the railroad company, if payment for its right-of-way only is considered, that its exigencies demanded the construction of its road at the time the property in controversy was condemned, in April and
“The market value means the fair value of the property, as between one who wants to purchase and one who wants to sell; not what could be obtained for it under peculiar circum*416 stances when a greater than its fair price could be obtained, not its speculative value; not a value obtained from the necessities of another; nor, on the other hand, is it to be limited to that price which the property would bring when forced off at auction under the hammer. It is what it would bring at a fair public sale, when one party wanted to sell and the other to buy.” (Railroad Co. v. Fisher, 49 Kas. 17.)
The instructions refused in the present case were objectionable, because they permitted the jury to make their view of the premises exclusive or predominating evidence. If the railroad company had requested an instruction “that the jury might, in considering their verdict, take into consideration the view of the lots and blocks appropriated, the result of their observation therefrom, in connection with the evidence produced before them,” it would probably have been given. The condemnation proceedings were in April and May, 1887. The trial in this case was in June, 1889, two years after the appropriation. The jury could not, merely from a view of the lots and blocks in 1889, determine the actual market value of the same in 1887. Their view, however, might have assisted them in ascertaining how many entire lots and how many portions of other lots were taken; the various sized fragments of lots or blocks left; the manner in which the tracks were laid; the cuts, fills, etc., made; and .the view of these things might and should have been taken into consideration, in connection with the evidence produced, in considering the verdict.
The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.