266 Mo. 694 | Mo. | 1916
The city of St. Louis brought this action to condemn a strip of land for the western approach to its Municipal Bridge. Damages were assessed in favor of the several defendants by a commission of three freeholders, to whose report the city filed exceptions. The case came on for hearing in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, wherein the exceptions of appellant city were overruled and it appealed.
The Regal Buggy Company, respondent herein, was the lessee for years of one parcel of the real estate which was condemned in this action. The lease of respondent, at the date of the making of the commissioners’ report, had a little over three years to run. Specifically touching the land occupied by respondent the commission assessed the value of said land taken, plus the damages to the remainder of the parcel, at the sum of $41,310. They then appor
“ (1) For the cost of removal of their several stocks of goods and fixtures from their present place of business to new locations and installing said goods and fitting said fixtures therein;
“ (2) For depreciation in the value of such goods and fixtures caused by the removal and reinstallation of the same;
“(3) For injury to their said businesses caused by the interruption of the same during the' period of removal of their said stocks of goods and fixtures.”
The allowance of damages for the three items above enumerated is the sole matter of contention here. It is conceded, even, that if these three items were proper subjects of damages, then that the amount allowed respondent therefor is fair and reasonable, but appellant contends that under the law of eminent domain of this State no such damages may be paid by the condemner to him whose land is taken for public uses.
.These three propositions and the contentions of appellant ■ and respondent pro and con respectively, form the points up for decision.
As forecast there is no contention made by appellant that respondent as the owner of a lease for a term of years was not entitled to compensation therefor; nor that the amount of damages awarded as the market value of respondent’s lease, to-wit, $2700, is unfair or unreasonable. It is only the damages awarded for the three items set out in our statement herein that are in controversy.
When this case was argued, the writer was of the opinion that it ought to be affirmed upon principle if not upon authority; but upon coming to examine the authorities I have been forced to a different view. Coming to the question of authority first, we have had our attention directed to but one case squarely on all-fours in favor of the allowance of damages for the expense of removal of .personal property from the right of way condemned. That is the case of Blincoe v. Railroad, 16 Okla. 286, 4 L. R. A. (N. S.) 890. In the latter case the question of the allowance of such
The case of Philadelphia & Reading Railroad Co. v. Getz, 113 Pa. St. 214, is urged upon us as announcing a rule in favor of the contention that damages of the sort here under discussion may be allowed; but that case did not deal with ordinary personal chattels, but apparently with machinery and fixtures. Besides, the Pennsylvania court, in the later case of Becker v. Railroad, 177 Pa. St. 252, held to the contrary, in that they held that it was proper to refuse to allow proof as to the expense of the removal from such land of the personal property of him whose land was being taken, and said that the expense of such removal could not be considered as an element of damages for the condemnation of real estate for public uses.
The case of Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad Co. v. Schneider, 127 Ill. 144, is urged as an authority for the awarding of damages of the sort here under discussion. But we need not consider whether that case is an authority or not, for the reason that it was distinguished and practically overruled by the later case of Braun v. Railroad, 166 Ill. 434. So, we cannot see that respondent’s contentions are at all aided by either of the above cases.
The case of Railroad v. Piel, 87 Ky. 267, is cited by respondent as an authority for a modicum of the position taken by it. This case seems to an extent to
The rule announced by Mr. Lewis in his excellent work on Eminent Domain, is as follows: “While it is proper to show how the property is used, it is incompetent to go into the profits of the business carried on upon the property. No damages can be allowed for injury to" business. The reason is that the constitution and the statutes, as ordinarily worded, require only that just compensation shall be made for the property taken. Just compensation, as we have already seen, where an entire property is taken, is the market value of the property, and where a part is taken, it is the value of the part taken and damages to the remainder by the taking and use of the part for the purpose proposed. The business conducted upon the property is not taken and the owner can remove it to a new location or continue it upon the part of the property which remains. Any incidental loss or inconvenience in business, which may result from a removal or change consequent upon the taking, must be borne by the owner for the sake of the general good in which he participates. In a few instances the statute has expressly provided that compensation shouhj be made for injury to business.” [Lewis on Eminent Domain, sec. 727; Central Pacific R. R. Co. v. Pearson, 35 Cal. 247; Pause v. Atlanta, 98 Ga. 92, 58 Am. St. 290; Jacksonville & S. E. Ry. Co. v. Walsh, 106 Ill. 253; Chicago &'
In the case of Pause v. Atlanta, 98 Ga. 92, l. c. 105, the Georgia Supreme Court said: “The measure of her damages is the injury to her property which is injuriously affected by the public improvement; in arriving ?it that damage, neither the profits in the busi
The general rule as regards including as elements of damages expenses of removal of personal property, as well as that regarding the status of fixtures, below discussed, is thus stated by Mr. Lewis: “Fixtures upon the property taken must be valued and paid for as part of the real estate, and any depreciation in the value of fixtures upon the part not taken is to be taken into consideration, the • same as damage to the soil itself. Where a railroad was laid through premises which had been fitted up for a water cure, so as to render it unsuitable for that purpose, it was held that the owner was entitled to the difference between what the fixtures and appurtenances were worth in connection with the property as a water cure (not exceeding their reasonable cost) and what they were worth to be removed from the premises and applied to other purposes. In a case in Pennsylvania it was held proper to show the expense of removal of machinery and fixtures as bearing upon the value of the property as it stood. But the damages to personal property, or the expense of removing it from the premises, can not be considered* in estimating the compensation to be paid. But when both parties proceed upon the theory that the owner is entitled to the cost of removing machinery, the condemning party cannot complain. Where the statute provided that the commissioners should ‘inspect said real property and consider the injury which such owner may sustain by reason of such rail
But this matter has also been before our Missouri courts and if we are now to hold that respondent is entitled to damages for the three elements under discussion, we must of necessity overrule two Missouri cases wherein the point involved was squarely lodged and wherein it was held that no such compensation is allowable under our laws. [Railroad v. Knapp-Stout & Co., 160, Mo. 396; Springfield S. W. Ry. Co. v. Schweitzer, 173 Mo. App. 650.] In the Knapp-Stout ease, supra, at page 412, Judge Gantt, writing the opinion of the court, in defining the measure of damages, and touching the identical question of the allowance of damages of the sort here under discussion, said:
“It is the settled law of this court that the measure of compensation and damages in cases in which only a part of a tract is condemned, as in the case at bar, is the market value of the land taken for the right of way, and the damages to the remainder by reason of the railroad' running through it, less any benefits that are peculiar to the tract of land arising from the running of the road through it. [Bridge Co. v. Ring, 58 Mo. 491; Railroad v. Waldo, 70 Mo. 629; Railroad v. Story, 96 Mo. 611; Railroad v. Baker, 102 Mo. 553.]
“Injury to business, loss of profits, inconvenience to the owner, damage to personal property or the expense of removing it, are not to he estimated as distinct elements of damages.”
In the very late case ruled by the Springfield Court of Appeals practically all of the Missouri cases were examined and discussed, and such of them as seem upon casual glance to oppose the conclusion
In the Knapp-Stout case, supra, precisely the same question was before this court that was before the Oklahoma court in the Blincoe case, viz.: the question of whether he whose land was taken .for public uses could recover the expenses necessarily incurred in the removal of personal property from the land, to-wit, lumber, lying thereon. In both cases parts of lumber yards were taken, yet we ruled that such expenses were not proper elements of damages.
At first glance it is to be conceded that there exists a difficulty in finding a reason for not compensating the owner of personal chattels who is compelled to remove them, for his expense in so removing them to a point at least, beyond the edge of the right of way. It is equally clear, on the other hand that no logical reason can be found for compensating him for the expense of removal beyond such point. This is so, for the reason that A might desire to move his chattels only into the next adjoining house, while B might desire to have his taken several blocks, or even several miles, and C on the other hand, his business being broken up, might desire to remove his goods to some other place, or city. No reason in logic therefore can be found for the condemner’s paying more than is sufficient to move the personal property off the right of way. A rule which would require the condemner to do more
It is obvious that a lessee stands in no better condition touching his right to be compensated for -expenses of this sort than does the owner of the fee. In fact, the reasons are more cogent for permitting the owner of the fee to recover as damages expenses of this sort than they are in favor of the lessee. For the lessee may be compelled to move at the end of his term; and since his occupancy of the premises is founded on contract, it may even he said that the presumption is that he will move. Or if there be no such presumption, or no presumption either way, the lessee is not aided by a discussion of this moving matter, for arguments in his favor in this behalf are founded upon the presumption that he will renew his lease and remain at the end of his term. But as regards the owner whose lands are taken, no requirement exists for his removal at any time, unless he sells the premises — a contingency too remote for consideration in this connection.
We apprehend that back of the rule against allowing damages of this nature also lie the considerations that loss of profits during removal is necessarily so speculative as to afford as a measure of computation no rule except a mere guess; that likewise, beyond the mere moving of goods to a point just outside the bounds of the right of way condemned, the expenses of removal being variant, damages would be arbitrary and highly speculative, and removal but to a point only just beyond the edge of the right of way would fall into the category de minimis, and that moreover, the inclusion of expenses of removal of personal.property and compensation for loss of profits during removal, is merged and included in the price paid for- the easement to the owner, or to the lessee, as the case may be. Viewed as a forced purchase by the public for the pub-
But be all these things as may be the overwhelming weight of authority both in this State and in all other jurisdictions is as we hold, and having had other views in the beginning, by reason of the' apparent, rather than real, crying equities in the case, we have yet been compelled to follow the law as it is written both here and elsewhere. To rule otherwise would necessitate the overruling of at least two Missouri cases squarely in point and of most carefully distinguishing three or four other cases. [Railroad v. McGrew, 104 Mo. 282; Hannibal Bridge Co. v. Schaubacher, 57 Mo. 582; Railroad v. Porter, 112 Mo. 361.]
We therefore hold, in consonance with the great weight of authority everywhere, that respondent was not entitled to recover for loss of profits in its business during the removal of its stock of goods; nor for the expense of the removal of its stock of goods and personal property, as contradistinguished from fixtures, from its old location which was condemned, to a new location; nor for the depreciation in value of such personal property and stock of goods, caused by such removal and re-installation.
A fixture appertains to the real estate itself, which real estate to the extent, at least, of an easement therein, is being taken by condemner. We need not enter into any intricate discussion of fixtures (since siich a discussion does not belong here), for the reason above given; which is well-settled, to-wit: that a trade fixture such as is herein involved, and such as was to an extent involved in the case of Hannibal Bridge v. Schaubacher, supra, is a part of the realty; and since it passes ordinarily as between vendor and vendee, upon a voluntary sale, we see no reason why it should not pass to the condemner upon an involuntary transfer, such as this is. We find nothing in the Missouri cases, nor in the cases from other jurisdictions- which seriously militates against this view. Those mentioned below sustain it. It seems to be right on principle; to do full justice and afford full compensation.
In passing we may say arguendo, that the view that the owner should be compensated for the expense of tearing out, moving and re-installing fixtures in another location has much of logical cogency. But it seems out of consonance with our own rulings, and subject to the objection that the expense of carriage from the old to the new location would be speculative, and so having reached a view which affords full compensation for the injury done, we hesitate to overrule our former holdings. Many of the cases from
In a very late case, decided in the United StatSs Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second District, it was held that an award in a condemnation proceeding for the value of certain trade fixtures, to-wit, machinery of an engraving plant, was proper, the court holding that in condemnation proceedings where the land is taken in mvitvm, the rule which obtains as to such fixtures is analogous to that between vendor and vendee and not that between landlord and tenant. [United States v. Wiener, 127 C. C. A. 382.] In the latter case the court quoted with approval what was said in In re Block Bounded by Avenue A, 122 N. Y. Supp. 321, l. c. 339, wherein it was ruled:
“The city took the entire buildings as they stood, including the trade fixtures therein, and for. the purposes of this proceeding they must all be regarded as real property; that is, as between the tenant and the city, the trade fixtures were real property and must be paid for by the city the same as a building, and the tenant was under no more obligation to remove them than he would be to remove a building if he were the owner. As between the tenant and the owner, however, the trade fixtures were personalty, and could be removed, and therefore any award made for them would go to the tenant.”
Since houses, which are but fixtures to real, estate, pass to the condemner (Kansas City v. Morse, 105 Mo. l. c. 519),-and since trade, fixtures under the Vendor and vendee rule would pass to the buyer, they pass here to the condemner and it must pay for them. Respondent, absent an election on its part and consent of the city to that end, could not take fixtures which the city had condemned, nor obtain as damages pay for moving property which by condemnation became that of the city. [Kansas City v. Morse, 105 Mo. l. c. 519; Springfield S. W. Ry. Co. v. Schweitzer, 173 Mo. App. 650.]
. It follows from all this that respondent was entitled to be paid the reasonable market value of its fixtures (contra-distinguished from mere goods and chattels) which were contained in, and affixed to the leased premises condemned. But the apparent present status of the instant case causes us to further rule, that if appellant does not want these fixtures, and respondent elects, or has elected, to take them (or, as seems probable, has already taken them),, then damages which appellant will be held to pay as such value of them should be recouped to the extent of their reasonable market value, as they stood in their old location, when confronted, however, as diminishing such value, by the necessity of immediately tearing them out and re-installing them elsewhere.
Upon the other phases of the case and to the extent last discussed upon the latter one, we are of the