453 S.W.2d 532 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1969
In this condemnation proceeding the Department of Highways is acquiring 37.51 acres from a farm which contained 230 acres before the taking. Embraced in the taking were a large residence, a tenant house, four barns, and some sheds. Three wells were destroyed, and the former access to the waters of Barretts Creek has been impaired. The new right-of-way line for relocated U.S. Highway 60 has been moved to within three feet of the front step and within six feet of the garage at a comparatively new “ranch” house remaining on the farm. The trees and front yard of the “ranch” house were taken.
Nonaccess 1-64 traverses the farm, as does a service road to which there will be access. Substantial fencing will be required if the farm is to be used for livestock, but appellee asserted that the farm has lost its potential as a livestock farm.
A related appeal has been dismissed in Com., Dept, of Highways v. General Refractories Company, Ky., 453 S.W.2d 531, (this day decided).
At a former trial a jury awarded the landowner $39,000. A new trial was granted the landowner after that verdict in which the jury had fixed an after value not supported by any evidence. No claim is presented that the first verdict should be restored.
The Department introduced evaluation evidence through three witnesses whose before values ranged from $55,000 to $62,800, with after values from $26,250 to $27,000, and resulting differences expressed from $28,000 to $36,500.
In sharp contrast, the appraisal evidence for the landowner fixed before values ranging from $95,000 to $124,000, after values from $20,000 to $45,00, with differences from $75,000 to $81,000.
Once again we are presented with a verdict which falls within the ambit of the before and after values expressed by the witnesses. This fact alone is not conclusive in the matter of testing whether the verdict is excessive or supported by evidence of sufficient probative value. Com., Dept. of Highways v. Gearhart, Ky., 383 S.W.2d 922, 925.
In examining the verdict here in light of the evidence presented, it appears that the award is patently excessive and not supported by evidence of such probative value as to induce conviction in the minds of reasonable men. Com., Dept. of Highways v. Tyree, Ky., 365 S.W.2d 472, 475.
We are mindful of the improvements taken in this proceeding. The large house, as depicted by photographs in the record, appears to have been a substantial one. The other buildings shown fail to impress the viewer as of notable value, although the barns appear to have been adequate. Significantly none of the witnesses undertook to relate the extent of contribution to before market value attributable to the buildings. It would have been proper and helpful to supply such evidence. Com., Dept. of Highways v. Stamper, Ky., 345 S.W.2d 640; Com., Dept. of Highways v. Cardinal Hill Nursery, Ky., 380 S.W.2d 249, 253.
It is seen that the range of before values offered for the landowner is from about $413 to $539 per acre. The after values expressed by the same witnesses reflect per-acre values from about $109 to $247. The per-acre findings of the jury were about $455 before and $224 after the taking. Computed on an acreage basis, the evidence for the Department placed the before value at about $285 and the after value at nearly $148.
Before the taking the Littleton farm lay in three tracts, but the dividing roads were free-access roads. After the taking the land will lie in four tracts, and one of the dividing roads is nonaccess 1-64. The tobacco base of seven-plus acres remains.
The Department places much stress on the sale of Crawford to Fossom involving a farm of 320 acres as a potent indicator of market value. The Fossom sale was at $189 per acre. The witnesses for the landowner conceded that the Fos-som farm was quite comparable to the Littleton farm but undertook to explain some differentiating aspects. Assuming the verity of some relatively minor dissimilarities between the Fossom and Little-ton properties, there simply is no plausible way to reconcile a value of $187 per acre for the Fossom property with the jury’s finding of approximately $455 per acre for the Littleton farm. We recognize that comparable sales are not immutable gauges of value, and we agree that the expert
The judgment is reversed.