109 Mo. App. 498 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1905
This is an appeal from a judgment assessing damages in favor of the appellant Prentice for the opening of a public road through his farm. The regularity of the preliminary proceedings in regard to the opening of the road, publication of notices and such matters, is not in question. Prentice filed a remonstrance in the county court against opening the road along the line proposed by the petition on the ground that it would extend diagonally across eighty acres of his land and work irreparable injury to him; whereas if it followed the line of the government survey as required by the statutes (R. S. 1899, sec. 9414), this harm would not result. He further stated in the remonstrance that the line along the government survey was entirely practicable and therefore the petition prayed an illegal route and ought to be dismissed. That point is not involved on this appeal. The remonstrance and motion for dismissal of the proceedings were overruled. Subsequent steps were taken in the county court finally leading to the appointment of a commission of three freeholders to assess damages to Prentice, who had refused to relinquish the right-of-way or agree on his damages, though an effort had been made to come to an agreement with him. The commission filed a report
“It is therefore considered by the court that defendant doth recover of and from Lewis county in the State of Missouri, -the said sum of $300 damages assessed to defendant Prentice, by the jury as aforesaid, together with his costs and charges in this behalf laid*502 out and expended in the county court, and that he have execution therefor; and that plaintiffs recover of and from defendant the costs and charges in this court and have execution thereof; and that defendant have and recover off of Lewis county all other costs and have execution therefor.”
Appellant brought the case to this court for review.
Numerous errors are assigned in regard to the admission and' exclusion of testimony. These alleged errors relate chiefly to the admission and exclusion of the testimony of witnesses on cross-examination, and as there are twenty or more such assignments we can not review them in detail. The general theory of the complaint of the court’s rulings is that they permitted an inquiry as to the benefits which would accrue to Prentice’s land in common with what would accrue to other land in the neighborhood, instead of such benefits as would result to his land in particular.. This point is not well founded. Prentice’s contention was that his' farm would be injured in various ways by opening a road through it along the line projected; that he would have to build long lines of wire fences, cross fences and gates, and would have additional trouble in moving cattle about his farm and be subject to other inconveniences from which he is now free:
The purpose of the testimony complained of was to show that this supposed detriment would not result, or would be less serious than the witnesses for the appellant testified. We think there was no ruling on the evidence to justify a reversal of the judgment.
The court gave this instruction as to the damages to be allowed:
“The court instructs the jury that in estimating the damages sustained by Mr. Prentice, the defendant, the jury shall take into consideration:
“1. The value of the land taken by the right-of-way.
*503 “2. The injury and damage the evidence shows that Mr. Prentice, the defendant, has sustained in consequence of the location of said road through and upon his lands by a depreciation of the value of his said farm of about nine hundred acres, and will allow defendant such sum as will reasonably compensate him for the in-j'ury and damage sustained by him, if any, by the location of said road through his said farm, and deduct therefrom any benefits, if any, which may result to defendant’s farm through which said road runs and is located, but the benefits as herein used, if any, must be such as result to the entire tract or farm of defendant Prentice, in particular, and not the general benefits accruing to it, in common with other lands or farms in the immediate neighborhood of defendant’s said tract or farm, or of said proposed new road.
“3. The erection and maintaining of fences and gateways on either side of the road.
“4. The inconvenience of getting from one part of the farm to the other, and of the driving of stock from one part of the farm to the other, and of extra gateways, and the trouble of passing through them, if any.”
That instruction was requested by the- appellant’s counsel and shows that the case was submitted to the jury on the theory that no benefits to Prentice’s farm from the proposed road were to be taken into consideration to offset the injury it would do him, except such benefits as would accrue to his farm’ from the road above the general benefit to farm lands in the neighborhood. It adopted his own theory in regard to the measure of damages and was according to the law on the subject. We see no fault in the instructions, which were, indeed, very liberal to the appellant.
The main objection goes to the action of the court in entering judgment against Lewis county for $300 damages assessed by the jury in favor of Prentice. It is insisted by him that the county was not a party to