This is a condemnation suit to acquire an easement 100 feet wide, running diagonally 2,805 feet across defendants’ 220 acre farm-residence property. Upon and along the easement plaintiff has constructed a 69,000 volt electric transmission line consisting of 8 single poles with supporting cross arms, insulators, circuit breakers, wires, lightening arrestors, and other necessary electric equipment. The line is plainly visible from the public highway which runs east and west along the south edge of the farm, comes within 500 to 600 feet of defendants’ farm improvements,
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and runs along the most visibly prominent and “best part” of the farm, the “ridge”. The farm, described as “one of the best farms in the country”, consists of well-improved crop and pasture lands and is located in Bates County, Missouri, about 2 miles west of Passaic. The first trial, in 1966, resulted in a jury verdict and judgment awarding defendants damages of $4,800. Kamo appealed to the Kansas City Court of Appeals, one contention being that the trial court erred in permitting the jury to take into consideration any unsightliness of the property resulting from the construction and maintenance of the transmission line. The Kansas City Court of Appeals, in an opinion written by Cross, J., and reported in
The point has not been decided by this court. Under the constitutional provisions, Art. V, Sec. 10, 1945 Constitution, this case being here by our transfer, we decide it the same as if it were here on original appeal. Plaintiff advanced other contentions before the court of appeals, but in this court it has abandoned the other points, and the sole issue is the admissibility of the element of unsightliness as bearing on the issue of damages.
We decide the issue in favor of the defendants and affirm the judgment. In doing so, we acknowledge the comprehensive opinions by Cross, J., in the earlier and on the present appeal, from which we borrow heavily both as to statement of facts and reasoning.
Evidence was introduced to show the market value of the entire farm before and after the easement was taken and thus establish the net resultant depreciation in value. Defendant, William C. Cushard, testified the total decrease in market value was $10,000 and that 50% of the decrease resulted from unsightliness of the transmission line. E. A. Brewer, a licensed real estate broker produced by defendants testified that the difference in before and after value of the farm was $11,000. He further testified that the lines are “unsightly”, that the unsightliness affected the value of the property “ * * * very much * * * because as you drive up to the farm, that’s the first thing you see is the power line between you and the house”. Asked to explain what the “appearance of these lines across the Cushard property * * * has * * * to do with the valuation of it”, the witness answered, “Well, it knocks the value down very much, because anybody looking at it is going to object to it.” He testified it would be the first thing that any prospective buyer looking at the farm would see. He said his testimony was *515 based partly on the unsightliness of the power line and the damage it would do to the property if the owners should decide to sell it. The witness also testified that defendants had “a lot nicer farm than some of the adjoining farms”, and that there was a difference in the amount of damage that the transmission line did to the Cus-hard farm from the standpoint of looks compared to other farms in the neighborhood because of the location of the Cus-hard farm, it being a good, level farm lying on a blacktop highway and so worth more than one sitting off the road. Mr. Brewer attributed 60% of the depreciation in market value of the farm to the unsightly effect of the transmission line.
Paul Buerge, defendants’ third witness, president of a bank at Butler, had been engaged in the grain elevator business for 20 years, had owned and operated farm land most of that time, made loans on farm land at the bank, and was generally familiar with real estate values in and around Bates County. He put the value of the farm at $55,000 before plaintiff took the easement and $41,250 afterwards, a decrease of $13,750. He considered the power line as unsightly and said it affected the value of the Cushard property because it goes “ * * * across the high point of the farm, which always is the best part of the land. It goes antigoggling across the farm, the ridge part of it.” He attributed 40% of the damage to the element of looks or unsightliness.
Kamo produced three witnesses. Tom McGuire, a licensed real estate broker, placed the before and after value of the farm at $49,500 and $47,960, total damage $1,540. He testified he did not think power lines were “particularly unsightly”, and that they had little effect on a farm’s market or loan value. Roy Young, an insurance agent, put the before and after values at $51,700 and $50,150, total damage of $1,550. He did not think power lines were unsightly and, in fact, would say “ * * * they are prettier than some trees * * * ” He did not think the value of any real estate is ever affected by the appearance of power lines. Ira H. Baker, former county clerk, put the damage at $2,400. He testified the power line was “not particularly” unsightly. He did not know whether any property could be affected by the appearance of a power line running across it.
Following the testimony of witnesses Cushard, Brewer, and Buerge, Kamo moved the court to strike such portion of their testimony as related to the element of looks or unsightliness and to admonish the jury to disregard such testimony, which motions were by the court overruled. Kamo made no attack upon the qualification of defendants’ witnesses to testify to land values. At the close of all the evidence Kamo requested and the court refused to give an instruction that the jury should not take into consideration damage which may arise because the “looks” of the transmission line across the tract would be detrimental to its value.
For a statement of the general rules as to the measure of compensation in a transmission line easement case and a collection of the authorities on the “[t]wo distinctly divergent views * * * held by the courts of the various jurisdictions on whether the unsightliness of power transmission lines and appurtenances is an element of damage to be awarded when the property condemned for the power line easement consists of farm lands * * * ”, we refer the reader to the first Cushard decision, 416 S.W.2d l.c. 651-654. Judge Cross there also discusses the Springfield Court of Appeals opinion of Kamo Electric Cooperative Inc. v. Brooks, supra, relied upon by Kamo, and Union Electric Co. of Missouri v. Simpson, supra, relied upon by defendants.
We cannot say it any better than Judge Cross has already said it in the first Kamo decision,
Kamo presents an additional point which was not argued to the court of appeals. This is that the “rule of common injury” precludes a claim of unsightliness here even if it is an injury. Kamo argues that it becomes an area and neighborhood problem, a personal inconvenience, comparing it to highway noise, citing State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Turk (Mo. Sup.)
Judgment affirmed.
