256 Mo. 386 | Mo. | 1914
— This is a condemnation proceeding, but one with some rather unusual features. A number of parties, headed by Arthur E. Stilwell and E. L. Martin, were interested in the construction of a railroad from Kansas City, Missouri, to the Gulf of Mexico. To this end there seems to have been several companies organized, which were largely officered by the same parties, and which seem to have had a community of interest in the one project, i. e., the railroad from Kansas City to the Gulf. The railroad proper, which did not touch Kansas City, but started from Grandview, near Kansas City, was built by the Kansas City, Pittsburg & Gulf Railroad, a corporation chartered for that purpose. Getting from Grand-view into Kansas City was left to other terminal companies, which were finally merged into the Kansas
During the term of this lease and pursuant to the rights conferred upon the lessee by it, the Suburban Belt Railroad erected on the land a roundhouse, turntable, machine shops and numbers of miles of railroad tracks. In 1898 the defendant, with the consent of the lessee, Suburban Belt Railroad, sold seven and one-half acres of the leased lands to the Kansas City, Pittsburg & Gulf Railroad, a matter which may become material. Adversity overtook the two railroad corporations, and by foreclosure proceedings in the Federal court the property of both was sold ( out, and the plaintiff in this case became the purchaser. These proceedings occurred from 1899 on, but prior to the termination of the lease. Plaintiff
“Wherefore it is considered, ordered and adjudged by the court that the defendant, Second Street Improvement Company as owner of the following described tract of land in Kansas City, Jackson county, Missouri, to wit: ....
“Has been and is damaged by the taking of the property above described in the sum of thirty thousand dollars, of which said sum there has heretofore been, paid by the Kansas City Southern Railway Company to said owner, the defendant, the Second Street Improvement Company, the sum of twenty-six thousand dollars.
“Wherefore it is further ordered and adjudged by the court that the said Kansas City Southern Railway shall, within' ten days from this day, pay to the defendant, the Second Street Improvement Company, herein, as owner of the said land, the sum of four thousand- dollars from July 8, 1903, and the costs of this proceeding, and in default of such payment that said defendant have hereof execution, providing the said Kansas City Southern Railway Company shall not elect to abandon this proceeding, as by the statute in such cases made and provided.
*395 “And it is further considered, ordered and adjudged by the court that upon the payment of said sum of four thousand dollars with interest as above provided to said defendant, the Second Street Improvement Company, or into the hands of the clerk of this court, for defendant, the Second Street Improvement Company, the real estate above described he and stand condemned for the purpose and uses mentioned in its petition for condemnation.”
The italics are ours. This judgment the plaintiff abided, but defendant being discontent therewith, has appealed, and urges here questions not only as to the matter of damages, but also as to the right of the plaintiff to condemn at all. This fairly outlines the case.
Ordinarily an ejectment will lie for the recovery of realty owned by one party and wrongfully held by another, yet this is not always true. [Second Street Improvement Co. v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co., 255 Mo. 519.] In this case we held that where the railroad company went into possession with the knowledge or consent of .the owner, then such owner would be driven to ask for its just compensation hi an action for the appropriation of his property, rather than have a suit in ejectment to recover such property in kind. The rule announced in the case supra is one well sustained by the case law, and it should be added that such rule is founded upon the idea that .the broad rights of an individual should be curtailed to some extent if the exercise of the broad right would interfere with the public service. So the courts say that whilst a landowner usually has the broad right to sue in ejectment and recover in kind lands wrongfully in the possession of another, yet if he has stood by- and permitted improvements to be made thereon by a public service corporation, such as a railroad, which improvements are to be used in connection with the public service, such broad right will be refused and the landowner required, in the interest of the public service, to sue for and take the value of his land rather than the land itself. This, however,
“Where the company’s occupation of the land is not illegal, its rails and other structures thereon do not become a part of the realty, and it should have a reasonable time in which to remove them, upon abandonment; and the fact that the landowner has been allowed to take possession of the land embraced in the right of way and hold it for a term of years less than is required to extinguish the.company’s easement does not imply relinquishment by the company of its right to enter and remove its structures.”
To state the rule in different language: If the possession of the railroad is with the express or implied consent of the landowner, then upon leaving the property if the railroad does leave it, the right to remove its improvements is unimpaired. In other words, the trend of the case is that such property is and remains personal property, and does not attach to and become a part of the realty. In the instant case the property was bought by defendant for the very purpose for which it was afterward used. By express lan.guage the railroad was authorized to use the property for railroad purposes, a matter in which the general public have a practical concern. The lease itself made no provision as to the disposition of improvements at or after its termination. The lease, however, gave the railroad an option to buy, but no more. The railroad did not have to buy under the lease. If it thought the
“Where a corporation invested with the power of eminent domain enters upon land without the consent of the owner, express or implied, and places improvements thereon, and subsequently institutes proceeding^ to condemn the same land, the common law rulé that a structure erected by a tortfeasor becomes a part of the land does not apply and the owner is not entitled to the value of the improvements thus wrongfully erected: So where a company enters and erects improvements pending condemnation proceedings which are subsequently abandoned, or where it has no positive knowledge as to the ownership of the land, and enters-upon it with the intention of subsequently instituting condemnation' proceedings, or of subsequently purchasing the land, the owner is not entitled, in proceedings for condemnation afterward commenced, to an award 1 for the value of the improvements so constructed. With stronger reason the landowner is not entitled to the value of such improvements, if the company enters on his land with his permission; - and if the compcmy enters with the consent of a person in possession claiming wider color of title, one who afterward shows him*400 self to be the paramount owner is not entitled to recover the value of the improvements placed on the land by the company.”
The italicized portion of the text (the italics are made by ns) announces the rule applicable to the facts of this case.
To the doctrine that where the improvements are made without the consent of the landowner, yet such owner is precluded from recovering for the improvements, there is some discord in the cases, but where the improvements for railroad purposes are made upon the land either with the express or implied consent of the landowner, the overwhelming case law is that in subsequent proceedings the landowner cannot claim the benefits of the improvements to enhance his' damages for the taking of private property for a public use. [Vide cases, cited under the text in Cyc., supra.]
In 10 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2 Ed.), p. 1159, it is said:
“Where the government or a corporation to which has been delegated the power of eminent domain enters upon land before its condemnation, but with the consent or license of the owner, and proceeds to construct its works or to make improvements upon the land, such works or improvements do not become a part of the land, and their value is not to be considered in determining the compensation to be awarded for the land.
“Where the company enters upon the land and makes improvements without the consent of the owner and without having caused the land to be condemned, there is a difference of opinion as to whether, in subsequent condemnation proceedings, the owner is entitled to compensation for. the improvements made by the company. But, the greater weight of authority seems to be against.the owner’s recovery for such improvements.”
In 4 Sutherland on Damages (3 Ed.), sec. 1076, it is said:
“The numerous exceptions to the common law rule that everything attached to the realty by -one who had no right to the latter became part of it have been extended in recent times upon grounds of public policy so far as railroad companies are concerned. An entry by them in advance of the acquirement of the right to make it is not unlawful in the same sense as such an entry by an individual or a corporation which is not invested with the power of eminent domain. Hence, if such a company enters upon land with the consent of the life tenant or the person who appears to own it and erects a depot or other structure thereon without injuring the inheritance, the remainderman or legal owner cannot, in a subsequently instituted proceeding for the condemnation of the property, recover the value of such improvements. This is the rule where the entry is made without license.”
Here we have the idea of public policy noted by us in the beginning of this opinion. The courts have different ways of putting the rule, and the reasons therefor. Thus in McClarren v. Jefferson School Tp., 169 Ind. l. c. 143, the court said: .
“The great weight of authority, however, is that when a person, corporation, or body, invested with the power of eminent domain, enters upon land with or without the consent of the owner, express or implied, and places improvements thereon, and subsequently institutes proceedings to condemn the same land, the common law rule that a structure erected by a tort-feasor becomes a part of the land does not apply, and the owner is not entitled to the value of such improvements.”
This court collects and cites cases, both Federal
“We are of opinion that no error was committed in excluding from the compensation allowed to Dunlap the value of the railroad track laid upon the land. We think the casé cannot be distinguished from Morgan’s Appeal, 39 Mich. 675. The railroad company, whether rightfully or wrongfully, laid this track while in possession and for purposes entirely distinct from any use of the land as an isolated parcel. It would be absurd to apply to land so used, and to a railway track laid on it, the technical rules which apply in some other cases to structures inseparably attached to the freehold. Whatever rule might apply in case of abandonment, it is clear that this superstructure was never designed to be incorporated with the soil except for purposes attending the possession; and in a proceeding to obtain a legal and permanent right to occupy the land for this very purpose, there would be no sense in compelling them to buy their own property.”
To like effect is Jones v. Railroad, 70 Ala. l. c. 232, whereat Brickell, C. J., said:
“The duty rested upon the appellee, before the taking and appropriation of the lands, to have caused, in the appointed mode, an ascertainment of the compensation to which the owner was entitled, and to have made payment of the compensation. Neglecting this duty, the entry upon and possession of the lauds was wrongful — no title to them was acquired, and the title of the owner was not divested. The neglect of the duty, the wrongful entry and possession, does not preclude the appellee from resorting subsequently to the appropriate proceedings for the acquisition of the lands, and, of consequence, availing itself of all the structures it may have placed thereon. [Justice v. Railroad, 87 Pa. St. 28; Secombe v. Railroad, 23 Wall. 108.] Though the appellee was a trespasser, by rea*403 son of the neglect to pursue the proper remedy for acquiring the lands — acquiring them without the consent of the owner — there is in the right continuing in him to pursue the remedy, rendering the possession rightful, and by which title may be acquired a plain distinction between the appellee and a common trespasser. As against such trespasser, the proprietor can keep the lands, and, keeping them, hold the improvements he may have annexed to the soil. No remedy is given the trespasser, by which he may acquire the use and enjoyment of, or title to the lands. There is, also another distinguishing fact; the structures of the appellee were dedicated, not to the use and enjoyment of the freehold, but to public uses which are the consideration for the grant to the appellee of corporate franchises, and of the right, in the exercise of these franchises, to take and appropriate private property. [Justice v. Railroad, supra; Railroad v. Canton Co., 30 Md. 347; Morgan v. Railroad, 39 Mich. 675; Lyon v. Railroad, 42 Wis. 538.] These elements of the case distinguish it from that of the trespasser entering upon lands, fixing chattels to the freehold for its use and enjoyment, which he must intend to convert into realty, and which, following the title to the soil, as one of its incidents, pass to the proprietor.”
In the Jones case the railroad had entered the land without legal right, further than the statutory right to condemn. It had no authority from the owner to enter and make the improvements, but did enter and make them. The landowner claimed that he was entitled to the value of the improvements, just as contended here, but the lower court found against him, and he met with no better fate in the Supreme Court. The courts all proceed upon the theory that there being the right to condemn vested in a railroad corporation, it cannot become a trespasser in the same sense as an individual or corporation having no right to condemn,
“It is insisted that the court erred in refusing to include in its estimate of the value of the land taken the value of a railroad previously constructed upon it by the appellee or its vendors. It is argued that the railroad was built on it by a trespasser; that it became a part of the land and, as such, passed to the landowner; that when the petition was filed the railroad was as much the property of the appellant as the soil itself, and could not be taken from him without just compensation. There is an old maxim that ‘whatever is affixed to the soil belongs to the soil;’ and it is a general rule of the common law that a trespasser who builds on another’s land dedicates his structure to the owner. The reason of the rule, which has been often stated, is that the entry was a trespass to the injury of the owner, and that the trespasser could not add further injury by tearing down and removing the building, for in that the law contemplates that an injury to-the soil will result as a necessity. The trespasser has. no legal right to acquire the soil, and when he places on it a building which cannot be removed without some-injury to it, it will be presumed that he intended to dedicate the building to the use of the land, and not. that he contemplated a second trespass. He could not remove the building, for its severance would damage the soil; he could not exact pay for it, for he could not impose upon the owner of the soil an obligation to pay for improvements which he had not authorized and may not have desired. Those reasons fail when applied to the case at bar. The corporation had the right to enter upon the land for purposes of survey, and to appropriate it on making just compensation. It is therefore not necessary to presume that when it*405 built its railroad it intended either to dedicate it to the use of the land or to commit another trespass to the damage of the land; but it is more reasonable to presume that it intended to retain the railroad for use as such, and lawfully to acquire the land upon which it rested. The railroad was not built to improve the ground, or to enhance its ordinary utility, but to be nsed as part of an easement for public purposes, entirely independent of the ordinary uses of the ground. To the rule relied upon, exceptions have always been recognized, increasing with the importance and value of personal property, and with the demands and exigencies of society; and as its reasons fail in this case we do not think it should control. All that the Constitution guarantees or the law demands is that just compensation shall be made to the owner in return for property appropriated by the public. A rule that would exact of a corporation the payment of a sum to cover the value of a railroad as such, constructed at its own expense, would go beyond the demands of justice, and could find no sort of countenance in conscience or in law outside of the strict letter and fanciful presumptions of the rule stated. The same question has been often adjudicated by the courts of the highest dignity and learning in sister States, and the decided weight of adjudged cases is against the appellant. Aside from adjudication, reason and justice condemn the contention.”
Nor are we wholly without authority in this State. [Dietrich v. Murdock, 42 Mo. 279; Hosher v. Railroad, 60 Mo. 329.]
There can be no question that, where the railroad with the knowledge and consent of the landowner places improvements upon the land, such owner cannot claim for such improvements in a condemnation suit, subsequently brought to acquire such lands. The case at bar is not different in principle.
But we need not stop here. Land is not taken for public use until it has been condemned and paid for by the party desiring it and authorized by law to take it. As a general rule the appropriation and taking is. fixed as of the date the commissioners make their report of the damages, and the condemning party pays such sum into court for the benefit of the landowner. Up to this point the party can abandon the condemnation, but when the payment is made there is and has. been a taking of the property in a constitutional sense. Such seems to be the well-settled rule in this State. [Railroad v. Townsite Co., 103 Mo. 451; Simpson v. Kansas City, 111 Mo. 237; Railroad v. Railroad, 138 Mo. 591; State ex rel. v. Fort, 180 Mo. l. c. 110.]
There is nothing in this case to take it out of this general rule. Under the evidence the relation of landlord and tenant existed until the taking in the constitutional sense was undertaken in this condemnation proceedings. Defendant recognized this relation of landlord and tenant by bringing suit for the rents. Under the facts of this case, the instruction given for the plaintiff was right, and that refused the defendant was wrong. The point is ruled against the defendant.
Y. Complaint is urged as.to plaintiff’s instruction numbered one, which reads:
*408 switching Measure* of Damages. *407 “The court instructs the jury that under the law of the State of Missouri and of the United States the plaintiff railroad company was obliged after the condemnation of the land to furnish to defendant’s ele*408 vator all reasonably necessary switching services and facilities, such as supplying cars, storing cars, moving cars to and from said elevator, and switching and transporting the same to and from the elevator without discrimination or favor, and at reasonable rates, neither higher nor lower than it performed the same service for other elevators similarly situated along the line of plaintiff’s railway, and the jury must not allow defendant any damages in the belief that by reason of these condemnation proceedings whereby defendant’s land was taken on both ends of the elevator, said elevator was or in the future would be deprived of such switching services and facilities.”
To get at the right of this proposition we must consider this instruction along with other instructions given. At the request of defendant the court gave defendant’s instruction numbered two, which reads:
“The court instructs the jury that the defendants, the Second Street Improvement Company, in this case, is entitled to damages against the plaintiff for a sum equal to the difference of what the fair market value of the whole property was at the time of the appropriation with such improvements thereon as was owned thereon by the Second Street Improvement Company and the fair market value of the property left and not taken by the plaintiff and of which that taken forms a part, and in arriving at said damages you may first ascertain and allow as damages the fair market value of the land taken, and in addition thereto you should allow the defendant the additional damages, if any, to the land and improvements of the defendant, which ioere not taken by the railroad and which formed a part of the land taken; and in determining what is the market value, your inquiry should be directed to what is. the property worth in the market in view not merely with reference to the use it was put at the time of condemnation, but with reference to the uses for*409 which it was plainly adapted, having regard to the existing business or wants of the community at the time of the condemnation or such as may have been reasonably expected in the immediate future.”
We should further go to some of the evidence bearing upon the question to the end that the theory nisi may be fully gathered. The railroad was not condemning the land upon which the elevator stood, but was condemning the land right up to the elevator. Under the lease the railroad company wg.s to put switch tracks to elevators, and this it had done. The railroad in this proceeding was condemning the land upon which these switch tracks were built, to the end that it. might own all of its tracks and other improvements, but not the elevators along its line. Now with these things in view let us turn to the evidence introduced. The defendant introduced a Mr. Minter and he testified:
“Q. I will ask you whether or not the Second Street Improvement Company being deprived of the right to construct and maintain its own switch tracks upon this land colored red, and taken in this proceeding, to and from its elevators, as distinguished from the switching facilities which the railroad is required by law to furnish, would affect the value of that Sun Elevator on that date, July 8,1903? A. Well, I would say anything from sixty-five to seventy-five per cent of the valuation of the elevator.”
On cross-examination he further said:
“Q. Now, Colonel, if in this situation precisely the same switching facilities are furnished and the same room for the storage of cars, and everything of that kind, that existed before the condemnation, where does the damage lie? A. The damage lies in the possession of the ground to the elevator.
“Q. The possession of what ground? A. Why, the ground that they own; when you take away the*410 ground from the elevator I say you practically destroy the greater value of the elevator.
“Q. Well, why? A. Simply because when you go to sell the elevator you sell it without the ground.
“Q. Well, all you want the ground for, as I understand, is for switching purposes? A. Yes, but when you come to sell it you want to own the ground as well as the switching service too.”
There was other evidence along the same line. Now, under this evidence and defendant’s instruction numbered 2, supra, it is clear that the jury was directed to allow the defendant any damages which might result to the elevator property itself by reason of the taking from the owner of the elevator this adjoining land upon which the tracks were located. We have italicized that portion of defendant’s instruction number 2 which applies to the facts shown as above. That italicized portion reads: “And in addition thereto you should allow the defendant the additional damages, if any, to the land and improvements of the defendant, which were not taken by the railroad and which formed a part of the land taken.” Under this evidence and this instruction the defendant was allowed to recover (and from the verdict, we think did recover) for such damages as were occasioned to the elevator property by the taking of the land adjoining it. Both the evidence and the instruction authorized such a recovery. Instruction number one for the plaintiff does not undertake to preclude the defendant from the recovery of these damages to its remaining property by reason of the taking of the adjoining property. All such instruction does is to tell the jury that under the law the railroad company was required to do certain things, and these things should not be considered in determining the depreciation of defendant’s remaining property by reason of the taking of the adjoining land. We think the instruction a proper one. It does not preclude the defendant from recovering
“Q. The commissioners’ report, Mr. Truitt, was filed July 8, 1903, and the land which is sought to be condemned in this case, is all of this land shown in pink or red coloring on this plat which is in evidence as Exhibit I. I wish you to state to the jury what, in your opinion, was the fair reasonable market value of that land on the date of the filing of this report July 8, 1903? A. I don’t remember what the value was placed upon it; the report there, I suppose, shows.
“Q. The amount named in the report? A. That would be my answer. I have no recollection of what the amount was.
“Q. I will refresh your recollection by letting you look at this report which you made at that time.
“Mr. Wright: If Your Honor please, I object to that. The report of Mr. Truitt, refreshing his recollection from the report is not a proper way of getting at the value. If he is an expert on this, he knows what the value was at that time.
“The Court: Yes, the commissioners’ report is not competent.
“Mr. Crane: I don’t want to introduce the report, hut he says that he—
*413 “The Court: That is just an indirect way of getting in what he did before, showing him what he did and then asking him to do it over.
“Q. Well, Mr. Truitt,'there were something like twenty and three-quarters acres taken in this proceeding, and what I want to get at is what, in your judgment, on that date was the fair reasonable market value of that per acre? A. It is the amount set forth in that report, is what we felt that the land was worth at that time.
“Mr. Wright: I object' to that, if Tour Honor please, and move to have it stricken out as being not responsive to the question, not a proper answer to the question.
“The court sustained the motion to strike out.
“Q. You went out and looked at the property at that time? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. In company with the other commissioners? A. The other commissioners, yes, sir.
“Q. And did you investigate as to the value? A. Heard the evidence as to value from both sides, yes, sir.
“Q. And you say you looked at the property? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And adjoining property around there? A. Took into consideration everything around there and there were values proven on property on practically all sides of it.
“Mr. Wright: I object to that, if Your Honor please, as assuming the legal conclusion that the values were proven as to surrounding property, invading the. province of the jury in this ease, and ask to have that answer stricken out.
“The court sustained the objection and motion to strike out.
“Q. I don’t care for that. I am simply asking if a thorough — . A. A thorough examination was made of the property.
*414 “Q. A thorough, examination was made of the1 property. Do you remember, Mr. Truitt, what allowance was made per acre? A. I do not.
“Q. You don’t remember? A. I dismissed it. from my mind after that and never thought of it since until I was asked to come down and testify two or three days ago, and I have not seen the report or given, it a thought since that; I didn’t think I would have to come down, didn’t want to come; I was too busy to get away.
“Q. Well, now, then, if it he a fact and if it be shown in evidence that you at that time—
“Mr. Wright: I object, if Your Honor please, if he intends to give any figures at this time he is indirectly getting the report before the jury of the commissioners by assuming a state of facts.
“Mr. Crane: You don’t pretend that I don’t have a right to offer this report in evidence?
“Mr. Wright: You don’t have a right to offer it for the purpose of refreshing his recollection now, or showing the value of the land.
“Mr. Crane: I understand that, but you don’t contend that I don’t have a right to offer this report in evidence.
“Mr. Wright: I expect all the facts in this case are competent evidence.
“Q. (By Mr. Crane): You say you don’t recollect that amount at the present time? A. No, I don’t recollect it, I don’t.
“Q. I will ask you, Mr. Truitt, if it shall appear in evidence here that the amount allowed by the commissioners was twenty-six thousand dollars, whether or not that, in your judgment, was the fair reasonable market value of the land at that time?
“Mr. Wright: I object to that, if Your Honor please, as being incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial and not a proper method of refreshing the rec*415 ollection of the witness, and as indirectly assuming facts, invading the province of the jury.
“Mr. Crane: I think the witness has shown that he was at that time familiar with the market value; he made an endeavor to ascertain what it was, and since that the matter has passed from his mind and he don’t now recollect it as an independent proposition.
“Mr. Wright: I don’t think he has.
“Mr. Crane: Don’t have to; he recollects that, whatever the allowance was at that time was the then market value of the land.
“Mr. Wright: I object to it.'
“The Court: It is admitted that the commissioners’ report is competent evidence in the case, that objection will be overruled.
“To which ruling of the court, defendant then and there at the time duly excepted.
“Q. (By Mr. Crane): What is your answer? A. My answer is whatever the amount set forth in that report is, that was what we felt was a fair valuation for the land at the time of this proceeding, and if that be twenty-six thousand dollars, that is the amount.’.’
“Redirect Examination by Mr. Crane.
“ Q. I will let you look at this report, Mr. Truitt (handing commissioners’ report to witness.who examines it): Now Mr. Truitt, have you finished with your examination? A. Not quite — well, I want to look the first over again, I was trying to see the amount of ground taken here.
“Mr. Braley: It is on the blueprint, I guess.
“Witness: I suppose it is on the blueprint or set forth here at the last, I suppose.
“Mr. Crane: No, I believe it is twenty — how many acres?
“Mr. Braley: Twenty and three-quarters acres.
*416 “Mr. Crane: This center strip is not taken, you know, it runs from here down to here, down to here (indicating on the map).
“A. Yes, twenty and three-quarter acres.
“Q. (By Mr. Crane): Having seen your report and examined it, can you now state what the fair market value of that land, that twenty acres, in July, 1903, was?
“Q. (By Mr. Braley): Wait a moment. Independent of your report which you made at that time do you now know what the market value was of that twenty and three-quarter acres taken in this condemnation proceeding on July 8, 1903? A. My knowledge is based upon the report that I handed in at that time.
‘‘Q. And independent of that you don’t now know what the market value is? A. I should say it was worth from a thousand to fifteen hundred dollars an acre, just guessing now, because I gave myself such wide latitude; I think I hit about where it was, but to get at what the actual value was at that time, I couldn’t say except that we have given our sworn statement in that report there that that was what we felt it was actually worth at that time — no, I could not give the exact value of that land.
“Mr. Braley: Well, I object to his answer in which he states he is giving a guess it would be worth a thousand and fifteen hundred dollars an acre.
“A. I know it was not worth over fifteen hundred dollars at that time, and I am not positive it was not less than a thousand, so that is the reason I placed my figure so.
“Mr. Braley: He says it is a guess as to what it was, independent of the report.
“Mr. Crane: Well, he put the guess in the sense— from a thousand to fifteen hundred dollars I understood is not a guess, but he says he has given me a*417 wide berth. A. A wide latitude so I would be sure I would not miss the value of the land.
“Q. (By Mr. Crane): You say independent of the commissioners’ report your statement now, the testimony is independent of that, it would be from a thousand to fifteen hundred dollars? A. That would be. my recollection of the value at that time.
“Q. And you actually thought it was at that time without paying any attention to it since? A. That would be my recollection of the value- at that time.
“Q. And you actually thought it was at that time without paying any attention to it since? A. It was twelve hundred and fifty-three dollars per acre. .
“Q. Twelve hundred and fifty-three dollars per acre? A. From the report, yes, sir.
“Mr. Braley: We ask that that answer as to twelve hundred and fifty-three dollars an acre be stricken out as simply a computation of what his report is, and he says he don’t know whether that was the actual value except by referring to his report.
“The court sustained the objection and motion to strike out.
“Mr. Crane: Now, I offer to show by the witness that in 1903, July 8th, he ascertained the market value of this ground; that he stated it in the report, that he then dismissed the matter from his recollection and has had nothing to do with it since that time, and he don’t recollect, independently of the report, exactly what he found it to be at that time, but that he does recollect that it stated in the report, and that he will now testify, that what was there stated in the report was at that time the acual value, actual market value of the land.
“The Court: "Well, it is admitted that the report is competent evidence. Now, the report itself shows what the commissioners found.
“Mr. Crane: Yes, Your Honor.
*418 “The Court: That is the best evidence of that, the commissioners will not be permitted to dispute it, so it is not necessary for him to testify to it.
“Mr. Crane: I don’t want him to dispute it, and on the other hand, I don’t want his testimony thrown entirely from the record, but I do want to show that he can from the report refresh his recollection on a matter which he has since dismissed from his mind, and testified then exactly what the market value was as he ascertained it to be at that time.
“The Court: But suppose that he is testifying from the report.
“Mr. Crane: Well, he is refreshing’ his recollection from the report.
“The Court: And the report is the best evidence of what he ascertained at that time.
“Mr. Crane: Then you overrule my offer.
“The Court: Yes, sir, it is not necessary for him to fortify his own report.
“Q. (By Mr. Crane): Whatever you found in that report, reported to the court, was in your judgment, the market value at that time? A. Yes, sir; it is, was sworn to.
“Mr. Braley: I object to that and move that the answer be stricken out as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial and invading the province of the jury.
“Witness: Your Honor, after I look that report over can’t I state what the market value was of that land at that time?
“The Court: If you know of your own knowledge after refreshing your recollection.
“Witness: I do know of my own knowledge after looking it over.
“Q. (By the Court): If you know of your own knowledge what was the fair market value of that property in July, 1903, you can testify. A. I do, from the evidence before the commissioners, what it was worth.
*419 ‘ ‘ Q. (By the Court): No, but of your own knowledge, do you know of your own knowledge?
“Q. (By Mr. Crane): It does not mean what source you got it from, but if you know of your own knowledge, from whatever source you got it. A. I know of my own knowledge what I felt at that time it was worth.
“Q. What was that? A. Twelve hundred and fifty-three dollars an acre.
‘‘ The Court: Proceed.
“Mr. Wright: We object to that and ask that the answer be stricken out as not • being competent or relevant of what it was worth; he does not testify that it was what the witness at that time felt was market value, or that he had any personal knowledge other than what is contained in the report and we move that the answer be stricken out as to what he felt at that time.
“The court overruled the objection and motion to strike out; to which ruling of the court defendant then and there at the time duly excepted.
“Q. (By Mr. Crane): You signed the report and swore to it? A. I signed the report and swore to it, yes, sir.
“Mr. Braley: Was that stricken out?
“The Court: No.
“Mr. Braley: He said what he felt it was worth at that time; we would like to have a ruling on the question.
“The Court: I understood the witness to say that he knew what was its value at that time after having refreshed his memory.
“(Answer read by the witness.)
“Mr. Wright: I move to strike it out. It was simply a statement of the witness’s feelings at that time, based • solely on the report, and incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial.
*420 “Q. (By the Court): You mean that as a conclusion from what yon heard from other witnesses? A. A conclusion from what I heard at that time, backed up by the report that we made.
“The Court: Well, the motion will be sustained.
“Q. (By Mr. Crane): You mean, as I gather it, Mr. Truitt, that you went out there and examined the land? A. Heard the evidence.
“Q. Heard the evidence? A. And at that time it was worth twelve hundred and fifty-three dollars an acre.
“Q. And made investigations? A. Made investigations.
“Q. As to other sales in the neighborhood? A. Other sales and all the evidence that was before us.
“Q. And from that you arrived at it? A. I say at that time it was worth twelve hundred and fifty-three dollars an acre.
“Q. And you know that of your own knowledge? A. Enow that' of my own knowledge after refreshing my memory.
“Q. And I suppose, too, in arriving at that you took into consideration the — ■
“Mr. Braley: Wait a moment. I object to the form of the question.
“Q. (By Mr. Crane); I don’t want to put it in leading form. Did you or not also in arriving at that value take into consideration such knowledge as you had gained in the real estate business here in the city? A. I did.
“Mr. Crane: That is all.”
The trial court was right in saying that the report of the commisioners was improper, and of course counsel for the plaintiff was in error in contending that it was competent. This Division had the question' up in Railroad v. Roberts, 187 Mo. l. c. 321, and by a full consent, we then said:
*421 “When the exceptions are sustained, the report of the commissioners is set aside and becomes functus officio except for the purposes hereinafter indicated. The jury have no more right to know what the report or assessment of damages of the commissioners was, than any jury in any case has to know what the verdict of a previous jury was in the same case. The jury in such cases has only one duty to perform, and that is to assess the damages the defendant will sustain by the appropriation of his land to public use. All other questions arising in any manner in the case, are matters for the court to settle in its judgment. The rule laid down in the Clark case (119 Mo. 357) and reiterated here, is in accord with the law in other jurisdictions. 2 Lewis on Eminent Domain (2 Ed.), sec. 449, states the law as follows: ‘On appeal from the commisioners and trial de novo, the report appealed from is not evidence as to the amount of damages.’ The authority cites cases supporting the text from Indiana, Iowa, Wisconsin, Kansas, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts. The case of Railroad v. McElroy, 161 Mo. 584, does not correctly state the law and it is therefore overruled.”
In Railroad v. Pfau, 212 Mo. 398, our brothers in Division Two, quoted and approved the above language . from the Roberts case, and we have no doubt about the correctness of that rule. It is clear from the evidence quoted above that the plaintiff evidently got before the trial jury the contents of the commissioners’ report of the amount of damages. It is true that the report itself was not offered in evidence, but its poisonous effect was instilled into the jury by this evidence of Truitt. No person can read this evidence without knowing that thereby the jury was given to understand that the commissioners had found this property to be of $26,000 in value. It was but an indirect method of putting the report of the commissioners in evidence, which was not allowable under the rulings above men
‘ ‘ The report of the commissioners was not offered in evidence, although, under the attitude of defendant’s counsel, the plaintiff would have been justified in offering it in toto. A litigant is never permitted to play fast and loose with the court. It must take a stand one way or the other. Defendant’s counsel were asked squarely to say whether or not they objected to the introduction of the report in evidence and they squarely stated that it was competent evidence and the court so understood them as did counsel for plaintiff. "When Mr. Truitt was on the stand, this occurred.
“ ‘Mr. Crane: I understand that, but you don’t contend that I don’t have a right to offer this report [commissioners’] in evidence.
“ ‘Mr. Wright: I expect all the facts in this case are competent evidence.’
“Instead of saying he did object to this being offered in evidence or used in evidence, counsel for defendant made the foregoing answer. Both the court and counsel for plaintiff understood this to mean that it was conceded by defendant’s attorney that the report could be used. Witness this language of the court on the following page:
“ ‘The Court: It is admitted that the commissioners-’ report is competent evidence in this case, that objection will be overruled.’
“And defendant’s attorneys made no objection or protest to this statement showing the understanding of the court.
“Again, this occurred:
“ ‘The Court: Well, it is admitted that the report is competent evidence. Now, the report itself, shows what the commissioners found.
*423 “ ‘Mr. Crane: Yes, Yonr Honor.’
“And again defendant’s counsel were mute and made no objection to tbe statement and understanding of tbe court as to tbe admissibility of tbe report.
“It is too fundamental to need citation of authority that counsel cannot at the trial take an attitude of this kind and then attempt to put the trial court in error here after such plain concessions. It may be that the counsel had purposes of their own in thus conceding the admissibility of the report at the time of the trial. Whatever those reasons may have been, it is too late now to contend that any error was committed in this regard.”
We are not inclined to the view that the action of counsel for the defendant amounts to an admission that the report of the commissioners was competent. Nor do we think the trial court was justified in so construing it, although there is some ground for such a construction. It is clear that counsel for defendant was objecting to the use which was being made of this report, i. e., to refresh the recollection of an expert witness. It is clear that the report was so used. It is further clear that in doing so the substance of that report was before the jury. The report was not properly used to refresh the expert witness. An expert testifies to things within his own knowledge, or gives his expert opinion upon a hypothecated state of facts. There is no reason for refreshing the recollection of such a witness. Hpon the whole the examination of this witness was improper, and constituted prejudicial error. "We cannot say that this character of evidence did not influence the jury, when it is considered that the evidence for the defendant tends to show damages far in excess of that allowed by the jury. For this error the judgment as to damages should be reversed and the cause remanded for the trial of that issue only. There are other matters argued, but they are not such as we deem it necessary to discuss them.