263 P. 418 | Mont. | 1928
The following cases sustain the contention of appellant that the cost of maintenance of the fences is as indispensable as an element of compensation or damages, as the cost of fencing itself: Jones v. Phillips,
Damages must be real, tangible and proximate. (City ofDetroit v. Deecher,
The evidence adduced is not before us, but it is herein stipulated that, on the trial, the defendant established the necessity of fencing along the right of way for the protection of her inclosed lands and introduced testimony tending to show the annual cost of maintaining them, when built, and tending to show the cost of an annuity equal to the amount of such annual expense. It is further stipulated that the court, by a specific instruction, withdrew from the consideration of the jury the evidence respecting maintenance, and refused to instruct the jury to consider the cost of the annuity in arriving at the compensation to be awarded for maintenance of fences. The cost of fencing was included in the lump sum awarded by the verdict.
The sole specification made is that the court erred in withdrawing from the consideration of the jury the evidence as to cost of maintaining the fences, and this assignment raises the single question as to whether the cost of maintaining necessary fences, indefinitely, is a proper element of damages to be considered in making an award of compensation for the taking of land for highway purposes.
1. Section 14, Article III, of the Constitution declares that[1] "private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation. * * *"
"It is, of course, well established that a taking of property by authority of the state for a public purpose on payment of just compensation, although a drastic interference with private rights of property, is, when effected in accordance with a statute which affords the owner a reasonable opportunity to be heard on the question of damages, due process of law within *265 the meaning of the Constitution, because eminent domain was a recognized function of government when the Constitutions were adopted." (10 R.C.L. 16.)
2. The manner of arriving at an award which will be "just compensation" for the taking of private property for a public use, and the method of affording the owner a reasonable opportunity to be heard on the question of damages are declared in section 9944, Revised Codes 1921, while section 9947, Id., provides that, upon an appeal from an award made by commissioners, the damages must be "reassessed upon the same principle"; therefore, in arriving at an amount which will be just compensation, the jury must "ascertain and assess: (1) The value of the property sought to be appropriated. * * * (2) If the property sought to be appropriated constitutes only a part of a larger parcel, the damages which will accrue to the portion not sought to be condemned, by reason of its severance * * * and the construction of the improvements in the manner proposed by the plaintiff. (3) Separately, how much the portion not sought to be condemned * * * will be benefited. * * * (4) If * * * for a railroad, the cost of good and sufficient fences along the line of such railroad, and the cost of cattle guards where fences may cross the line of such railroad." It is then declared that, "(5) as far as practicable, compensation must be assessed for each source of damage separately." (Sec. 9944.)
Counsel for plaintiff rely solely upon the declaration found in Los Angeles R. Co. v. Rumpp,
3. The measure of damages in a proceeding for the condemnation[2] of land for public highway, under our statute and similar enactments, is the fair market value of the land sought to be condemned with the depreciation of such value of the land from which the strip is to be taken, less allowable deductions for benefits proven (10 R.C.L. 128, sec. 112; Lewis on Eminent Domain, 3d ed., sec. 694; Sanitary District v. Boenning,
Any attempt to enumerate the various circumstances which may enter into depreciation of the market value of a tract of land would be futile. All that can be said on the subject as a guide in cases such as this is that, in arriving at a conclusion as to the damages to be awarded, the triers of facts should consider all of the circumstances which immediately and directly depreciate the present market value of the portions of the whole tract adjacent to the strip sought to be taken as a right of way.
4. One of the circumstances which directly depreciates the market value of such land is that the opening of a highway through a fenced tract of land destroys the close and necessitates additional fencing in order to re-establish it. Here the damage suffered and the amount of depreciation is readily ascertainable by testimony as to the reasonable cost of construction of such fences, and the consideration of such an item has generally been upheld. (Butte County v. Boydston,
5. However, in the absence of statutory justification[3] therefor, no allowance can be made for a fence as a fence, and proof of the necessity of such fencing, and its cost, is proper only as a means of showing the depreciation in market value of the land by reason of the taking and use of a part of the land. (Board of Trade, etc., v. Darst,
Undoubtedly, on such an examination, a witness could readily testify concerning the depreciation by reason of the requirement of fencing, but could he give a satisfactory answer as to how the future maintenance of the fences would depreciate the present value of the premises? True, one familiar with conditions in the neighborhood and experienced in the care of fences could tell about how long a given type of fence would last and what would be the reasonable repairs necessary thereon throughout its life, and the cost of replacement; but what sort of fence would the owner build and how long would he maintain it? A re-adjustment of the ranch may later obviate the necessity of the fence. We have statutory provision for the creation of her districts; if such a district should be created next year and, as a consequence, the Nett lands thrown open, should allowance be made for the maintenance of the fences for a period of ten years or a hundred *268 years as a direct and immediate depreciation in the present market value of those lands?
A reasonably prudent man, contemplating the purchase of the Nett premises at the time of the commencement of this action, would undoubtedly estimate the necessary construction of fences along the right of way of the proposed road, and deduct the necessary cost as a depreciation in the market value of the land; but would he make a deduction from his contemplated offer for the premises based upon the problematical future cost of maintenance and replacement of the new fence at that point any more than he would for the future repairs of other fences, or, for that matter, of the barns or the house on the premises, and, if so, for how long a time would he estimate the cost of repairs and replacement?
The author of a comprehensive note on the subject of fencing as an element to be considered in cases such as this, found in 10 A.L.R. 451, states that "there is comparatively little directly on the point of maintaining fences after they are built," but expresses the opinion that, "in the cases holding that the burden of fencing is an element to be considered in estimating depreciation, probably the courts had in mind repairs as well as original cost."
In Illinois, Kansas, Pennsylvania and New Jersey, at least, it is held that maintenance is a proper element to be considered (Department of Public Works v. Griffin,
In the early case of In re Rensselaer S.R. Co. (1834), 4 Paige, 553, the supreme court of New York applied the rule *269 as to division fences to railroads, thus requiring the railroad and the owner to each build and maintain one-half of the fence.
In Iowa and Indiana, awards were set aside because of the allowance for maintaining fences. (Henry v. Dubuque P. R.Co., above; Kennedy v. Dubuque Ry. Co.,
However, it is not every possible element of depreciation in[4, 5] value for which compensation must be awarded in an eminent domain proceeding. (Farwell v. Boston,
Recoverable damages here, as in all cases of damages, must be the natural and proximate consequence of the action taken (Griffin v. Colver,
Like maintenance of fences, clearing snow from necessary sidewalks would be a known future burden upon the lands, but in each instance, in our opinion, the claim should be disregarded as too remote, and as incapable of definite ascertainment or determination at the time the depreciation in value must be determined; i.e., as of the time of the commencement of the proceeding.
If an owner is allowed all other elements of damage entering into the depreciation of the market value of his lands and a fair amount for the erection of new fences along the right of way, he receives just compensation for the taking of and damage to his lands and the constitutional and statutory provisions are satisfied.
For the reasons stated, the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY and ASSOCIATE JUSTICES MYERS, STARK and GALEN concur.
Rehearing denied January 23, 1928. *271