This action was commenced in Barton county, Missouri, by appellant to condemn the right of way over respondent’s farm, consisting of six hundred and forty acres of land, in the west part of Barton county, Missouri, near the town of Pedro, being section 35, township 33, range 33, three-fourths of a mile north of where appellant’s railroad crosses the Ft. Scott & Gulf railroad. The petition is in due form, and all the preliminary steps were taken to sustain such a proceeding.
On the fourth day of March, 1886, three commissioners were appointed to assess respondent’s damage, to-wit: James Gregory, Thomas Seals and Frank Jones, who after viewing the land on the seventeenth day of March, 1886, made their report in due form and time,
The appellant, in due form, took a change of venue on account of the. prejudice of the inhabitants of Barton county, Missouri, and the case was sent to the Dade county circuit coui't, where the exceptions to the report of the commissioners were sustained, and the report set aside, and the damages ordered assessed by a jury. Whereupon the appellant asked leave to take a nonsuit, which, after appellant having admitted that it had obtained possession of the land, sought to be condemned for right of way, and its said road over it, and was then using and occupying it for its railroad, by virtue of the condemnation proceedings, the court refused to allow appellant to do. The case was then submitted to a jury, which assessed the damages at $5,000.
I. The action of the court in refusing to permit appellant to take a nonsuit is assigned for error. This point is ruled against appellant on the authority of Gray v. Railroad,
II. As to appellant’s objection to certain questions propounded to many of the witnesses, we will quote from the opinion of Judge Ray in the case of Railroad v. Calkins,
No error appearing in the instructions the judgment is affirmed.
