189 P. 90 | Utah | 1920
Plaintiff, a railroad corporation, commenced this action in the usual form under our statutes to condemn for railroad purposes certain real property situate in the city of Pays on, Utah county. The defendants answered, admitting the allegations of the complaint, except that a taking of the property was necessary for plaintiff’s use. It was alleged in the answer by way of a counterclaim against the plaintiff that prior to the commencement of the action the defendants had sustained certain damages to the real property sought to be condemned, and that they had suffered personal discomfort and inconveniences in its use and occupancy in many ways, by reason of the construction and maintenance of the plaintiff’s railroad and certain shops on premises adjacent thereto, for which judgment against the plaintiff was" prayed in the sum of $5,000.
The necessity for the taking of the property was found by the court, upon the admission of the defendants, and thereupon the case proceeded by trial to a jury as to the other is
For convenience we shall first consider the defendants’ cross-appeal, taken from the dismissal of the counterclaim for damages, and certain rulings of the trial court with respect to the admission and rejection of certain testimony. As pointed out, the alleged injuries for which defendants sought damages under their counterclaim arose long before plaintiff commenced its action to condemn. As we view the
The plaintiff’s assignments of error go to the admission and rejection of certain testimony, the giving and refusal to give certain instructions to the jury, and the overruling
“The only question for you to determine in this case is the market value * * * of the lot, together with all the improvements appurtenant thereto.”
If the plaintiff desired more specific instructions than given by the court, it became the duty of the plaintiff to frame and present them for the court’s consideration. This the plaintiff did not do. It is true the plaintiff did request that an instruction be given directing the jury to find the issues under the counterclaim for the plaintiff, “No cause of action;” but the defendants’ counterclaim was then out of the case — dismissed from further consideration by either court or jury — on the plaintiff’s application. Not having made a written request to the court to charge the jury in the particulars complained of, the court’s failure to do so will not be regarded as error. Comp. Laws Utah 1917, section 6803.
Bearing on the question of just compensation for the property taken, the defendants produced but two witnesses in their behalf — Lydia Schramm, one of the defendants and a part owner in the property, and Charles F. Watkins. Objections were made by the plaintiff as to the qualifications of these witnesses to give an opinion as to the market value of the premises on February 21, 1918, the date of the commencement of the action. The witness Schramm testified in substance that she had resided on the premises all her life; that she had made frequent inquiries of people who wanted to sell property iu the city of Payson, both before and after the commencement of plaintiff’s action; that she had been interested in friends
In cases like the one under consideration the qualification of witnesses to express an opinion as to market value necessarily is a question to be largely determined by the trial judge. If it is shown that the witness is competent to express an opinion as to values, no matter what the source of the qualifying information may be, he should be permitted to testify. The sources of the witnesses’ information may vary according to the peculiar means or opportunity the witness has of forming an opinion and judging the premises. We do not think any good reason can be assigned why a person wdio has occupied and used the premises all her life, and has been interested and alert in making inquiry as to its value, may not be as well qualified to speak as the banker, lawyer, or real estate man, having more or less to do with the sales and transfers of real property. The means and extent of the knowledge of any witness may be gone into on cross-examination, and
What has been said also applies to the qualifications of the
The plaintiff’s witnesses, four in number, testified that the fair market value of the premises taken was from $1,500 to $1,650. W. H. Ray, a real estate broker for many years and of wide experience in the lending of money, buying and selling real property throughout Utah county, who knew the defendants’ property, and was familiar with its adaptability for any uses it might be put to, and acquainted with its conditions and improvements on February 21, 1918, placed the market value at $1,500. R. A. Porter, an attorney, who had resided at Payson for eleven years preceding the commencement of plaintiff’s action, and who had attended to the business of others at Payson in the transfer of property there upon sales being made, who had observed the valuations and prices for which property had been sold in Payson, testified that the market value of defendants’ property was $1,650. John W. Prows, also a resident of Payson, and engaged for five years last past in the real estate business, who was acquainted with values of real property in Utah county, particularly in Pay-son, and who had carefully examined the defendants’ prop
Much complaint is made by the plaintiff of the ruling of the trial court in denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, particularly on the grounds of excessive damages and the insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. We have heretofore remarked that in our opinion the witnesses for the defendants were, in view of the testimony offered and received, qualified to speak ijpon the question of market value. The plaintiff complains, however, that the answer of the defendants’ witness Watkins as to market value was erroneously predicated on the meaning of “market value,” as defined to be “the price the party who wanted to buy would give in cash for the most advantageous and valuable use, excluding, however, railroad purposes,” and particularly so in view of the court’s charge to the jury on the question of market value. In this same connection the plaintiff tendered to the trial court a request that the jury be instructed that “market value” is defined to be the price the property “would bring when it is offered for sale by one who desires, but is not obliged, to sell it, and is bought by one who is under no necessity of buying it,” which the trial court refused to give. While we think that “market value,” as defined
The plaintiff complains of the court’s charge to the jury that in passing on the question of market value they should “take into consideration the existing business or wants of the community.” The principal objection urged by plaintiff against the instruction is that there was no evidence upon which to base it, and therefore it left the jury to enter the realm of conjecture and speculate as to what the existing
We find no prejudicial error bearing on the questions raised by plaintiff’s assignments, neither as to the admission or exclusion of testimony, nor in the giving or refusal to give the instructions complained of by plaintiff. We are also of the opinion that the trial court rightly denied plaintiff’s motion for a new trial. While the plaintiff’s witnesses and those for the defendants greatly differed as to the proper amount of damages for the taking of the property, after all it was for the jury and not the court to determine from all the testimony its real market value.
Lastly, the plaintiff assigns as error the allowance of interest by the court on the damages awarded defendants by the jury from the date of the commencement of the action, instead of from the date of occupancy by the plaintiff. The action
For the reasons heretofore assigned, it is now ordered that the judgment of the district court of Utah county on verdict awarding damages in the sum of $4,000 be modified to the extent only of allowing the defendants interest thereon from April 29, 1918, and that in all other respects the same, including the order dismissing defendants’ counterclaim, is affirmed. Defendants to recover costs of printing their brief on the main appeal, not including cost of printing abstract or brief on cross-appeal.-