21 Minn. 122 | Minn. | 1874
For convenience we will speak of tbe respondents in the appeal at bar as plaintiffs, and of the appellant as defendant. Plaintiffs are owners of a tract of land, consisting of lots 4, 5, 6, 7, and of adjoining portions of lots 3 and 8, in block 13, in the village of Dresbach, which is di
The dwelling-house in which plaintiffs resided, was situate on lots 6 and 7, and the remainder of the tract was used and occupied, in connection with the dwelling-house, as a site for out-buildings, for a garden, orchard, etc. Defendant’s railway was surveyed and located upon lots 3, 4 and 5. The commissioners appointed, under the provisions of defendant’s charter, to appraise the value of land taken for the purposes of defendant’s railway, awarded for the taking of so much of each of said lots 3, 4 and 5, as was taken, as follows: For lot 3, $60; for lot 4, $75; for lot 5, $85. Plaintiffs appealed from this award to the district court, and the jury by which the appeal was tried, found for the plaintiffs, “For the taking of that part of lots 3, 4 and 5, in block 13, * * * described in the notice of appeal, the sum of $450.” Defendant claims that the verdict and the judgment founded upon it are erroneous, for the reason that lots 3, 4 and 5, in block 13, are assessed together, and not separately.
The statute under which the condemnation was had, provides that the commissioners appointed shall have cognizance of all cases arising on the line of the road, ‘ ‘ and they shall proceed to examine the premises in each case separately; * * * and after making such examination, the said commissioners shall, * * * in each case separately, make an appraisement and award of the value of the'lands, etc.;” and in case of appeal from their award to the district court,. “ the said court shall proceed to hear and determine,” and
The defendant insists that the words, “ in each case separately,” required the commissioners to make a separate assessment as to each lot in this instance. To this we by no means agree. The tract owned and occupied by plaintiffs, as before mentioned, was a compact body of land, used and occupied as an entirety. It was essentially one tract, notwithstanding its division into lots by imaginary lines. It is apparent that the amount which the plaintiffs were entitled to receive from the company, for the taking of so much of lots 3, 4 and 5 as was taken, was to be arrived at, not alone by an estimate of the value of the land actually occupied by the company, but by considering the effect of the taking upon the whole tract of which these lots formed a part. Now, while we are not prepared to say that there was any legal objection to the award made by the commissioners separately as to each lot, yet, when we consider the entirety of the whole tract, and the practical difficulty of apportioning the amount which the plaintiffs are entitled to receive, on account of the effect of the taking upon the Avhole tract, among lots 3, 4 and 5 separately, Ave are sure that, per se, it would have been eminently sensible and proper to have assessed the amount to Avhich plaintiffs were entitled, on account of the appropriation of so much of lots 3, 4 and 5 as was taken, at one gross sum. In other Avords, in view of the (so to speak) natural and intrinsic entirety of the damage to plaintiffs, there is abundant reason
The counsel for defendant, referring to the above quoted provisions of the statute as to costs, contends that if some of the lots had been assessed by the jury at a value above, and some at a value below the finding of the commissioners, it would have been competent for the court to apportion the costs accordingly. But we are of opinion that the proper construction of the statute requires the question of costs to be determined upon a comparison of the gross amount awarded by the commissioners for the land to which the appeal relates, with the gross amount allowed for the same by the court or jury in the district court. Even if this were not so, and the defendant’s counsel desired to apply the rule as to costs for which he contends, he should have called attention to the matter seasonably, and not have permitted the verdict to be recorded in its present form without objection. L. S. & M. R. Co. v. Greve, 17 Minn. 322.
It appeared that after the defendant’s line had been (with plaintiffs’ knowledge) staked out and located upon lots 3, 4 and 5, plaintiffs made some improvements upon the dwelling-house on lots 6 and 7 ; and defendant insists that they are not entitled to recover on account of the effect of the taking upon such improvements. We see no reason for departing from the rule heretofore laid down by this court, viz. : That in these cases of condemnation, compensation should be awarded with reference to the value and condition of the premises at the time of the award. Winona and St. Peter R. Co. v. Denman, 10 Minn. 267; St. P. & S.
The plaintiffs were owners also of lot 2, in block 14, in Dresbach, for the taking of a part of which the commissioners awarded $100. Plaintiffs’ appeal aforesaid embraced an appeal from the award as to this lot, also, as to which the jury awarded $137.50. It appeared that there had been a building upon the lot, which had, however, been removed therefrom by plaintiffs, prior to the examination and award of the commissioners. There was evidence tending to show that the defendant agreed that if plaintiffs would remove it, the companj7 would pajr for removing and making it as good as before. The plaintiffs’ claim, that, upon this state of facts, the expense of moving and making good was properly included in the award, is not pressed; nor is it easy to see how it well could be, in view of the rule that the assessment is to be based upon the value of the premises at the time thereof. But it is said that even if this expense was improperly included in the award,'there is no occasion to reverse the judgment, and grant a new trial, because the plaintiffs have only recovered what the defendant was bound to pay. It is enough to say, in answer to this position, that the liability of defendant, (if any,) on account of the alleged agreement in respect to the building, was not in issue, or
Ordered accordingly.