257 Mo. 448 | Mo. | 1914
Barring a few sentences of argumentative matter counsel for the defendants have made a very concise statement of the case, and we adopt it, with these sentences cut out. In fact we could take the statement of counsel upon either side of the controversy and have a fair general outline of the case, but that made for the defendants is a little more compact and concise and we take that. It reads:
‘ ‘ This is a proceeding, instituted December 1,1910, by the plaintiff in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, to condemn, for the use of the plaintiff for depot purposes, certain property situated in City Block 841-of the city of St. Louis.,
“The petition was in the usual form and need not be particularly noticed at this point. The defendants are husband and. wife, and the title to the premises is in the .wife. The city block in which the premises are situated lies just a block north and east of Twelfth and Washington avenue, in the City of St. Louis, and is bounded on the east by Twelfth street, on the west by High street (which is really Twelfth street at that-point), on the north by Linden street, and on the south by Lucas avenue, which is the nest street north of Washington .avenue. The three pieces of property sought to be condemned comprise a lot at the northeast corner of. the block, fronting seventy-one feet and some inches, on Twelfth street, by a depth westwardly on Linden street of one hundred and seven feet and. some inches; another lot at the southwest corner of the-*457 block fronting seventy-one feet and some inches on High street, by a depth on Lncas avenue to the east of sixty feet and some inches; and a third lying in the eastern center of the block, fronting eighteen feet on Twelfth street, by a depth of seventy-eight feet toward the west.
, ■ “The defendants answered, setting up two affirmative defenses. First, that the railroad, for the use of •which .the plaintiff sought to condemn the property, was an interurban electric railroad within the meaning of section 3228, Eevised Statutes 1909, and that therefore the plaintiff was without authority of law to condemn said property to the uses mentioned in the petition; and, second, that the plaintiff had abandoned a .material portion of the route of its railroad, as described in its charter, and was therefore without authority of law to condemn any property to its use for any purpose.
“The affirmative averments of this answer were pnt in issue by a reply filed by the plaintiff.
“Upon the issues thus made a trial was had to ■the court March 27, 1911, resulting in a judgment finding the issues submitted by the answer in favor of the plaintiff, awarding the plaintiff the right to condemn the property and appointing commissioners to assess the damages. ' ' - ,
“Within four days after that judgment was entered the defendants filed their motion for a new trial and in arrest of judgment. These motions the court overruled and the defendants excepted, and, having obtained time within which to file a bill of exceptions, filed the same within the time allowed, with all formalities duly complied with.
“In due time, and under date of June 6, 1911, the commissioners appointed by the court reported that they valued the property sought to be condemned at $164,300. Thereupon both parties excepted to this report, the exceptions of the defendants being filed June*458 10, 1911. In these exceptions the defendants renewed their objections to the proceeding and to the right to condemn the property, on the same grounds as were set forth in their answer, supra; and also complained that the damages allowed by the commissioners were inadequate. The plaintiff likewise filed exceptions to this report, complaining of the manner in which the commissioners had arrived at their conclusion as ■to the value of the property, and of the valuation placed ■thereon. Each side asked a jury trial as to the valué of the property; and, in response to that request, such was had, beginning December 11,1911.
“At the opening of this trial the defendants objected to the introduction of any testimony, and to the trial of the exceptions with respect to1 the value of the property, on the ground that the plaintiff was shown to have no right to condemn the property for the reasons set forth in the answer above referred to; the court'overruled the objection, and defendants excepted, and, at the conclusion of the trial, filed a motion for a new trial and in arrest of judgment assigning the same reasons as those set forth in the answer above referred to; and, on the overruling of these motions, duly excepted and took another bill of exceptions embodying the rulings on that subject.
“At the trial to'the jury on the question of value, each of the parties called numerous expert witnesses, and their testimony with respect to the proper value of the premises on the 8th day of June, 1911, when the commissioners filed their report, took a. wide range. The minimum valuation assigned by any witness was $86,000'; the maximum nearly $300,000'. The jury, by their verdict, assessed the value of the premises at an aggregate of $175,850, and the court entered judgment accordingly. After all due formalities, both parties appealed. The defendants here contend that under the evidence ,in the record the affirmative defenses in the answer ought to have prevailed, to-wit,*459 that the railroad which the plaintiff owned and operated, and to the nse of which it sought to condemn this property, was, and is, an interurban electric railroad within the meaning of section 3228, Revised Statutes 1909, and hence the plaintiff was without authority of law to condemn property to its use for depot purposes, as it sought to do in this proceeding; and, secondly, that the plaintiff had abandoned a material portion of the route for its road designated in its charter, and was therefore without authority to exercise the power of eminent domain for any purpose. The plaintiff* appealing, complains of rulings of the trial judge on the admission and exclusion of testimony, and on instructions, during the progress of the hearing-before the jury on the question of value.
“The parties have left the field of their controversy long- enough to unite in printing the entire record ■ applicable to both appeals, and have brought it here in that form, certified by the clerk, with a separate publication comprising copies of the blue prints, maps, etc., which were introduced in evidence and are called for by the various bills of exceptions contained in the record.” To this it is added by counsel for the plaintiff that, upon the return of the award, the money .was promptly paid into court for the defendants, and again upon the return of the verdict by the jury, the additional sum awarded by the jury was likewise paid into court, and thereupon the plaintiff took possession of the property for the uses stated in the petition. Matters of detail will be left to the opinion.
Not only so, but in this identical proceeding the two MasAdarases, the defendants here, likewise filed their application in this court for a writ of prohibition against Judge Shields who tried the instant proceeding. In that petition they urged’ the same matter that they urge now. Therein, they said:
“And the petitioners say that said railway company is not entitled to condemn their said property-to its such use because (1) the said railway company has abandoned the route for its road designated in its articles of incorporation, and is therefore without the power of eminent domain; and (2) the said railroad, to the use of which said property is sought to be condemned, is an interurban electric railroad within the meaning of section 3228, Revised Statutes 19091, and lands may not be condemned to its use for depot purposes ; and that the said respondent, Honorable George H. Shields, as judge of the circuit court for the eighth*461 judicial circuit, presiding in Division No. 4 of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, is, for the same reasons, without jurisdiction or authority of law to condemn said lands of the said petitioners to such use of said railway company. ”
Vide files of record in the office of the clerk of this court. This application we denied on April 11, 1911, and thereafter Judge Shields proceeded with the case to the judgment now attacked .on. this appeal. If the plaintiff is a railroad-company under the steam railroad act there can be no question of its right to condemn property for its right of way and depot purposes. If it is an interurban railway company, as defendants contend, then by the Act of 1907 (Laws 1907, p. 174) it was given the same rights and power as steam railroads in the matter of condemning property for railroad purposes. [State ex rel. v. Williams, supra.]
So that the right of this plaintiff to condémn property for the purposes stated-in its petition in this case has been practically - twice passed upon by this court — and we shall not open up the question now. The refusing of the writ of prohibition in the matter mentioned, supra, however, did not preclude the defendants from urging the question of abandonment pleaded in their answer. That was a matter of fact to be thrashed out by the trial judge.' Under the evidence, Judge Shields, in an exhaustive and elaborate opinion (found in the files, of the case of State ex rel. MacAdaras et al. v. Shields, No. 11947) held that the evidence totally failed to show abandonment. We have examined this evidence and are satisfied with the ruling nisi thereon.
Under the evidence and the law that judgment finding that the plaintiff was entitled to condemn and take the property in dispute should be affirmed.
“If the jury find and believe from the evidence that the plaintiff had located its road in St. Louis and constructed a freight depot or station in proximity to the property of the defendants before it sought to condemn the property in controversy, and that this location and construction had enhanced the value of the defendants’ property, you should take that enhancement into consideration in fixing the fair market value of .the defendants ’ property at the time the same was taken, to-wit, June 8, 1911.”
To gather the force of plaintiff’s objection to this instruction a few pertinent facts should be stated. Plaintiff was building its line from a bridge across the Mississippi river out into the city. It was a single contemplated scheme and plan for a railroad and necessary freight and passenger depots. The land in dispute was sought for its tracks and passenger depot. Prior to the date plaintiff paid the commissioners’ award of damages into court, the plaintiff had located and built its f eight depot in the vicinity of the property in dispute upon property it had acquired for that purpose. Plaintiff contends that as the building of the railroad and necessary freight and passenger depot for use thereon, was all one plan and one work, the defendants were not entitled to have the jury consider the enhanced value, if any, which was given to the property, by reason of the doing of a part of the work contemplated by the plan, i.e.the building of the freight depot, but that the value should be ascertained without the consideration of that matter. The plaintiff took all of the three lots, so that the question of damages is somewhat simplified. Counsel for defendants thus state the situation:
*463 “But in this case the question of the amount to. he recovered was entirely uncomplicated by any consideration of consequential damages, or special benefits to property not taken, such as is usually met with in cases of this character; because, forsooth, the whole of each property was sought to be appropriated. ’ ’
It being true, as this record shows, that the building of the railroad and the building of a freight depot and a passenger depot were parts and parcels of one single continuous and simultaneous public improvement, we are impressed with the view that this instruction is not supported by the weight of authority, and certainly not by the reason of the thing. If, when property is taken in boto, as here, it be the rule that the owner can have considered as an element of his damages the enhanced value of the property occasioned by a partial construction of the railroad, and its incidents (such as depots, switches, etc.) then the converse of the proposition should likewise be true, i. e., that if a partial construction of the contemplated road and its incidents, above named, had depreciated the property sought to be taken, then the railroad should have the benefit of such depreciation, when it actually came to the taking of the property. No court would stand for this latter rule, and yet it is the very converse of the one sought to be enforced here. The proper rule, when the whole property is being taken, is not to allow the jury to consider either enhancements or depreciation brought about by the construction of the improvement for which the property is being taken. In other words, the value should be determined independent of the proposed improvement. If the anticipated and proposed improvement had been -completed, and the value of the property had been enhanced thereby, and afterward it was sought to condemn the property for additional improvements, as the building of passenger depot, not a part of the original improvement, then we would have
“Whatever the time fixed upon with reference to which the compensation shall be estimated, the owner is entitled to the actual value of the land at that time, even though it may have been enhanced by reason of the projected improvement for which it is taken. It is said this is not really making the condemning party pay for an enhancement caused by its own work, as such enhancement does not come from the mere projection of the work, but from the existence of circumstances which create a demand for the work, and ren*465 der it probable that snob a work will sooner or later be built. In so far as tbe enhancement is due to such circumstances no doubt it is properly considered and allowed. But it may be doubted' whether the rule should go any further. If the proposed improvement had depreciated the value of the property, it would be very unjust that the condemning party should get it at its depreciated value, and the correct rule would seem to be that the value should be estimated irrespective of any effect produced by the proposed work. It has been held improper to consider what the property would have been worth if it could have had the benefit - of the proposed ' improvement without being taken. ” ■ -
The views of the author as to what should be the rulé accords with my views, and for such there is ampié authority. Thus in May v. Boston, 158 Mass l. c. 29, it is said:
“If the expected improvement involves the taking of land by the right of eminent domain, the value of the land taken will never be enhanced by the improvement, for the taking precludes the possibility of ever using it under improved conditions. In that respect it stands differently from other lands in the vicinity which is not taken. Whenever, there is a project for laying out'or widening a way, or taking land for any other public use which is expected to increase the value of real estate in the neighborhood, if the market price of land in the vicinity rises in anticipation of the change, the statute very justly says that the land taken shall not be paid for at the increased price. If it is known from the beginning exactly what land will be taken, it must also be known that that particular land can never be made more valuable by the improvements, since it can never be used by its owner under the improved conditions. If the plan is general, and it is not known exactly what land will be needed by the public, but that only-that*466 ■some land will, whenever the plan takes definite form, and the location is fixed, it is known that the land to he taken has not received, and never can receive, any benefit from the improvements. There is no injustice in saying that such land shall not entitle its owner to be paid out of the public treasury at a rate determined, not by its value for use, but by a prospective and speculative value of land in the vicinity, derived from an expectation of the benefit to come from the public use for which this is to be taken.”
In an earlier Massachusetts case, Dorgan v. City of Boston, 12 Allen, l. c. 231, Bigelow, C. J., said:
“We are unable to perceive that this rule of damages will work any injustice to the landowner. It provides for compensation to him for the value of the property as possessed and enjoyed by him at the time when the statute was enacted which appropriated it to the public use. Nor can we see any good reasons for including in the valuation an element not incident or appertaining to the property itself in the hands of the •owner, but which it acquires only by the act which takes it from him and appropriates it to the public. ■Strictly speaking, the land taken is intrinsically worth to the owner only so much as its valuation would be as part of the entire tract or lot, irrespective of its proposed severance for .the public use. It is difficult to understand how land is increased in value to the owner by a public improvement, which can be effected only by depriving him of its use. Certainly there is no principle of equity on which a party can rest a claim for ■damages for the loss of a benefit or profit which, from the very nature of the case, he never could have received or enjoyed.”
These cases it is true are discussing a statute which fixed the rule of damages, but the validity of the statute was challenged on the ground that it was a wrongful taking of the landowner’s property, and therefore the very reason of the rule had to be dis
“The benefit and the increased value arise from the expected construction of the way. The location does not construct it, but only renders its contemplated construction more probable. Its location and construction may be so assured before the location that the formal location may make no appreciable difference in the market value of land affected. It would be as reasonable to hold that there could be no assessment for betterments because the increase in market value from the expected construction of the way accrued in anticipation of the record location, as it would be to hold that such increase could be allowed in damages for land taken. [Cobb v. Boston, 112 Mass. 181.] ” In Louisiana Ry. & Nav. Co. v. Xavier Realty, 115 La. l. c. 341, it is said:
“We think the district court was right in taking as the date for estimating the value of property expropriated for railroad purposes that of the institution of the expropriation suit, withdrawing, hoivever, from the value so ascertained so much of the same as was the result of the construction. Many elements enter in enhancing the value of the property in the interval between the date of the determination of the railroad company to build its road and the date of the expropriation proceedings which may be taken for that purpose, which are entirely independent of the building of the road. The property owners, not the railroad company, are entitled to the benefit of such factors in increasing values.” (The italics are ours.)
In Shoemaker v. United States, 147 U. S. l. c. 305, that court said:
“While the board should be allowed a wide field in which to extend their investigation, yet it has never been held that they can go outside of the immediate duty before them, viz., to appraise the tracts of land proposed to be taken, by receiving evidence of con*468 jectural or speculative values, based upon the anticipated effect of the proceedings under which the condemnation is had. [Kerr v. South Park Commissioners, 117 U. S. 379, 380.] ” Again the italics are ours.
So, too, in City of El Paso v. Coffin, 40 Tex. Civ. App. l. c. 60, the Texas court thus states the rule:
“It is held generally, in cases presenting the appropriate facts, that, where’a person’s entire property is included in one general proceeding of condemnation for a particular purpose, it is not permissible to consider that purpose, or the results thereof, in estimating the owner’s compensation. The reasons for this rule, are apparent. To permit it would be to take into consideration the condemnation proceeding itself as a factor, which is not allowed. Further, it is evident, in such a case, that the taking, and the effect on the value from-such taking, would be concurrent, and such increase would not exist when the taking occurs. The person’s property is taken, and is absorbed in the purpose for which it is taken, and, to alíow' him a compensation based on the value which the property would have had if not taken would be giving it a status it could not possibly have had in the very nature of the act. The reasoning of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts is appropriate here, though not its decision, as that was controlled by a statute: ‘Its real value for use is not increased until the change in its surroundings comes. If the expected improvement involves the taking of the land by the right of eminent domain, the value of the land taken will never be enhanced by the improvement, for the taking precludes the probability of ever using it under improved conditions.’ [May v. City of Boston, 158 Mass. 21.]”
Other cases will be found cited in the briefs, and by the author under section 745 of Lewis’s Eminent Domain, supra. These, however, suffice to illustrate the correct rule. In the case at bar the condemnation proceedings were begun December 1, 1910. February 24,
From what has been said the judgment as to damages should be reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to the trial court to retry the question of damages alone in the light of this opinion. It is so ordered.