[58] The State Highway Commission, as- relator, instituted condemnation proceedings to acquire lands in- Clay County for the relocation of a portion of Highway 69 as a limited access highway. We are concerned here only with the land and interests of Harry A. Clevenger and his wife. They were awarded $4,400 by the commissioners, filed timely exceptions, and were thereafter awarded $15,000 by a jury. The relator has appealed. For convenience, the parties will be referred to as relator and defendants. We have jurisdiction because of the-amount involved.- -
Defendants owned a farm of 176.38 aerés in a somewhat irregular shape; it is bounded on the west by Fishing -River, on the south largely by the old channel of that river '(it having been diverted at that point in a previous highway project), and on the east by si county road. The north boundary is immaterial here. The drainage on this farm was largely to the south. No farm buildings have been-physically disturbed. The old Highway 69; a two-way route, bordered the farm on the south for a distance of approximately 150-200 feet, extending westerly from the east line to a ditch. The Highway Department has, ■as indicated in the petition, established Highway 69 at this point as a ■limited access highway, using the old route for eastbound traffic and establishing a new roadway for westbound traffic; • the latter lies north of the old road, and runs generally northeast ■ and southwest. For this project relator has appropriated 9.27 acres of -defendants’ land for the new right of $ay and for a relocation of the county road; in addition, 1.38 acres are to be used under a temporary construction easement for a “borrow-pit.” The strip thus taken for the new roadway' is approximately 2,000 feet in length and includes a drainage easement north of the roadway, extending from the relocated county road to the west line of the property. A drainage ditch- will run along this easement to the old channel of Fishing River, defendants’ westerly boundary. No culverts are provided under-the' new roadway. Approximately nine acres of defendants’ land are left between-the old and new roadways of the highway. These nine acres are.also bisected by the relocated county road, which now runs southwesterly from a point on defendants’ east line,for-approximately 1,000 feet (north of the new roadway, but within its right of way), thence across the new roadway and southerly to a point where it intersects the old roadway of Highway 69 at defendants' south' line. The relocated county road serves as an access road for defendants’ property-throughout its entire *974 length, but access to the highway proper is otherwise denied defendants, as specified in the condemnation petition. The new westbound roadway is approximately 5 to 6 feet above the ground level of defendants’ adjacent land, and the relocated county road gradually slopes downward from that roadway, reaching the old ground level at its intersection with old 69. It was agreed that 220 rods of new fencing would be.required to separate defendants’ remaining land from the highway. The numerous other details of the construction need not be mentioned.
Defendants had owned and occupied this farm for many years. There was wide divergence in the testimony on valuations, both as to the value of the land taken and the damage to the land remaining; or, putting the matter in another way, in the difference between the fair and reasonable market value of the land b'efore and after the ■taking.. We cannot go into the details of all this testimony. The witnesses for defendants fixed the total damages at figures varying •from $11,800 to $20,990; these witnesses (aside from defendant Harry ■Clevenger), were nearby real estate dealers and neighboring farmers. They fixed the original value of the farm at figures varying from $44,000 to $52,8001 Two of relator’s witnesses fixed the total [59] net damages (considering special benefits) at $2,294.50 and $2,960, respectively, and the other testified that defendants derived a net benefit of $2,230; Apparently defendants’ witnesses thought there were no resulting special benefits. The disparity in the resulting views of the total damages was caused' in part by the completely opposite views as to the value of the nine acres left between the two roadways and also bisected by the new county road. Defendants’ witnesses attributed to this tract a greatly depreciated value, while relator’s witnesses thought it now very valuable as commercial property because it would presumably be available as a site- for one or more filling stations, and perhaps for other commercial development?; they explained that such •improvements could (subject to a re-zoning) be constructed at the access point where the county road intersected the new west roadway, though necessarily they would face the county road. We find it unnecessary to discuss the details of this controversy. One witness for relator, employed by an oil company, testified specifically that in his opinion the .nine acre tract was worth $8,500 after the new construction, because of the limited number of access sites available. Defendants’ witnesses emphasized the obstruction of the drainage and the possibility of flooding, the necessity of new fencing, the inconvenience of farming the separated tracts and of passage between them, the limitation of access to the new highway, and the good quality of the land taken. - Other features of the evidence will be discussed, hereinafter: .
One of the points made here by appellant, and certainly not the least important-or troublesome, is that the court erred in permit *975 ting defendants’ witnesses to testify to an item of damage resulting from the “limitation of access” from defendants’ land to the new route of the highway, and in submitting this to the jury as an element of damage. As a corollary, relator also insists that the court erred in refusing its Instruction A, which would have instructed the jury that it might not consider any limitation of defendants’ right of access to any part of the highway not in existence at the time of the appropriation. This raises a question new to the jurisprudence of Missouri, and one which is relatively new elsewhere. We shall discuss all those cases cited by relator which we deem sufficiently in point.
We note first that § 29, Art. IY, Mo. Const., 1945, gives to the State Highway Commission full “* * * authority * * to locate, relocate, * * maintain * * construct and reconstruct state highways, * '* and * to limit access to, from and across state highways where the public interest and safety may require, subject to such limitations and conditions as may be imposed by law.” The powers of the Highway Commission are set out generally in Chapters 226 and 227, RSMo 1949, Y.A.M.S. In the case' of State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. James, Banc,
Essentially, the Commission contends that since the new Avestbound roadway was never in existence, actually or potentially, until the appropriation was made, defendants could not possibly have had any previous right or easement of access to it; and, since the right of access was restricted by the very same appropriation, no easement of *976 access ever arose, except as permitted thereby; further, that such supposed and nonexistent right of access was a wholly improper element of damage to the land remaining.
. This principle has been adopted in several California cases, although the facts therein differ somewhat from ours. Thus, see: Schnider v. State. (Calif. Sup.), 38 Calif. 2d. 439,
In the case of State, By and Through State Highway Commission v. Burk,
“ ‘As a final case, consider the situation where the right-of-way purchased runs right through B’s land. In the case of a normal, unrestricted-access highway, B will be paid for the land actually taken and also “severance” damage for the separation of the property. If the highway is to be of limited-access design, with B having no right of access, the severance of the two parcels will be more complete. B should be, and is, paid for this more complete severance, but this is on the basis of severance damage alone and not on any /theory of right of access being denied.’ 3 Stanford Law Rev., Freeways, p. 308.
“* *.* In any event, whether the market value of the land not taken was affected by the ‘more complete severance’ resulting from the character of the highway appropriated, was a question to be determined by the jury upon the evidence. * * * *
“* * * It follows that the damages awarded to a landowner may include an element of loss by reason of a depreciation in the market value of the remaining land by reason of the peculiar nature of the appropriation.” We do not regard any differences between the cited Oregon Statutes (as there construed) and the Missouri law as controlling. In Carazalla v. State of Wisconsin et al., 269 Wise. 593,
*978 As indicated in the Burk opinion, there are two law review articles containing instructive discussions of limited access highways, their desirability, and the legal implications to adjacent owners. See: 3 Stanford Law Review 298 (1951); 27 Wash. Law Review 111 (1952); and see also the earlier article' in 13 Mo. Law Review 19, which, is more in the nature of a forecast of things to come. The purport of these (and particularly of the Stanford article) is: that an adjacent owner is ordinarily entitled to compensation for the extinguishment of an easement of access to an existing road, but with a possibility of no damage if he is given a service road; where a new freeway is established adjacent to one’s land and access concurrently denied, the landowner never had an easement of access, and no compensation should be awarded; if such freeway goes through the land; he'has lost no access rights to a highway, but the severance may thus be more complete and the severance damage greater, and this should bé considered, but not upon thé theory of a denial of or loss of access. The author of the article in 27 Wash. Law Review 111, regards the restriction of access as merely taking away “the value which the construction of the road created.” (l.c. 123)
Some authorities hold that there is no special damage for the deprivation of access to a freeway, as such, if reasonable access is provided by.way of a service or outer roadway, although this access be somewhat moré circuitous. Carazalla v. State of Wisconsin et al., 269 Wise. 593,
[62] The cases of Burnquist v. Cook,
As we construe the record, defendants made no claim for any loss of access to the old roadway of Highway 69, being the eastbound láne) which wás adjacent to the south end of their farm for a short distance. The relocated county road now joins the eastbound lane there. The matter was' mentioned at least once, casually, but no witnesses were asked concerning a supposed valuation, and no ■ such item was included in Instruction No. 2 explaining defendants’ theory of 'damages. If' such a claim was in the case at all, it was abandoned'. It is entirely possible that the access to thé south along the relocated county road is substantially as good as it was previously;- We *979 shall disregard that feature as a possible element of damages and we specifically call attention to this.
We are, therefore, interested only in the claim for damages for limiting defendants’ access “from defendants’ land * * to certain portions of said westbound lane.” In the evidence there was much .confusion, both' in questions and answers, between the supposed right of access to 'the road, and the inconvenience of access from one part of the farm to the. othér, after the location of the new highway. Certain of the witnesses were apparently thinking, in part, of the latter element, but the' transcript specifically shows that some of the witnesses testified that the loss of access to the road was worth $1,000; when this first occurred, the court sustained an objection and struck but the evidence as an improper element of damage; shortly thereafter, however, the court.reversed this ruling,' and specificálly so instructed the jury, Thereafter, both in hypothetical questions and in specific questions to defendants ’ witnesses, this element was included and in the answérs it was considered. Instruction No. 2, given at the request of the defendants, told the jury that it might take into coñsideráion in determining the damages, if any, the limitation of access to the westbound .lane of the highway, in addition to the separation of the different tracts, and the inconvenience of getting from one part of the farm to another. It is clear that the supposed taking of an easement of access "was thus included and stressed as a specific element of damage in addition to such other elements. .
We approve the view expressed in the case of State, By and Through State Highway Commission v. Burk,
This ruling, we think, is not out of harmony with the' decision in State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. James, Banc,
From what we have said it necessarily follows that Instruction No. 2, given for defendants, was erroneous; relator also contends that it was erroneous because it listed various elements of damage in argumentative fashion. Except for the inclusion therein of the •element of limitation of access, a very similar instruction was approved in the case of State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Haid et al., Banc,
At the trial one of relator’s witnesses, Gerald G. Green, a real estate dealer, produced and presented a written contract to purchase for $7,500 the. 9.246 acres of defendants’ land lying between the westbound and eastbound roadways; he had executed this as the proposed purchaser, but he had not previously presented it to the defendants. He.also presented a cashier’s check for $1,000, the down payment recited in the contract. This witness wa.s examined largely out of the presence of the jury, he stating that he was then openly making the offer, though admitting a little later that he had made no investigation of property values on that highway and in that vicinity. On objection that the offer had not previously been communicated to defendants and that it did not tend to prove the reasonable value of the land, the offers were excluded. Relator insists that this was error, though admitting that “oral and hot binding” offers are inadmissible as evidence of value, because easily made and refused and easy of fabrication. Missouri Public Service Co. v. Hunt, Mo. App.,
It will not be necessary to consider in detail relator’s assertions of error in the [64] admission of evidence, but a few suggestion's may be appropriate in view of a retrial. The principal claim is that, the court erred in permitting defendants ’ counsel, after, he had asked complete hypothetical questions on valuations before' and after the appropriation, to ask some of his witnesses if they had taken into consideration certain specific items of damage, such as fencing and loss of access, and in permitting answers placing values on such items; it is further claimed that this tended to build up the damages and to cause an assessment of “double damages.” This was. apparently done upon the theory that these witnesses were confused. ’ ’ Some of this evidence was likely to be misleading; counsel did not establish a foundation for cross-examination on the-ground of surprise. A witness may properly be asked' to explain hów he arrived at a total valuation given, or at the difference in valuations "before and after, thus permitting him to explain what items he considered; indeed; counsel for relator followed this course in their cross-examination. Defendants suggest that the total damages fixed, by the respective witnesses thus involved were in each instance less than the verdict of the jury. It would be difficult to say, and we need -not determine, whether this evidence resulted in any double damages' or constituted reversible error. It further appears that the trial court received at. one point in evidence a stated valuation of $600 per acre on the 9.27-acres of land taken which the witness said he fixed because the land was being taken for road purposes. The court rejected similar evidence from other witnesses and the reception mentioned was probably inadvertent. That basis of valuation is improper, as the court recognized and stated.
*982 Iii view of the action now taken, it is wholly unnecessary to pass upon the contention that the verdict was so excessive as to indicate bias and prejudice. The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion. It is so ordered.
