25 Colo. 243 | Colo. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a proceeding under the eminent domain act to acquire by condemnation a right of way for an irrigating ditch across the lands of respondent. Upon the issue of compensation there was a trial by the court before a jury which returned a verdict awarding to the respondent damages in the net sum of $19.50 for a strip of land about a quarter of an acre in extent; and judgment was entered thereon.
Respondent has appealed to this court and assigned numerous errors. The principal ground urged for reversal is the refusal of the court to grant the request of the respondent to have determined the question as to the necessity for taking this land. To a clear understanding of this point a statement of some of the facts will assist.
On the 8th of May, 1896, the respondent filed in court his demand in writing for a jury to ascertain and assess the damages caused by the taking of the land. In accordance therewith, a jury was duly summoned and empaneled, as the statute provides, and trial begun on the 14th day of May following, and continued over during the following day, when the jury returned its verdict. After the court had instructed the jury and counsel had finished their arguments and the bailiff for the jury had been sworn and the jury sent out to consider their verdict, but before all of them had gone from the presence of the court, the respondent caused to be presented to the court his written demand for a commission to be appointed to ascertain the necessity for taking the land sought to he condemned. This demand was refused by the court because not made in apt time. The respondent now claims, inasmuch as evidence was elicited from his own, and petitioner’s, witnesses touching the question of necessity,
By an examination of the record we find it to be true, as respondent claims, that there was some testimony which might be considered as pertinent to the issue of necessity. The specific object of this testimony, however, in so far as the petitioner is concerned, even though, in one sense, it bore on the necessity, was avowedly upon the issue of damages and benefits, to which it was responsive. What was the real object of respondent in eliciting this kind of testimony we are not advised; but from an incident occurring during the trial the presiding judge was justified in concluding that respondent then did not find fault with the ruling that a waiver had occurred. . .
Upon cross-examination of one of petitioner’s witnesses, respondent’s counsel asked a question which, in one view, bore upon the issue of necessity, and this was objected to by counsel for petitioner upon several grounds, and, among them, that by demanding in writing a jury and entering upon the trial as to the question of value, the respondent waived all rights as to the question of the necessity for the taking. The objection was sustained, and exception to the ruling taken by respondent’s counsel, not because his conduct did not' amount to a waiver, but on the ground that this holding of the court makes unconstitutional the law which delegates to a board of commissioners the sole power to determine the necessity for the taking; and that, under the constitution, as the necessity for the taking is made a judicial question, the respondent had the equal right to raise it before the jury, and have that body pass upon it.
This incident is referred to for the double purpose of show
In further confirmation of the view that the question of necessity was not considered as an element in the case, either by petitioner or the court, is the fact that when the respondent submitted to the court a request for instructions bearing upon the question of necessity they were absolutely refused upon the ground that they were not pertinent to any issues tried. Under the facts, we think the court was right in holding that respondent could not try before the jury the necessity for the taking.
But respondent now urges, in the light of the record, that he did not waive his right to have that question determined by a commission. There is nothing in this record that calls for a modification of the rule in relation to the duty of respondent to raise the question of necessity in limine, as laid down by this court in the case of Sand Creek L. I. Co. v. Davis, 17 Colo. 326; but, upon the contrary, we are unable to perceive any substantial difference between the two cases. In that case all the evidence was not brought up, and the reviewing court, relying upon the presumption that obtains, where there is no showing to the contrary, that the trial court was right, held that, by neglect, the respondent had waived his right to have the question of necessity passed upon by a board of commissioners. Here, upon the evidence produced, we arrive at the same conclusion. In that case, after remarking that the mere fact that a respondent demands a jury to assess damages does not waive the right to have commissioners appointed to determine the necessity, the court proceeds as follows:
“ A party may demand a jury to try the question of compensation and damages, and at the same time, or at any time before entering upon such trial, may demand the appointment of a board of commissioners to try the question of the alleged necessity, or, as in this case, the question of the al
Respondent, however, seeks further to distinguish his case from the case cited by emphasizing the fact that a demand by him was made for a board of commissioners before the last member of the jury had passed from the court room into the jury room, whereas in the former case the jury had retired, and judging from the record, each member had passed from the immediate presence of the court. We apprehend that there is no difference in principle between the two cases. The court would have the same power to order the question of necessity to be tried by commissioners as well after the last juror had passed into the jury room as when one of them remained therein when the demand was made. We are clearly of opinion that in this case the respondent has, by his conduct in voluntarily going to trial before a jury upon the issue of damages, without then or theretofore asking for a commission to pass upon the question of necessity, waived the statutory privilege of having the preliminary question determined.
The resolution of this question against respondent is a sufficient answer to certain objections made by him to the refusal of the court to give instructions upon the question of necessity. A further answer, however, to this, and other, objections to, and criticisms made upon, the instructions, is that in the abstract it does not appear that any objections to them were made, or the attention of the trial court in any way called to the alleged objectionable features. In his brief counsel for respondent says that, while the abstract does not contain the exceptions, the record somewhere does, but we
In the same way may be disposed of the objection that the court in its instructions does not, in so many words, instruct the jury that their ascertainment must be based upon the evidence. There might be some merit in this contention if a literal interpretation was given to the instructions, and if the proper objections had been taken or exceptions preserved. Satisfied, however, as we are that the jury were not misled to the prejudice of the respondent, and further considering that no proper exceptions have been preserved, we must decline to reverse the judgment upon any such ground.
That the verdict is not sustained by the evidence is strongly urged by respondent, but the mere fact that the amount of damages awarded may not correspond exactly with the testimony of any particular witness is no ground for setting aside the verdict; nor does such variance between the damages as testified to by a witness and found by the jury, support the proposition that the verdict is contrary to the evidence. The jury were freeholders of the county; they saw the witnesses as the testimony was given, and it was peculiarly within their province to determine from all the evidence in the case what compensation should be awarded; and we are not at liberty in this case to substitute our judgment for theirs, even if we differed from them.
Some objection seems to have been made as to the form of the verdict, in that it did not literally and exactly conform to the directions of the statute; but when the verdict was returned, as we understand this record, the respondent expressly waived any objection to its form.
In estimating the damages to the residue of the lands of
Other alleged errors argued pertain to rulings on admission and rejection of testimony, but on careful examination we find them not tenable. Considering the whole record in ■this case, while it may be true that some immaterial errors were committed in the matter of excluding or admitting testimony, we are clearly of the opinion that, considering the facts, no prejudicial error was committed against the appellant. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.