UNITED STATES of America, Appellant,
v.
3,698.63 ACRES OF LAND, MORE OR LESS, Situate IN BURLEIGH,
EMMONS AND MORTON COUNTIES, STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA,
and Anton Tschida, et al., and Unknown Owners.
Heirs of Herbert Lang, Deceased, Ralph E. Lang and Walter
Lang, Appellees.
UNITED STATES of America, Appellant,
v.
2,134.46 ACRES OF LAND, MORE OR LESS, Situate IN BURLEIGH
AND MORTON COUNTIES, STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA and
Herman Bliese, et al., and Unknown Owners.
Alex W. MacLean, Robert B. MacLean, William V. MacLean and
Pauline M. MacLean, Appellees.
Nos. 19562, 19563.
United States Court of Appeals Eighth Circuit.
Oct. 7, 1969, Rehearing Denied Oct. 30, 1969.
George R. Hyde, Attorney, Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., for appellant; Glen E. Taylor, Acting Asst. Atty. Gen., and Roger P. Marquis, Attorney, Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., and Eugene K. Anthony, U.S. Atty., Fargo, N.D., on the brief.
Robert Vogel, of Vogel, Bair & Graff, Mandan, N.D., for appellees; Robert Chesrown, Linton, N.D., on the brief.
Before MATTHES, GIBSON and BRIGHT, Circuit Judges.
BRIGHT, Circuit Judge.
On thesе appeals, we are asked to overturn jury awards in land condemnations which exceed estimates of damages submitted by qualified land appraisers but which are less than evaluations of loss as testified by owners.
The United States, as condemnor, appeals separately from two judgments entered in eminent domain proceedings relating to land taken for the Oahe Dam and Reservoir on the Missouri River. Though the dam is located north of Fort Pierre, South Dakota, the acreage tаken is located in Morton County in westcentral North Dakota.
In No. 19562 (Lang), the government condemned 337.83 acres of land owned by two members of the Lang family. Valuations submitted included: government, $15,700.00 and $14,590.00; landowners' experts, $32,500.00 and $31,450.00; owners, $43,000.00. The jury awarded $34,500.00.
In No. 19563 (MacLean), the government acquired 881.56 acres of land out of a total tract of 1,447 acres owned and farmed by the MacLean family. As in No. 19562, the award surpassed the estimates of damages made by experts for both sides, which ranged from a high of $128,000.00 to a gоvernment low of $67,700.00. The jury award totalling $137,500.00, including severance damages, was substantially less than the MacLeans' estimates of $200,000.00, plus.
According to the government, the trial court erred in declining to strike the owners' estimates of value during trial and in failing to set aside or modify the awards in accordance with the government's post-trial motion. It asserts that each landowner's opinion on value rests on an improper foundation and cannot not support the awards. On review, however, we find no prejudiсial error and, thus, we affirm.
Alex MacLean, who had farmed the family land all of his life, described its topography, its many uses and its distinct attributes. He grew small grains and raised and fed cattle. River bottom farming produced high yields of wheat and barley. Timber acreage provided necessary and natural shelter for his cattle summer and winter. A natural spring flowed throughout the year and that, together with shallow wells drilled on the bottom lands, provided ample water for his cattle. He estimated damages as a result of the government taking at more than $207,000.00.
Referring to his testimony on cross-examination:
'Q. * * * How did you arrive at your figures when you came to this value? What did you take into consideration?
A. Well, mostly the use of the land-- what its worth to me. It was my home, it was my means of making a living, and what I could do with it and how would I get by without the land',
appellant asserts that Alex's opinion testimony rests on improper value concept of personal worth and not market price.
Alex's brother, Robert MacLean, also a lifelong resident and farmer on the subject acreagе, estimated the value of the land taken at $200,000.00. His estimate was based on prices of land in nearby counties that he had attempted to purchase to replace the land taken. He described that available land as having rocky soil, lаcking timber acreage necessary for sheltering livestock, and being generally less suitable for farming than his own.
Ralph Lang acquired an ownership interest in the Lang tracts only six months prior to the time that the government took that land. No other persоnal identification with the property buttressed his opinion that his land when taken was worth $43,000.00. His co-owner, Walter Lang, however, had lived on the property and had farmed it until 1944. He explained that the land, part of it homesteaded by his father in 1916, had been actively cultivated until 1945, when his widowed mother left the farm. Thereafter, the land had been leased for haying and grazing livestock, though it had utility for general agricultural purposes. Walter, too, estimated the value of the land at $43,000.00 or $44,000.00, arriving at that figure by 'listening to aрpraisers and pricing around'.
However, the government asserts that Walter Lang's testimony on cross-examination:
'Q. Now which of those two (valuation) figures would you go with?
A. Well, that comes from offers I had from people that heard Oahe Dam was coming up, but we didn't think it would flood what's known as the Huff bottoms down there, and this was going into cabins for hunting and fishing. See, I was a big game guide for 17 years on deer hunting',
establishes an improper basis for receiving his value opinion in evidence.
In eminent domain, as in other cases, federal courts admit evidence under rules generally applied by federal courts or under the rules of admissibility used by courts of the state in which the trial is held. Fed.R.Civ.P. 71A and 43(a); United States v. 60.14 Acres of Land,
A landowner is also competent to testify on the value of his property under North Dakota rules of evidence. Doll v. Doll,
The testimony of each of the landowners was admissible under both the federal and state rules of evidence. The trial court properly refused to strike their valuation testimony. This conclusion does not end оur inquiry, however. We examine the underlying basis for that testimony to determine whether it carried sufficient weight to support the verdicts.
Generally, all evidence on market value in condemnation cases should relate to what a willing buyer would pay a willing sеller for the land. See United States v. Miller,
The government places principal reliance for reversal on United States v. Sowards,
'But the owner's qualification to testify does not change the 'market value' concept and permit him to substitute a 'value to me' standard for the accepted rule, or to establish a value based entirely upon speculation. * * * His oрinion has no probative value and is insufficient to sustain the award.'
We agree that an opinion based entirely on speculation could not support a verdict.
However, juries have been allowed to attribute weight to land value opiniоns of farmer-owners of agricultural land who have familiarity with the land and its productivity even though they lack experience in real estate valuation and have not based their estimates on sales of comparable property. See United States v. 1,516.90 Acres of Land, State of Tenn.,
We are convinced that the landowners' testimony in these cases was entitled to be given some weight by the jury. We recognize that Ralph Lang had little personal knowledge about the property involved. He had been an owner for about six months, had received no income from the property, and had very little knowledge conсerning the uses to which the land had been put in the past. However, we need not decide whether his opinion alone would support a verdict above the highest estimate of the expert appraisers. The co-owner, Walter Lang, furnished an identical estimate which reflected his knowledge concerning the special attributes of the land and some familiarity with pricing of land. A fair reading of Walter Lang's testimony refutes the government's contention that his opinion of value was based solely on a theory of enhancement due to the earlier construction of Oahe Dam or offers received for his property. We cannot say as a matter of law that his opinion on land value wholly lacked weight.
MacLeans' thorough familiarity with their land, together with Robert MacLean's investigation into possible purchase of other land to replace that taken by the government, furnished adequate suport to give some weight to opinion testimony of each.
Sales of сomparable land referred to by the landowners' experts reflected a per acre sales price of from $65.00 to.$331.00. Those comparable land values did not constitute independent evidence of value, but reflected only a basis for expert opinions. United States v. Smith,
In a condemnation case, the law relies heavily on the jury to reach a correct conclusion from all pertinent facts. See United States v. 25.406 Acres of Land, supra. Jury verdicts, however, are subject to judicial control. Trial courts have an obligation to modify or set aside awards that are clearly excessive. See Boyle v. Bond,
We do not exercise a fact-finders prerogative of balancing the evidence. See Evans v. United States,
Affirmed.
Notes
For example, in 60.14 Acres of Land, only the landowners testified on property values. The government complained that the testimony of the husband (and co-owner) should have been stricken because it did not go to fair market value, but was based on a fair return on his investment. The court said:
'While the husband did not testify with a precision which would havе rendered such an argument frivolous, nevertheless, his evidence read in its ordinary meaning and not artifically was adequate for consideration by the jury under the accepted standard of what a willing buyer would pay in cash to a willing seller of the property.'
The government cites Ham as a basis for striking testimony of Alex MacLean because net income as a criterion to determine market value of farm lands may be unreliable. Ham does not support the government's position. The cаse does not suggest that such testimony is inadmissible. The opinion stated:
'To fairly try the issue and determine just compensation in this case it was necessary for the jury to consider both sides of the dispute and to weigh the evidence of use value which tended to enhance compensation for the taking against the evidence of the sales value which tended to diminish it, * * *.'
