State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Nickerson
Decision Date | 13 March 1979 |
Docket Number | No. 60458,60458 |
Citation | State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Nickerson, 578 S.W.2d 916 (Mo. 1979) |
Parties | STATE ex rel. STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION of Missouri, Respondent, v. Max Allen NICKERSON et al., Exceptions of I. J. Nickerson and Ruby MaeNickerson, his wife, Appellants. |
Court | Missouri Supreme Court |
Robert C. Smith, Smith, Lewis & Rogers, Columbia, Robert J. Quigley, Kay & Quigley, Eldon, for appellants.
Thomas E. Cheatham, Bruce A. Ring, State Highway Commission, Jefferson City, for respondent.
This appeal, written on recent reassignment, involves a case wherein State Highway Commission of Missouri(respondent) filed condemnation proceedings to acquire land for right of way for a relocated U. S. Highway 54 in Miller County.One of the tracts, 4.13 acres located on the west side of old U. S. Highway 54 approximately two miles south of Eldon, belonged to I. J. Nickerson and wife (appellants).Respondent sought to condemn 2.01 acres off of the back of west side of that tract.The portion to be taken did not include the land on which a restaurant, a filling station and various appurtenances were located but did take part of the sewage lagoon and the area into which the sewage lagoon drained.
After a change of venue to Moniteau Countythe case was tried on exceptions to the commissioner's award.The jury returned a verdict in the amount of $2500 in favor of the appellants as damages for the property condemned.Appellants appealed to the Missouri Court of Appeals, Western District, which reversed and remanded for new trial.This court sustained respondent's motion to transfer and we now decide the case as though here on direct appeal.Mo.Const. Art. V, § 10.We reverse and remand.
Appellants assert four alleged trial errors which they say entitle them to a new trial.The first of these involves the action of the trial judge in requiring that appellants' counsel add to the usual question asked valuation witnesses a "tail" which instructed the witness to leave any diversion of traffic out of consideration in assessing the fair market value of the land after the taking.
It is well established in Missouri that where part of an owner's property is condemned, he is entitled to receive as compensation therefor the difference between the fair market value of the entire tract immediately before the date of taking and the fair market value of the property remaining immediately after the taking.State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Kendrick, 383 S.W.2d 740, 745(Mo.1964);Kamo Electric Cooperative v. Baker, 365 Mo. 814, 287 S.W.2d 858, 861-62(1956);State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Cady, 400 S.W.2d 481, 484(Mo.App.1965).MAI Instruction 9.02 is prescribed for use in such situations and was utilized in this case in InstructionNo. 3 which was as follows:
"You must award defendants such sum as you believe was the difference between the fair market value of defendants' whole property immediately before the taking on October 18, 1971, and the value of defendants' remaining property immediately after such taking, which difference in value is the direct result of the taking and of the uses which plaintiff has the right to make of the property taken."
The notes on use for MAI 9.02 require that fair market value be defined by utilizing MAI 16.02.That was done in this case in InstructionNo. 4 which provided:
Appellants called several witnesses to testify as to the amount of appellants' damages.Counsel for appellants, after qualifying these witnesses to testify as to value, first asked them what in their opinion was the fair market value of the 4.13 acre tract immediately prior to the taking on October 18, 1971.Each answered that question.Counsel then sought to elicit the opinion of the witnesses as to the fair market value of the tract remaining immediately after the taking of the 2.01 acres on October 18, 1971.However, counsel was not permitted to ask these witnesses what in their opinion was the fair market value of the 2.11 acre tract remaining immediately after the taking.Instead, counsel was required, over objection to add to those questions a tail which instructed the witnesses that in arriving at fair market value immediately after the taking they should leave out of consideration any diversion of traffic from the highway in front of the tract remaining.This direction was given to counsel during a conference which occurred as a part of pretrial proceedings.In that conference the trial court stated:
"COURT: Since the possibility appears that the major item of defendants' alleged loss will in fact be the diversion of traffic from old Highway 54 to the new super highway, that is to say, a resultant loss of travel on the old highway on which Mr. Nickerson's restaurant fronted, I think it would be improper for defendant to ask merely the bald question of his witnesses, "What was the value before and after the taking?
This requirement by the court resulted in this situation.By instructions 3 and 4 the jury were told to determine from the evidence the fair market value of the 4.13 acre tract just before the taking on October 18, 1971, and the fair market value of the 2.11 acre tract immediately after the taking.They were told that these values were to be the price which would have been agreed upon by a willing but unobligated seller and a willing but unobligated buyer.In other words, it told the jury that in awarding damages it should determine the difference in what this 4.13 acre tract would have sold for and what this 2.11 acre tract would have sold for.These instructions, as previously noted, conform to the established rule in Missouri.
However, instead of permitting appellants to offer proof by their valuation experts as to those two sums referred to in the court's instructions, the court compelled appellants to present testimony which applied a different test.Witnesses were told first to give the fair market value of the 4.13 acre tract immediately before condemnation and then to give the fair market value of the remaining 2.11 acre tract on a basis which assumed no loss of traffic on the highway in front of the 2.11 acre tract.They were not asked what price would be established by a willing buyer and seller as the fair market value of the 2.11 acre tract as it actually existed after the taking.Instead, they were to value a hypothetical 2.11 acre tract with no change in traffic.In other words, they were told to value a tract which did not exist.What the court did created an anomalous situation wherein the jury was told to apply one test but was given evidence which required it to utilize a different test.That necessarily was confusing to the jury.Furthermore, the question as to value of the remaining tract was not consistent with the test established in previous cases.State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Kendrick, supra;Kamo Electric Cooperative v. Baker, supra;State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Cady, supra.
If the questions which the court required counsel for appellants to ask where proper, it would follow that MAI 9.02 and 16.02 should have been modified so as to inform the jury that fair market value after the taking means the price which the property remaining after the taking would bring after eliminating any consideration of loss of traffic.It is clear that such modification of MAI 9.02 and 16.02 is not contemplated or permissible.See Notes on Use and Committee's Comment following MAI 9.02 and 16.02.That being true, it necessarily follows that the questions asked witnesses as to before and after fair market value should have been framed to elicit the information which the instructions told the jury to utilize.They should not have been qualified by tails such as the one the court required in this case.
Respondent, in seeking to justify the action of the trial court in requiring use of the tail, cites and relies on State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Brockfeld, 388 S.W.2d 862(Mo. banc 1965), cert. den.382 U.S. 846, 86 S.Ct. 79, 15 L.Ed.2d 86, andState ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Meier, 388 S.W.2d 855(Mo. banc 1965), cert. den.385 U.S. 204, 87 S.Ct. 407, 17 L.Ed.2d 300(1966).In both of those cases the landowners contended that by converting an existing highway to a limited access highway and requiring the landowners to utilize an outer roadway to reach the limited access highway the State was taking away an existing property right in the form of a right of direct access to the highway for which damages should be awarded.This court rejected those claims,...
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