Adams v. Commonwealth Ex Rel. State Highway Commission

146 S.W.2d 7, 285 Ky. 38, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 590
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 15, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 146 S.W.2d 7 (Adams v. Commonwealth Ex Rel. State Highway Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Commonwealth Ex Rel. State Highway Commission, 146 S.W.2d 7, 285 Ky. 38, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 590 (Ky. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

Some time prior to March. 27, 1939, the Commonwealth of Kentucky, on relation of its State Highway Commission, filed in the Jefferson County Court this condemnation action against defendants and appellants, Martin L. Adams and wife, Olive F. Adams, seeking to condemn for road purposes about one-fourth of an acre of land from defendants’ suburban home tract of thirteen acres upon which they resided, and to acquire two permanent easements under two small strips of land outside of the quarter of an acre permanently taken, under which necessary drainage sewers were to be.constructed as required appurtenances to the completed road. There was also involved in the contemplated improvement the obliteration of a grade crossing over the tracks of the Southern Railway Company, which were either upon or immediately adjacent to defendants’ land — the obliteration of the crossing being the construction of a passway through which the contemplated road would run under the railway tracks, and a part of the one-fourth of an acre permanently sought to be taken by the proceedings was necessary for that purpose. The other portion of the land actually taken was for the purpose of widening the road right of way so that a four-lane driveway might be constructed as contemplated, the additional strip sought to be taken when added to the old right of way being necessary for that purpose. The proposed work also required the setting back for a comparatively short distance a picket fence belonging to defendants, and a corresponding removal of four stone posts, or columns, apparently a part of that fence. But the final judgment rendered in the case imposed the duty to make such removals upon Jefferson County, and which, of course, included the payment of all necessary expenses so incurred.

Upon the filing of the petition, commissioners were appointed by the Jefferson County Court, and in due time they reported, valuing defendants’ land at $500 per acre, and allowed them $125 for the one-fourth of an acre actually taken. They also allowed them $10 for three *41 redbud bushes growing on the strip taken, and $30 for a pine tree located thereon. In the county court it seems that there was no stipulation agreement or provision for the county to remove the picket fence and stone columns, so that, the commissioners allowed $200 for that purpose, and expressly stated in their report that they returned no damage to the remainder of defendants’ tract — the total allowance being $365. Both ' parties filed exceptions to that report and a trial was had before a jury in the county court, resulting in a verdict in favor of defendants in the sum of $1,200. Defendants prosecuted an appeal to the Jefferson circuit court where upon a trial of the case the jury awarded them $1,000 damages. Their motion for a new trial in that court was overruled and they prosecute this appeal from the judgment rendered on that verdict. The parties have made what we conceive to be an unduly large record, and which necessarily contains much irrelevant and immaterial matter. However, their respective contentions both upon the law and the facts appear to have been duly presented.

The grounds urged for a reversal of the judgment are: (1) That the verdict of the jury is contrary to law in that it did not follow the instructions of the court; (2) the admission of improper evidence offered by plaintiff, and the rejection of proper evidence offered by defendants; (3) error of the court in overruling defendants’ motion for the closing argument to the jury; (4) the verdict is grossly inadequate, and (5) improper argument of plaintiff’s counsel to the jury. They will be discussed and disposed of in the order named.

Neither party offered any instructions, and the court on its own motion gave four to the jury, the last, or fourth, one requiring the verdict of the entire panel, which is necessary in this character of proceeding. Instruction No. 1 was the usual one in such cases, while No. 2 defined the phrase “market value” to be followed in fixing the value of the land actually taken; and No. 3 said: “You will find and state in your verdict the amount awarded for the land taken separately from the damage awarded for the remainder of the tract, if any, and from the amount awarded for additional fencing which will be rendered necessary, if any.” (Our emphasis.) The verdict of the jury as returned in the cir-suit court said: “We, the jury, find On.e Thousand *42 ($1000) Dollars as the sum to be paid Mr. Adams. R. 0. Aldridge, Foreman.”

The argument in support of ground (1) is, that the verdict was for an aggregate sum, and failed to reveal whether or not any allowance was made by the jury for damages to the remainder of the tract, or for additional fences rendered necessary as instruction No. 3 required, if the jury found any damages for such items, in addition to the market value of the land taken. The form of the verdict as returned would clearly indicate that the jury found no such consequential damages for the items referred to. It will be perceived that Instruction No. 3 — which it is insisted the jury failed to follow — did not expressly require the jury to expressly state in its verdict the fact that it did not find any damages for either of those items; but only required it to separately state in its verdict the amount found by it for such items “if any.” The fact that no return of damages was made by the jury for such items is tantamount to saying that the jury found none for either of them. Therefore, we find ourselves unable to agree with' learned counsel upon their insistence that the verdict did not follow the instructions which, it is correctly urged, should be done, although the court may have erred in giving the particular instruction or instructions. Hence, the cases cited in substantiation of that contention have no relevancy to the point. In the case of Louisville & N. R. R. Co. v. Muncey, 229 Ky. 538, 17 S. W. (2d) 422, relied on as sustaining this ground, the court failed to give to the jury the required instruction for a separation of allowed amounts in their verdict for all permissible items of damage under the law, and the instructions in that case were also faulty in other respects, as will be seen from a reading of the opinion. That case did not involve a general verdict returned by the jury under a proper instruction given by the court, but which is the situation here.

Moreover, there is no attempt at showing that defendants and their counsel, either of them, was absent when the verdict was returned by the jury. The presumption will be indulged in the absence of such a showing that they, or one of them, was present, since they had a right to be, and the record discloses no deprivation of that right for any cause whatever. They, therefore, permitted the jury to be discharged upon the re *43 turn of the general verdict now complained of without any effort to have it corrected so as to eliminate the error now complained of, if any. This court has heretofore had before it for determination the precise question here involved, presented in a manner and form as is done in this case — or in some other manner whereby it became necessary to determine the question — in the cases of Atkinson v. Lawrence, 161 Ky. 166, 170 S. W. 528; Walter v. Louisville Railway Company, 150 Ky. 652, 150 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.W.2d 7, 285 Ky. 38, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-commonwealth-ex-rel-state-highway-commission-kyctapphigh-1940.