Bennett v. Woody

38 S.W. 972, 137 Mo. 377, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 39
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 9, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 38 S.W. 972 (Bennett v. Woody) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bennett v. Woody, 38 S.W. 972, 137 Mo. 377, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 39 (Mo. 1897).

Opinion

Brace, J.

This is a proceeding commenced in the county court of Callaway county to establish a public road on the land of the defendant; tried in the county court, on his exceptions to the report of the commissioners, assessing his damages and resulting in a verdict of no damages; from the judgment of the county court on which he appealed to the circuit court of said county, from which court it was thence taken by change of venue to the circuit court of Montgomery county, where it was tried anew with the same result. From the judgment on this last verdict the defendant appealed to the St. Louis court of appeals, from which court the case has been transferred to this court (on the authority of State ex rel. v. Rombauer, 124 Mo. 598) as involving title to real estate.

1. The respondent contends that the appeal should be dismissed, because the appeal from the county court to the circuit court was premature, in that it was taken from the judgment on the assessment of damages in the county court before any order was made establishing the road.

We do not think this contention can be maintained. By section 7801, Revised Statutes, 1889, it is provided that, “in all cases of appeals being allowed from the judgment of the county court,' assessing damages, or for opening, changing, or vacating any road, the circuit court shall be possessed of the cause, and shall proceed to hear and determine the same anew; but no commissioner shall be appointed by the circuit court, nor shall any appeal prior to the determination thereof in the circuit court operate as a supersedeas of the proceedings of the county court.” By the plain terms of this statute an appeal is contemplated as well from the judgment of the county court assessing the damages as from the final judgment ordering the road [381]*381to be established and opened, which can be made only after the county court shall have found that “the use to which said premises are sought to be appropriated is of a public use, that the proposed road * * * is of sufficient public utility to justify the payment of damages awarded,” and the damages are paid to the owner or into court for his use. Sec. 7800.

The fact that the appeal from the judgment assessing damages is not to operate as a supersedeas to these subsequent proceedings in the county court is, apart from the wording of the section, a cogent reason for holding that the right to appeal was not intended to await thereon. Hook v. Railroad, 133 Mo. 313.

2. The errors assigned for reversal by the appellant are the giving and refusing certain instructions and the rejection of his evidence in support of the following plea:

“Now comes the claimant, S. L. Woody, and makes answer and says that the petitioners herein, in 1882 and again in 1883 and 1884, petitioned for the location for the identical road herein petitioned for to the county court of Callaway county, Missouri, and the court on hearing the same established said road, and in both of said trials there was awarded to said S. L. Woody damages to his land taken by said road; that the allowance in neither of said trials was paid and the same is now of record in said court, and this claimant, S. L. Woody, pleads said trials and findings and judgments in bar of this suit.”

The evidence offered in support of this plea were the records of the county court showing a judgment of said court, establishing this road on the premises of the appellant in the year 1882, “whenever the petitioner should pay the respondent his damages therefor assessed at $50 and all costs,” and a like judgment in 1884 establishing said road whenever respondent’s [382]*382damages therefor assessed at $51 should be paid in like manner, and evidence that the said damages and costs had never been paid on either of said judgments.

This plea was first interposed in the circuit court of Montgomery county after the case reached that court. It is not seen how the facts therein pleaded affect the issue raised by the defendant in the county court and which he carried for trial de novo to the circuit court by his appeal. The appeal was only from the assessment of damages, and the inquiry of the circuit court must necessarily have been confined to the case tried in the court below, and brought by the defendant for retrial to the circuit court. Moreover, as appears from the plea, these condemnation proceedings were never consummated, the condition on which the road was to be established never having been performed by the petitioners and the county court refusing to establish it at the public expense, as they might well do. Simpson v. Kansas City, 111 Mo. 237; R. S. 1889, sec. 7800. The matter stood just as it did before these proceedings were commenced, and they could not be a bar to the .present proceeding, in which the defendant sought merely to have his damages properly assessed.

3. The court refused to give the defendant’s instruction number 1 as asked, but modified it and gave it as modified. The modification consisted in striking out the words in parenthesis and inserting the words in italics, as here shown:

7“I. The court instructs the jury that in considering the evidence in the case and arriving at their verdict they will take into consideration the amount of land taken for the proposed road, the damage to the pond, if any, and the destruction or removal of the fence now on said land, and the erection and maintenance of a fence on the line of said road for the indos[383]*383ure of defendant’s land (and the damage to the remainder of the land left after taking the land necessary for the road, and all damages of every kind to plaintiff’s said premises) and deduct from the sum total of such damages the benefits, if any, enjoyed by defendant by reason of his oivnership of said land, over and above the benefits enjoyed by the commimity generally.”

The defendant complains of this as error and we think the contention is well grounded. The measure of damages for taking private land for a public way “is the value of the land taken, and the damage, if any, to the tract of which it forms a part, from which must be deducted the benefits, if any, peculiar to such tract arising from running the road through it.” McReynolds v. Railroad, 110 Mo. 484. The vice of the instruction as modified and given by the court is that it withdraws from the consideration of the jury any damages to the tract of which the land to be taken forms a part on the one hand, and on the other, requires the jury to deduct from the sum of defendant’s damages, any benefits enjoyed by him by reason of his ownership of the land, over his neighbors and the community generally, whether they flow from the establishment of the road on his land, or whether they are benefits to the tract of land on which the road is to be located or not. The error is obvious and needs no comment.

4. The defendant also complains of instruction number 2 given for the plaintiff which is as follows:

“II. The court instructs the jury that before the jury can find damages for Woody they must believe from a preponderance of the evidence that the damages sustained by Woody by reason of the establishment of the road exceeds the benefits that will accrue to him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 S.W. 972, 137 Mo. 377, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-woody-mo-1897.