Board of Levee Commissioners v. Dillard

76 Miss. 641
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 76 Miss. 641 (Board of Levee Commissioners v. Dillard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Levee Commissioners v. Dillard, 76 Miss. 641 (Mich. 1898).

Opinion

Terral, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the second of November, 1897, the board of levee commissioners for the Yazoo-Mississippi Delta, holding the power of eminent domain, applied, by petition to the clerk of the circuit court of Coahoma county, to have the appraisers, appointed to assess levee damages, to be required to view, ascertain and determine the value of certain lands in sections 25 and 36 of township 30, range 4 west, and in sections 30 and 31 of township 30, range 3 west, minutely and specifically described in their petition in that behalf, aggregating thirty-four acres of [646]*646land, lying in said county, and belonging to Dillard, Coffin & Mays, which they alleged it to be necessary to be taken and used in the construction and enlargement of the levee maintained by said board. A warrant having been issued to said appraisers, two of them (being a majority) assembled, on the sixteenth of November, 1897, and, pursuant to said authority, they duly assessed and awarded against said levee board, for the taking of said thirty-four acres of land of said Dillard, Coffin & Mays, the sum of $1,902.30, being $55.95 per acre, to be paid to said Dillard, Coffin & Mays. The said Dillard, Coffin & Mays, being dissatisfied with the smallness of said assessment, in due time filed with the clerk of the circuit court their petition, by way of appeal to said court, in which they alleged that said appraisers should have assessed the value of the thirty-four acres of land taken by said board for levee purposes at the sum of $3,400, being $100 per acre, which sum of $3,400 they alleged to be the reasonable cash market value of the thirty-four acres of land taken and appropriated by the defendant levee board, to which declaration or statement of law and fact the defendant levee board pleaded that the sum awarded by the appraisers to plaintiffs for the thirty-four acres of land “was not unjust and inadequate, but that the award was more than the actual cash market value of the lands so taken, at the time of the taking, considered as a part of the entire tract from which it was taken, and that said appraisers should not have awarded a total of $3,400 therefor, and that the plaintiffs are not entitled to have and recover for the same the sum of $3,400, and all of which defendants ask may be inquired of by the country. ’ ’ The plaintiffs, for a replication to said plea, averred that it is not true, as pleaded, that $1,902.30, awarded them by said appraisers, “is more than the actual cash market value of the land taken and occupied by the board of levee commissioners for levee purposes, either considered as a part of the entire tract from which it was taken or otherwise, nor is it [647]*647true that plaintiffs are not entitled to have and recover, of and from the board of levee commissioners, the sum of $1,-902.30, and an additional amount as shown in their statement of law and fact, and of this the plaintiffs put themselves upon the country. ’ ’

The case being called for trial, one Berry, being accepted as a juror by the plaintiffs, was tendered to the defendants, when Berry, on his voir dire, stated that he had sat at the then current term of the circuit court as a juror in a levee board case for the assessment of damages for lands taken for the construction and enlargement of the public levee, and on that account said Berry was challenged for cause by defendants, but their challenge for cause was disallowed by the court, when they challenged Berry peremptorily. A like action, on like grounds, was had in reference to Mullens and Blackwell, except as to the juror Blackwell, the defendants’ peremptory challenges being exhausted, they were compelled to take him upon the panel to try the cause, and the action of the court in overruling the defendants’ several challenges for cause of Blackwell, Mullens and Berry constitute the appellants’ first alleged ground of error.

A jury being taken and the trial ordered to proceed, the parties laid before the court and jury their respective grounds of complaint and defense hereinbefore recited, when the defendants moved the court to direct the jury that the only issue submitted to them in this case is the cash market value of the land taken, at the time of the taking, considered as a part of the entire tract from which it was taken. The court declined to sustain the motion, considering the issue made by the pleadings sufficiently concise and comprehensive for the understanding and judgment of the court, jury and parties. The denial of this motion is the second ground of exception by the defendants.

The case having been submitted to a jury, they returned a verdict for the plaintiffs and assessed their damages at $72.50 [648]*648per acre, aggregating $2,465, for which amount a judgment was entered, and, a new trial being denied, the defendants appeal to this court.

Upon the trial the plaintiffs introduced, along with the other evidence, the opinions of the witnesses, Fontaine, Palmore and McKenzie, as to the value of the thirty-four acres of land sought to be condemned, which opinion evidence was objected to by the defendants, and the defendants sought to overcome the evidential value of the opinion of said witnesses by showing, on cross-examination of them, sales of similar land in the vicinity, and about that time, for sums less than that given in their opinions, from which they were precluded, and to which they excepted. The defendants offered in evidence the opinion of Stovall as to the value of first-class cleared land in said county, well located and accessible, and his opinion was excluded. Stovall had resided many years in the county, but was not acquainted with the plantation of Dillard, Coffin & Mays. Aderholdt, a farmer who had lived in the county thirty years, and who knew the plaintiff’s lands, who had worked on it, was then camped on it, and who testified it was productive, was permitted to give his opinion as to the value of said thirty-four acres of land on his examination in chief, but on cross-examination said that he did not know how to value land except from a consideration of its revenue producing qualities, when his evidence was excluded, to which ruling the levee board excepted.

The testimony bearing on the question whether the witnesses McKenzie, Palmore and Fontaine were qualified to give their opinions as to the value of the thirty-four acres of land in evidence is as follows: McKenzie said he was a landowner; knew the land in question; that it was fertile, and would produce from three-fourths to one bale of cotton, or fifty or sixty bushels of. corn per acre; that it was well located, highly improved, and convenient to market.' Palmore said that he was the assessor of the county; was familiar with land values; knew the [649]*649Dillard, Coffin & Mays plantation; that it was very fertile, well improved and accessible to river and railroad. Fontaine testified that he was acquainted with the land; had surveyed and mapped it; that it was fertile, and would produce forty bushels of corn or about one bale of cotton per acre. On cross-examination he was asked by the levee board the following questions, which the court overruled: ‘ ‘ Did you know the price at which such lands [similar to the lands in question] have been generally dealt with by sale and purchase in the locality of these lands or in adjacent territory?” “Do you know the market value of lands in the locality in which these ands are located except by recurring to particular sales? ”

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Bluebook (online)
76 Miss. 641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-levee-commissioners-v-dillard-miss-1898.