Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad v. F. Reisch & Bros.

247 Ill. 350
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 247 Ill. 350 (Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad v. F. Reisch & Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad v. F. Reisch & Bros., 247 Ill. 350 (Ill. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hand

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a proceeding commenced in the circuit court of Marion county by the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company against George Reisch, Joseph Reisch and Annie Reisch, doing business as F. Reisch & Bros., (hereinafter referred to as F. Reisch & Bros.,) and the Reisch Brewing Company and certain tenants in possession, to condemn for depot, trackage and other purposes incident to the conduct of the business of said railroad company in the city of Centraba, lots 7, 8, 9 and 10, in block 12, in the original town of Centraba. A trial was had and the jury by their verdict fixed the total value of said lots at $19,000, and the court, after overruling motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, rendered judgment on the verdict,' from which judgment F. Reisch & Bros, and the Reisch Brewing Company have prosecuted an appeal.

Appellants urge in this court as grounds of reversal (1) that the court erred in permitting the petitioner to make proof, upon the trial, of the amounts it had agreed to pay three of the tenants in possession of portions of said premises in satisfaction of their damages; (2) that the court misdirected the jury as to the law; (3) that the jury failed to allow the Reisch Brewing Company any amount for its damages; (4) that the court improperly excluded evidence offered on behalf of the defendants; .and (5) that the remarks of the petitioner’s counsel in his address to the jury constituted reversible error. The first and second propositions will be considered tog'ether.

The record shows that block 12 of the original town of Centrada was in part occupied by the petitioner as station grounds and switch yards in said city; that in order to enlarge its railroad facilities in said city it was necessary to procure title to lots 7, 8, 9 and 10, in said block 12, from F. Reisch & Bros., who were the owners thereof; that said premises were in the possession of certain tenants of said F. Reisch & Bros., and that the petitioner had settled with three of said tenants by agreeing- to pay said tenants the following sums, viz.: To Woollier & Co. $250, to George Mathis $500 and to Janies Reid $250. It also appears that upon the trial, in proof of the value of said leasehold interests, which it was claimed should be deducted from the total value of the premises, the court permitted the petitioner, over the objection of F. Reisch & Bros., to make proof of the amounts which it had agreed to pay said Woollier & Co., Mathis and Reid, and that the court gave to the jury, to assist them in reaching a conclusion as to the amount which they should award F. Reisch & Bros, by their verdict, the following instructions:

No. 6. “The court instructs the jury that whatever amount you allow to the holders of the respective leasehold interests, as proven by the evidence in this case, by way of compensation for the talcing of such leasehold interests, should be deducted from the total compensation which the evidence proves is a just compensation for the taking of the respective lots or parcels of ground covered by such leases.
No. 14. “The court instructs the jury- that you shpuld first fix the fair cash market value of the lots in question are sought to be taken in this proceeding, as compensation to the owners, F. Reisch & Bros., and then fix the amount of the fair cash value of the leasehold interests of the several tenants, Reisch Brewing Company, George Mathis, James Reid and Woolner & Co.; but you must then deduct from the amount found as the fair cash value of the lots the amount you find for the several tenants, and give to the owners, F\ Reisch & Bros., the remainder, after making the deduction.
No. 15. “The court instructs the jury that there can be but one recovery for the same property, therefore if you believe, from the evidence, that the rights or interests of the lessees, viz., Reisch Brewing Company, James Reid, George Mathis or Woolner & Co., in the lots sought to be taken, has any value, and the saipe is awarded to either of the said defendants, then such amount so awarded must be carved out of and deducted from the amount fixed as the total fair cash market value of said lots.”

It was undoubtedly a proper practice for the jury to first fix the value of the entire property by their verdict and then to apportion the total value of the property as found by them among the several parties who were interested therein. If, however, the petitioner had agreed with certain defendants as to the amounts which they were to receive for their damages, clearly such an agreement would not bind those defendants who were not parties to such agreements, and the petitioner, for the purpose of having the jury apportion the total value of the property among the several claimants, would not have the right to put in proof such agreements, and thereby force F. Reisch & Bros., who had not agreed to the amounts which petitioner had agreed, to pay Woolner & Co., Mathis and Reid as their damages, to agree that the amounts agreed to be paid said tenants should be deducted from the total value of the property as found by the-jury, and that they would be content with what remained after such deductions had been made, as their compensation and damages for the property taken. The burden oí proof was upon the petitioner, and it was required, in the first instance, to show the value df the property of F. Reiéch &' Bros, which it sought to condemn, which was its fair cash value, the total value of which would .be reduced by the values of the three leasehold interests of Woolner & Co., Mathis and Reid. We think, therefore, as F. Reisch &' Bros, did not agree that the amounts agreed to be paid for said leasehold interests by the petitioner were the value of such leasehold interests, that the petitioner should, as a part of its case in chief, have put in original evidence showing the,value of such leasehold interests, and that it was reversible error to have permitted proof, before the jury of the amounts which the petitioner had agreed to, pay Woolner & Co., Mathis and Reid in settlement of the value of the leasehold interests which they had in the property sought to be condemned, and that in view of the fact that the only proof of the value of said leasehold interests offered in evidence ' was the proof of the several amounts which the petitioner had agreed to pay for said leasehold interests,. there was no legitimate evidence in the record upon which to base petitioner’s instructions 6, 14 and 15, and that they should not have been given.

There was evidence in the record showing that the Reisch Brewing Company had a valid lease upon a portion of the premises sought to be condemned, but the jury, in their verdict, wholly ignored the rights of the Reisch Brewing Company and made no finding as to the value of the leasehold interest of said company in the premises sought to be condemned. The court submitted to the jury the form of a verdict, in which they were required to find ........dollars as the just compensation of the leasehold interest of the Reisch Brewing Company. This blank .the jury failed to fill with any amount but returned the verdict with all other blanks filled.

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Bluebook (online)
247 Ill. 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-burlington-quincy-railroad-v-f-reisch-bros-ill-1910.