Chicago, St. Louis & New Orleans Railway Co. v. Ware

295 S.W. 1000, 220 Ky. 778, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 601
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 24, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 295 S.W. 1000 (Chicago, St. Louis & New Orleans Railway Co. v. Ware) 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
Chicago, St. Louis & New Orleans Railway Co. v. Ware, 295 S.W. 1000, 220 Ky. 778, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 601 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Logan

Reversing.

In November, 1924, the appellant filed in the 'McCracken county court a petition against Mrs. Jesse Maxon "Ware, seeking to condemn 14 acres of land in McCracken county, near the village of Maxon, on the Paducah and Woodville road. Summons was issued ■against Mrs. Ware, but was not executed until some months thereafter. Commissioners were appointed to •assess damages and the value of the land proposed to be talien. These commissioners made their report, apparently in November, 1924, although the copy of the report in the record bears no date: These commissioners found the total value of the 14-acre tract' of land to be *780 $1,400. The value of the land to be taken was fixed at $130, and the damage to the residue of the traot was fixed at $470. After the summons was executed on Mrs. Jesse Maxon Ware, she conveyed the land to the appellee; the-date of the conveyance being February 6, 1925.

The appellant on the 20th day of May, 1924, filed an amended petition, setting up this fact, and summons was. issued against the appellant on June 15, 1925. Mrs. Jessee Maxon Ware filed exception's to the report of the-commissioners in June 1925. She disclosed in the exceptions filed by her that she was not the, owner of the land, but her exceptions raise all the questions that might have-been raised by her, if she had been the owner. Summons, was executed on appellee, but she took no steps concerning the condemnation proceedings pending in the county court. It appears that, at the time the summons was-executed on her, appellant had already appropriated the-land and constructed its railroad across it.

On the 8th day of June, 1925, appellee filed her suit, in the McCracken circuit court, alleging that appellant had wrongfully taken possession of her land. In answer to her petition appellant pleaded tbe county court condemnation proceedings as a bar, and also pleaded that it had taken possession of the land prior to her -obtaining title. The amount of damages which she claimed was-controverted in the answer. The trial of the case resulted in a judgment in favor of appellee for $3,500:

The first error assigned in the brief for appellant is. that the court should have sustained its plea in bar, because of the condemnation proceedings pending in the county court. The method of condemning land for -a. railroad right -of way is fully set out in sections 835-838, and 840, Ky. Stats. Sections 835, 836, and 837 vjerecomplied with in the county court proceedings; that is, appellant filed its petition as required by section 835, and the county court appointed commissioners, as therein provided. The commissioners made their report as provided in section 836, and summons was issued thereon as provided in section 837. Exceptions were filed by Mrs. Ware as provided in section 838, and thereafter an amended petition was filed and summons issued thereon. Section 8319 governs as to when the railroad company may take possession of the property so condemned. It cannot -do so until after the damages have been assessed .by the court pursuant to the verdict of a jury on the trial of exceptions. This cannot be don-e, however, until *781 the railroad company has paid to the owner the amount found as damages and costs. In the event there is an appeal from the judgment in the county court, the railroad shall not be entitled to take possession of the land until it shall have paid into court the damages assessed and all costs.

The appellant in this instance appropriated the land of appellee when it had no right to do so, and this was an abandonment of the condemnation proceedings pending in the county court. The appellee had a cause of action against appellant for the wrongful appropriation of her land. The railroad company cannot be allowed to take advantage of its wrongful act, and, after having appropriated the property, have a trial of the exceptions to the report of the commissioners. The acts of the appellant in appropriating the land without proceeding in accordance with, the provisions of the law cannot be approved. The property of an individual may not be-thus taken; !but, since it has been done,- the appellee is-not without remedy. Her suit must be treated as if it'were an appeal from the judgment of the county court Harlan County v. Cole, 218 Ky. 819, 292 S. W. 501, this' day decided.

It is urged in the brief for appellant that the appellee cannot maintain this -action, because the damages had accrued prior to her becoming the owner of the land. Appellant admits the wrongful appropriation of the property, but insists that the title was in Mrs. Jesse Maxon 'Ware when the property was appropriated, and for that reason appellee cannot maintain her action for damages. If it be true that the property was appropriated by appellant while Mrs. Ware was the owner thereof, -she alone may maintain an action for the value of the land so appropriated and damages to the residue. This was so held in the case of Carrollton Telephone Exchange Company v. Spicer, 177 Ky. 340, 197 S. W. 827, L. R. A. 1918A, 950. The mere taking possession of the land for the purpose of locating the railroad line across the land by making surveys, measurements, and cross-sections, would not be sufficient, however, to- deprive appellee of her right of action, if the actual appropriation -of the land took place after she became the owner. There is a difference between technically taking possession of land and appropriating land to the use of the person taking it into possession. An examination of the *782 'evidence shows that appellant in December laid, a water ■pipe through this land, and that during the same month surveys and measurements were made by engineers, preparing a blueprint, showing what the contractor would be required to do when he commenced work on this particular tract of land. The actual work of excavating did ■not commence until April, and that was after appellee ¡acquired title to the land. Appellee was the owner of The land at the time it was actually appropriated, and ¡she is the proper person to maintain the .action for the recovery of its value.

Another error suggested by appellant is the admission of incompetent evidence.' In cases such as this, the fair market value of the land appropriated is the measure of damages. If a man is willing to sell his land and desires to do so, and another person is willing to buy the land and desires to do so, and a trade is consummated on that basis, it establishes the fair market value of the land. Where the seller is under compulsion to sell, or the buyer is under compulsion to buy, the consummation of ,a. trade between them would not establish a fair market -value. All of the surrounding circumstances may be Taken into consideration in establishing the fair market -value of a tract of land. In the case of Kentucky Hydro-Electric Company v. Reister, 216 Ky. 303, 287 S. W. 357, on this point the court said:

“In condemnation proceedings, landowners should be allowed to show all facts existing before the taking which a seller would adduce in attempting to make a sale, and all facts resulting from the taking to which a purchaser would call attention in an effort to beat down the price.”

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Bluebook (online)
295 S.W. 1000, 220 Ky. 778, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-st-louis-new-orleans-railway-co-v-ware-kyctapphigh-1927.