City of Hazard v. Eversole

35 S.W.2d 313, 237 Ky. 242, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 593
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 3, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 35 S.W.2d 313 (City of Hazard v. Eversole) 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
City of Hazard v. Eversole, 35 S.W.2d 313, 237 Ky. 242, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 593 (Ky. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

J udqe Richardson

Reversing.

For their cause of action, appellees set out in their petition that, during the years 1924-25, J. S. Kelly, Paul Shields, and the city of Hazard wrongfully entered upon their land, without their consent, and committed a trespass by taking possession of “a strip of land 40 feet wide and 325 feet long” situated on Susan Ever sole’s branch. *245 They dug up, excavated, and built thereon a “storm sewer,” and graded and constructed a street, and so constructed them that they caused “the branch to overflow, run over and injured their land, from freshets and high water in the branch. ” “ The trespass and undue taking of the strip from their property damaged the remainder thereof, $1,500.00.”

J. S. Kelly and Paul Shields are not parties to this appeal. The issues between them and the appellees are thus eliminated and will not be considered in the disposition of the issues involved.

The city of Hazard, in its separate answer, traversed the allegations of the petition. For affirmative defense, it alleged (1) that, in an action instituted by Shields and Kelly against the appellees in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky, they recovered a judgment against the appellees for the construction of the storm-sewer and street in question under a contract with the city of Hazard, and that this judgment is res judicata as against the appellees in this action; (2) that the land of appellees since the rendition of that judgment has been sold in satisfaction thereof, and that they are not now the owners of it; (3) that the land had been used by the general public and the city as a highway for a period of more than fifteen years; (4) that the appellees executed and delivered to the treasurer of the city of Hazard, after the construction of the storm sewer and street, their joint application for the ten-year payment plan of this street, and by that act they are estopped. (5) The land had been dedicated by appellees and accepted by the city as a street.

A trial was hadbef ore a jury, a verdict was returned by it and a judgment entered thereon, awarding the appellees as damages, the sum of $2,000 from which this appeal is prosecuted.

In his brief, counsel for appellees makes this statement: “The petition alleges that they were trespassers and neither the contractor or city at any time legally or equitably had any rights therein whatever.” The allegations of the petition and the statements of counsel show that appellees regarded this as an action for trespass.

- There is no allegation in the petition charging negligence, fraud, or bad faith on the part of the city,of Hazard, or its officials. Even if their land were taken by the city without their consent, for the purpose of con *246 structing a storm sewer and street, without condemnation proceedings to acquire it, and even if the city had no rights to the land, either by prescription, or dedication, expressed or implied, an action for trespass does not lie against the city for appropriating the land for the purpose of erecting the storm sewer and the street thereon. Their remedy is one to recover of the city the value of their land so taken by it for public purpose without compensation.

In the introduction of their evidence and in its admission by the court, the appellees and the court treated it as an action for trespass. However, the court when it came to instruct the jury, undertook to give to it instructions applicable to condemnation proceedings to condemn land for public purposes.

If the appellee’s land were taken by the city and appropriated for public,purposes without right, without the consent of the appellees, in good faith, without negligence or fraud, and it constructed the storm sewer and street thereon, their remedy against the city is an action for the value of the strip so appropriated. This is not unlike an action by an owner of land against a county to recover the value ■ of his property taken for public use under section 242 of the Constitution.

Harlan County v. Cole, 218 Ky. 819, 292 S. W. 501, 503, was an action for trespass against the county for appropriating land for a public road, without the consent of the owner and without first instituting a condemnation proceeding, in which we said: “His action, therefore, must be treated the same as if it had been an appeal from an assessment legally made in a condemnation proceeding after trial before a jury in the county court as provided by law. It follows that his case when tried in the circuit court should have been tried under the law governing such appeals.” Black Mountain Corporation v. Houston, 211 Ky. 621, 277 S. W. 993; Muhlenberg County v. Ray et al., 215 Ky. 295, 284 S. W. 1074.

In the case of McDonald v. Powell County, 199 Ky. 300, 250 S. W. 1007, 1008, the court said: “This action is for a direct taking of property for public use without compensation. We think the same rule applies in both cases, and that this action may be maintained; the measure of damages being the same as in condemnation proceedings in the establishment of a public road. ’ ’

*247 There is no reason that the trial, the rule of evidence, and the instructions of the court to the jury, where land is so taken by a city, and appropriated by it for street purposes, should not be identical with that of an action by the county to condemn land, or on an appeal from a judgment in condemnation proceedings, for that purpose.

The appellant complains of the admission by the trial court of incompetent evidence. The appellee W. E.Eversole was permitted to testify that “this street was constructed on three sides of the property. The city charged it, and the buildings thereon, for all the street and took a lien thereon.” That “there was $3,700.00 for building Newland street alone.” “All the assessment against that property is now about $10,000.00; that includes Combs street and High street too. The fair market value of this forty feet strip of property taken for Newland street at a fair voluntary sale for cash was $2,000.00.” He had bought and sold property in the neighborhood of this property; ‘ ‘ sold to the Y. M. C. A. and to the L. & N. Railroad Company before any street improvement was made on either High or Combs street;” “the value of that 40-foot strip is $50.00 a front foot.” He “was acquainted with the value of real estate in the town of Hazard and in this particular part.” He sold another lot for $72 a front foot, and 42 feet for $3,000 adjoining this property across the street on the River side along about 1924-25. This was in September 1926, after this property was taken in the construction of Newland street. They made a fill practically all along th» street from 1 to 3 feet high all along above the property. Beneath that street they built what is-known as the “storm sewer.” The concrete sewer, the walls of which are about three or four inches thick by four feet-high, are of solid concrete the whole length of Newland street 325 feet at the front end and the entire length of Combs street; that the storm sewer carried the water from this place; it closed up soon after they constructed it. It stopped up with rocks and logs.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.W.2d 313, 237 Ky. 242, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-hazard-v-eversole-kyctapphigh-1931.