City of Little Rock v. Sawyer

309 S.W.2d 30, 228 Ark. 516, 1958 Ark. LEXIS 515
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 20, 1958
Docket5-1400
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 309 S.W.2d 30 (City of Little Rock v. Sawyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Little Rock v. Sawyer, 309 S.W.2d 30, 228 Ark. 516, 1958 Ark. LEXIS 515 (Ark. 1958).

Opinion

Carleton Harris, Chief Justice.

This action is a suit brought by and in behalf of the City of Little Bock to condemn lands required for the city’s new water supply reservoir on the Big Maumelle Biver, said lands being owned by appellees, Octavia and J. Gr. Sawyer. The tract involved contains approximately 322 acres, is. divided north and south by State Highway No. .10, and lies at the intersection of State Highways No. 10 and No. 13 at the point commonly known as Crossroads, located about 22 miles west of Little Bock. Big Maumelle Biver crosses part of the lands, which, according to the evidence, are partly timbered and partly open. The property, which was formerly used as a dairy farm by the owners, contained a dwelling house, fences, and various farm buildings. The jury returned a verdict of $55,000 for appellees, from which judgment the City and the Board of Commissioners of the Little Bock Municipal Water Works have appealed. For reversal, appellants urge four points, as follows:

I.

The Jury Verdict of $55,000 was Excessive and was not Supported by Substantial Evidence.

II.

The Lower Court Erred in the Exclusion and Admission of Evidence Belating to Values.

III.

The Lower Court Erred in Admitting Testimony Concerning an Offer in Compromise and Settlement Made by the City and in Befusing to Grant a Mistrial.

IV.

The Lower Court Erred in Dismissing the Board of Commissioners of the Little Bock Municipal Water Works as Parties Plaintiff.

We proceed to a discussion of each contention in the order listed.

Here we are concerned only with whether there was substantial evidence to support the verdict of the jury. Appellees’ evidence consisted of the testimony of Mrs. Sawyer, Jim Bland, a neighbor, who testified he had lived within a half-mile of the Sawyer place for 21 years, Thomas Johnston, a neighbor, who testified he had been familiar with the Sawyer property since 1933, Don Win-dle, a salesman for the Pulaski Implement Company and former instructor with the Institute on Farm Training, Fred Selz, a real estate salesman for Block Eealty Company for nine years, specializing in rural property, A. L. Saunders, engaged in real estate development business and formerly chief appraiser for the Highway Department (1954), W. H. Pitcock, who testified that he had specialized in rural real estate in Pulaski County for 12 years, and O. B. Higginbotham, who estimated that the tract contained 50,000 board feet of merchantable timber.

Appellants point out that a witness, in giving an opinion of value, must also give a satisfactory explanation of how he arrived at his conclusion; that there is a difference between “any evidence” and “substantial evidence”; that when the evidence given by appellees’ witnesses is weighed under such a rule, there is no basis for their opinions, and the verdict is accordingly not supported by substantial evidence. Mrs. Sawyer described the house on the property as a large, English-type house, with ten rooms, one bath, a place for another bath, and a 30 x 20 glassed-in porch. Located on the property also were a feeding barn, large stock barn, several sheds, hog houses, chicken houses, implement sheds, four deep wells, a stock pond, and five miles of fencing.

Mrs. Sawyer testified that $7,500 had been spent in altering the house since the purchase in 1948, and she valued the entire property at $85,000. Jim Bland concurred in this opinion. Thomas Johnston, a neighbor, testified that the Sawyer property under fence is flat, level soil . . . bottom land, and that he had occasion (because of his milk route) to be at the Sawyer place every day until September, 1955. He testified that dairy barns are graded as to their construction and maintenance, and Sawyer’s was grade A; that Sawyer had a “milking parlor,” which, according to his testimony, is the most modern type of milking barn developed 1 . He stated this was the only milking parlor on his route. Mr. Windle testified the cleared land was mostly in permanent pasture 2 in 1955, and that Sawyer had sixty or seventy head of cattle; that the fences were very good and were constructed of webbed wire and barbed wire. Mr. Selz testified that he was a former salesman with the Rhineman Horse and Mule Company and ‘ ‘ that kept me in touch with all the farmers and all the farms in this town.’.’ He testified he had made some other sales of property in the general area, but not in the immediate vicinity, i. e., some five or six miles from it; that he appraises farm property for Block and has handled nine-tenths of the acreage transactions for the past five years; that he helped handle the sale by Mrs. Sawyer to Mr. Almon of acreage adjoining the property in question; that the two tracts were so dissimilar as to preclude a comparison between them. He valued the farm and improvements at $70,670. Mr. Saunders testified he had been engaged in buying rural property since leaving the Highway Department; his appraisal of the property amounted to $84,327.03. Horace Pitcock, who testified that he specializes in selling farms and suburban property, valued the farm at $70,670, and stated that he conferred with Selz on arriving at the appraisal. He explained that in arriving at the same figure “* * * one gave and one took. ’ ’ Mr. Higginbotham was not interrogated on cross examination as to his estimate that the tract contained 50,000 board feet of merchantable timber.

The following witnesses testified for appellants, in brief, as follows: Jeff Graham, who has been engaged in termite control work for 20 years, inspected the Sawyer dwelling property and testified there was a general infestation of termites. He could not state how long the termites Lad been in tbe structure . . . infestation bad gone above tbe ground floor, but be could not estimate tbe damage without tbe major operation of exposing tbe walls . . . did not know extent of damage on October 26, 1956 3 . He made no termite inspection of tbe barns or outbuildings. C. Y. Barnes stated that be bad been experienced in dwelling construction since 1939; that be bad visited tbe Sawyer property on two occasions, and found it was not in good repair. He stated there were roughly 3,400 square feet in tbe bouse . . . casement windows showed evidence of decay and rot . . . there were two places where tbe foundation was not supporting tbe bouse properly . . . tbe bouse bad not been painted in a number of years . . . “ tbe roof is sound but it is about five years old.” Claude Woolsley, presently semi-retired, is a horticulturist and agriculturist, and has taught at tbe Universities of Arkansas, Tennessee, Virginia, and at Arkansas A & M. He testified that be managed a farm in Illinois for 30 years, and operated an orchard farm in Washington County. Mr. Woolsley took soil samples from tbe Sáw-yer farm, and stated tbe soil could be divided into two types . . . bill soil and deep silt loam.

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Bluebook (online)
309 S.W.2d 30, 228 Ark. 516, 1958 Ark. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-little-rock-v-sawyer-ark-1958.