City of St. Louis v. Abeln

70 S.W. 708, 170 Mo. 318, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 64
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 26, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 70 S.W. 708 (City of St. Louis v. Abeln) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of St. Louis v. Abeln, 70 S.W. 708, 170 Mo. 318, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 64 (Mo. 1902).

Opinion

YALLIANT, J.

A condemnation suit to widen Park avenue in the city of St. Louis. The commissioners appointed by the circuit court to assess damages and benefits made their report in which they said:

“We have carefully examined the premises proposed to be taken for the establishment and opening of said avenue, and we have ascertained the actual value of the land and premises proposed to be taken without reference to the projected improvement and the actual damages done to the property thereby, to be the sum of $13,767, and for the payment of such values and damages have assessed against the city the amount of benefit'to the public generally, to-wit, the sum of $507.15, and the balance, to-wit, the sum of $13,259.85 against property within the district ascertained, ’ ’ etc.

Of the total amount assessed as damages the commissioners awarded $8,438.60 to the Dillon estate, and the balance, $5,328.40, was awarded to the owners of what is known in this record as the Abeln property. This award is in these words: “The actual value of the land taken and the actual damages sustained by Wilhelmina Abeln for life, remainder to Wilhelmina Bernardina Abeln, Anna M. Abeln, Olivia A. Abeln, Anna M. B. Abeln, Prank Stephens, lessee, or the owner [322]*322of the lot of ground, situated” etc., (omitting the description) “we ascertain to he the sum of four hundred and fifty dollars; and for the improvements and special damage, as hereinafter stated, upon last described property, we allow the sum of forty-eight hundred and seventy-eight dollars and forty cents. Total fifty-three hundred and twenty-eight dollars and forty cents. Out of the above sum for improvements we award the sum of $1,021 to Frank Stephens, lessee, being for his interest in said improvements, to-wit, $421, and $600 as special damage to his business.”

The commissioners assessed as benefits against the Abeln property $1,000. Out of the $5,328.40 awarded to the owners of the Abeln property the commissioners deduct $421 to be paid Stephens as damages to his interest in the improvements and $600 as damages to his business, and also $1,000 as benefits to the property, leaving for the Abelns $3,307.40.

Appellant in due time filed exceptions to the report, which were to the effect that the damages awarded her were inadequate, that the benefits assessed against her were excessive, and that the award to Stephens was illegal, because: first, he was not a party to the suit; second, the interruption to his business should not have been taken into account; and, third, the effect of the report was to pay Stephens out of the fund awarded to the Abelns.

On the hearing of the exceptions the evidence showed that the taking of the land for the widening of the street as proposed would necessitate cutting off parts of the buildings on the Abeln lots and there was the testimony of an architect, a witness for exceptors, tending to show that to take down the walls of the buildings and reconstruct them on the line proposed and reconstruct the sidewalks would cost $3,014, to which the witness added $2,350, the depreciation in value according to his opinion of the houses after reconstruction; total damages, $5,364. There was testimony on the part of the exceptors tending to show that their property [323]*323would not be benefited. There was testimony to tbe contrary on this point in behalf of the plaintiff.

Over the objection of appellant two of the commissioners were called by the plaintiff and allowed to testify as witnesses, and exception was taken. The court overruled the exceptions and Mrs. Abeln took this appeal.

I. The learned counsel for appellant in their brief say: “On exceptions to the report, the court is required to hear evidence. As it is bound to hear the evidence it follows that it should be guided by it, and if there is no conflict of evidence effect must be given to the-facts established by it.” That is a very correct statement of the rule that should govern in the original trial of an issue of fact when there is nothing to be considered but the evidence then adduced. But in a review of the commissioners ’ report on exceptions thereto the report itself is to be considered and it must stand until it is shown to be. wrong either in a point of law or in a' matter of fact. This proceeding is statutory and is peculiar. To some extent it has the character of a trial de novo, but it is not entirely so. It is not, for example, like a trial in the circuit court of a cause brought up by appeal from a justice’s court, in which case the statute requires the circuit court to try the cause anew without regard to anything that occurred at the trial before the .justice or to his findings or judgment. [Sec. 4071, R. S. 1899.] And it is not exactly like a review of the verdict of a jury on a motion for new trial, for there the judge who heard the same evidence that the jury heard, weighs the verdict in the light of that evidence. •But on a review of the commissioners’ report in a condemnation proceeding, the court, from the necessity of the case, must hear evidence, because it has not before it the evidence and facts which influenced the commissioners.

In Bridge Co. v. Schaubacker, 49 Mo. 555, where the court in such case refused to hear evidence to overthrow the commissioners’ report, this court said: “The court should have heard the evidence, and if the facts [324]*324appeared as claimed, should have exercised the ample power given it by the statute.” And in Railroad v. Almeroth, 62 Mo. 343, after referring to the above case with approval, it was said: “It is not the province of-this court to review the evidence given in the circuit court, with a view of determining whether that court should or should not have set aside the report of the commissioners', hut only to see whether there was any testimony tending to support the exceptions, and by which the circuit court should have been guided in rendering its judgment thereon.” There was such evidence in that case and it was held that the circuit court-erred in deciding that it had no authority to consider it. In Cape Girardeau, etc. v. Dennis, 67 Mo. 438, the same doctrine was announced and those two cases were referred to and the court said: ‘ ‘ This court, however,, will not ordinarily review the action of the circuit court in such cases when the testimony is conflicting. It is only when the damages are flagrantly excessive or inadequate that we will interfere.”

In the case at bar, the circuit court heard the evidence and was not convinced by it that the commissioners ’ estimates as to damages and benefits were wrong. On this point the court had in one side of the scales the commissioners’ report, and in the other the opinion of' one witness as to the cost of removing and rebuilding the walls and the resultant damages to the rest of the property. We are asked now to declare that the trial court erred in not setting aside the report of the commissioners on the strength of that evidence. That we should not do. In St. Louis v. Brown, 155 Mo. l. c. 567, this court said: “On a mere question of value, depending on conflicting evidence, the circuit court should hesitate to interfere with the commissioners’’ finding, although in a proper case it has undoubtedly the right and duty to do so. A board of commissioners is the tribunal provided by our Constitution to do justice in such cases between the city and the citizen. They are selected by the circuit court and should be men of good judgment and honest repute. They have an ad[325]*325vantage that the court, and even a jury, do not have in trying a case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 S.W. 708, 170 Mo. 318, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-st-louis-v-abeln-mo-1902.