City of St. Louis v. Sheahan

36 S.W.2d 951, 327 Mo. 305, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 729
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 25, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 36 S.W.2d 951 (City of St. Louis v. Sheahan) 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. Sheahan, 36 S.W.2d 951, 327 Mo. 305, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 729 (Mo. 1931).

Opinion

WHITE, P. J.

— This proceeding, begun in May, 1925, in the St. Louis Circuit Court, was to condemn a right of w'ay one hundred feet *308 wide for water-pipe line through a tract of land in St. Louis County belonging’ to respondents, Dr. Edwin L. Sheahan and his wife Deborah M. Sheahan.

They owned a tract consisting of thirty acres and the right-of-way condemned goes through this tract a distance of a thousand feet. Commissioners appointed by the court assessed defendant’s damages at $17,255.80. The city filed exceptions. The court ordered a trial by jury, which rendered a verdict for the defendants for $14,-250.' From the judgment the city appealed in due form.

I. The first assignment of error made by appellant here is that the award of $14,250 damage was so excessive as to indicate the influence of passion or prejudice on the part of the jury.

The defendants introduced a number of witnesses who qualified as experts in valuing real estate.

Dr. Sheahan testified that his damage was twenty-nine thousand dollars. He estimated the thirty acres of land as worth thirty-five hundred dollars an acre. The amount taken in the hundred-foot strip. was 1.93 acres. It cut off 1.86 acres from the main body of the tract, making that piece practically worthless. The damage to the entire tract was- because the easement for the pipe line interfered with his sewerage and drainage and made it difficult to lay the tract off in lots in a satisfactory manner.

Mrs. Mehl, a real estate agent, testified about sales she had made in the vicinity, apparently on land in like situation: one tract of two acres for $7,000; one two-acre tract for $7,500; a one-acre tract for $11,000, and a three-acre tract for $10,000, and a three-and-a-half-acre tract for $12,000.

Mrs. ITeinsohn testified that she sold a six-acre tract about two -blocks from the Price Road upon which the Sheahan land fronts for three thousand dollars an acre.

"Witness Sertier testified that he sold a four-acre tract about a ■quarter of a mile north of the Sheahan property for four thousand dollars an acre.

Emil Dosenbach testified that'he-had made careful examination •of the property and'estimated-Sheahan’s damages at $17,300.

Mr. Jacobsmeyer testified to- a similar examination and estimated the damage at $17,369.

Mr. Morgan testified to such examination and placed the - damage at $17,396.

Mr. Keith testified that the Sheahan tract in November 1925, was .worth $2500 an acre, and Sheahan’s damage he estimated at eighteen thousand dollars.

*309 Frederick Pitzman, civil engineer, testified that the strip of Shea-han ’s property taken off was rendered useless and that another triangular piece would be nearly useless from a subdivision standpoint, and that the remainder of the land was damaged from a sewer standpoint because to drain it would necessitate going under the right-of-way, and an engineer in doing so would encounter a very serious problem.

Mr. Eemeley testified that -without figuring improvements the Sheahan property was worth about fifty thousand dollars, and averaged the property at three thousand dollars an acre.

The city introduced evidence tending to show the pipe line did not have the damaging effect testified to by defendant’s witnesses.

Mr. Wood testified that the Sheahan tract was worth about one thousand dollars an acre, and that the damage was about three thousand dollars caused by the right-of-way.

Mr. Shields testified that the tract was worth $36,000, and estimated the damage caused by the easement at $2,724.44.

Mr. Elbring testified for the city that the value of the Sheahan tract in November, 1925, was $1350 an acre. He estimated that the damage caused by the easement was two thousand dollars, and the value of the strip taken off by the right-of-way one thousand dollars.

It was shown on examination of Dr. Sheahan that he gave $18,500 for the thirty acres five years before, though he testified that values had greatly advanced since his purchase. It was further shown by the city that other tracts on the -road upon which the tract fronted were bought at an average of sixteen hundred dollars an acre, and one tract for a thousand dollars an acre.

We are unable to see from this evidence that the award of the jury indicates passion and prejudice. The trial court passed upon the weight of evidence, and we are not at liberty to disturb the court’s finding in that respect unless it is shown that the trial court’s discretion in that respect was abused, which does not appear.

A point is made that the alleged error is emphasized because three of the defendants’ witnesses, Dosenbach, Jacobsmeyer and Morgan, who substantially agreed on the amount of the damages, were the commissioners appointed by the court in the first place to assess the damages. Nothing in the record tends to show that those witnesses were biased in favor of the city or had temptation to render a large judgment in favor of the property owners. They probably gave the matter a more thorough investigation than the other witnesses and were therefore better competent to estimate the damages.

*310 *309 II. The appellant does not claim that those commissioners were not competent witpesses, bpt does claim that the jury, should pot *310 have been apprised that they were the commissioners who assessed damages originally, and complains that the court permitted tactics employed by defendants’ counsel in indirectly getting before the jury the fact that those three witnesses were the commissioners. The specific complaint is that it was brought out in the testimony of each of them that they were together when they examined the property for the purpose of estimating the damage, and substantially agreed on the amount of damage; that the jury would therefore infer that they had appraised the damage as commissioners.

When Mr. Dosenbach was on the stand the defendants’ counsel asked and he answered the following question:

“Q. With whom, if anyone, did you go on the land? A. The last time T went by myself.
“Q. And prior thereto did you go in company with others? A. Yes. sir. T was there with Mr. Morgan and Mr. Jacobsmeyer.
“Q. You were there with Mr. Morgan and Mr. Jacobsmeyer? A. Yes sir.”

There was no objection to this testimony. The witness then testified at length as to his knowledge of property in the city. Finally when the witness was asked his opinion of the damage the plaintiff made this objection in the absence of the jury:

“Mr. Bull: Your Honor, I will object to any testimony by this witness as to the valuation of this property or the damage sustained on account of the fact that the record shows he had been one of the commissioners in this case, and that any opinion advanced by him would be but a statement indirectly of the findings of the commissioners in the case.”

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.W.2d 951, 327 Mo. 305, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-st-louis-v-sheahan-mo-1931.