Commonwealth v. Combs

50 S.W.2d 497, 244 Ky. 204, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 394
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 24, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 50 S.W.2d 497 (Commonwealth v. Combs) 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
Commonwealth v. Combs, 50 S.W.2d 497, 244 Ky. 204, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 394 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion oe the Court by

Judge Richardson

Reversing.

This is the second appearance of this case in this court. See 229 Ky. 627, 17 S. W. (2d) 748. The state highway commission of Kentucky, in accordance with section 4356t-7, Ky. Stats., on April 26, 1928, instituted,' in the county court of Perry county, Ky., condemnation proceedings to condemn for highway purposes .871 of an acre of land owned by A. B. Combs, Alice D'avis, and others, ¡situated in Perry county, *206 Ky. Commissioners were appointed by the county court to assess the compensation which the owners were entitled to receive by reason of the taking of the land. The amounts assessed by the commissioners of the county were $1,000 for the value of the land taken and $600 resulting damage to the remainder of the tract. A. B. Combs, Ollie Combs, Alice Davis, and Charlie Davis filed in the county court exceptions to that part of the commissioner ’s report allowing to them $1,000 as the value of the land taken and $600 as damage resulting to the remainder of the tract. In their exceptions they fixed the .market value of the land taken at $7,000 and the resulting damage to the remainder at $3,000. They did not, in their exceptions, assert or claim any damage covering any item other than the two reported by the commissioners. On a trial of the exceptions by a jury in the county court, the damages were assessed by it at $2,6'3l3. On an appeal from the judgment of the county court to the circuit court, on a trial (by a jury, they were assessed at $7,500. On an appeal to this court the judgment of the circuit court was reversed because of the admission of incompetent evidence and excessive damages. The incompetent testimony chiefly considered in our former opinion related to the amount realized by the defendant A. B. Combs from a portion of the farm sold by him several years prior to the trial and the prices which he claimed he had been offered some years prior to the trial for other parcels of land, and to the amounts paid to other landowners for the right of way for a road over their land. It was our conclusion that such evidence was incompetent, and the appellant’s objection thereto should have been sustained.

Relating thereto, we used this language:

“If it should be conceded that testimony of that character might, under certain conditions be competent for what it was worth, we are clearly convinced that it was not so under the facts of this case. The sale of the lots was made under conditions' entirely different from those existing at the time of this trial in the circuit court, or at the time of filing this action in the county court. The strip of land sought to be condemned herein was much more removed from the valuable territory of the village than were the lots involved in the complained of testimony, and' the conditions affecting their value were much more favorable to its enactment than obtained at *207 the time of the filing of this action with reference to the involved strip .and consequential damages for its taking. Doubtless the pioneers, including defendants, in the launching of the village and giving it a place in Kentucky’s geography, possessed exaggerated dreams of its future outcome, and because thereof defendants were the recipients of the evident boom prices that prevailed for supposed eligible and desirable lots. There was no proof of a convincing nature that the village had grown in recent years, or that the conditions were such that it was reasonably probable that it would ever do so, and it is obviously certain that such testimony had a prejudicial effect on the minds of the jurors. It is a well-known fact of such universal prevalence as to entitle us to take judicial notice of it that under the circumstances and conditions prevailing at the time of the sale of the lots by defendants their price is generally doubled, trebled, and sometimes quadrupled because of their 'supposed advantageous location, and that the same character of property and not exceeding a block distant would command much less price.

“The prices that defendants had been offered for eligible town sites either for residences or business locations possessed the same demerits and the additional one that its probative value is so remote as to render it incompetent. The offer may not have been genuine, or may have been made by one who was financially unable to perform the terms of his offer, if accepted, and other similar contingencies, equally potent, might exist, establishing the irrelevancy of such testimony. Moreover, the offeree might be induced to reject the offer, not because of inadquacy of 'submitted prices, but for other reasons,_ sentimental or otherwise, and which furnishes additional grounds for the rejection of that character of testimony, and clearly so in the absence of other proof in the case eliminating the objections pointed. Indeed in this case A. B. Combs gave a sentimental reason as to why he did not accept the offered price for some lots, the amount of which he was permitted to state to the jury over plaintiff’s objection and exceptions. In discussing the same character of testimony, the text in Jones on Evidence, vol. 1, sec. 16, page 888, says: ‘Clearly evidence should not be received to prove what offers *208 have been made to sell or what prices have been ashed or refused. ’ In note 28 to that text cases supporting it from many courts of the country, both state and federal are cited, with none to the contrary. We therefore conclude that under the conditions of this record, as presented to us, all the testimony complained of under subdivision (a) of this ground was improperly admitted, and plaintiff’s objections thereto should have been sustained.”

See City of Hazard v. Eversole, 237 Ky. 242, 35 S. W. (2d) 313; West Ky. Coal Co. v. Dyer, 161 Ky. 407, 170 S. W. 967.

On a return of the case to the circuit court, instead of again offering the testimony of A. B. Combs which had been introduced on the former trial and which was held incompetent by this court, the appellees offered and the court permitted the jury to hear the testimony of Crawford relating to prices he had paid for two town lots years before the trial, and again permitted, over the objections of appellant, A. B. Combs to testify that he had been offered $4,000 for an acre of land, the opinion of this court to the, contrary, notwithstanding. 'He was also permitted to testify that he had donated to the county, on account of the land having been taken by the appellant for road purpose, other land on which a county road was constructed, and that the same was of the value of $300.

The major difference between the evidence discussed in our former opinion and that admitted on the last trial is, there A. B. Combs was permitted to relate the amount he realized from the sale of certain town lots, and here N. C. Crawford was permitted to relate the amounts he had paid for town lots in or near the village of Dolan. The statement of A. B. Combs as to the $4,000 offer for the acre is identical with his testimony on the first trial. While many of the questions which elicited such incompetent evidence were propounded to the witness by the court himself, yet the appellees acquiesced therein, and they may not now avail themselves of such palpable disregard of the former opinion of this court in this respect.

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.W.2d 497, 244 Ky. 204, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-combs-kyctapphigh-1932.