Curfman v. State

240 S.W.2d 482, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2111
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 23, 1951
Docket14294
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 240 S.W.2d 482 (Curfman v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curfman v. State, 240 S.W.2d 482, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2111 (Tex. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinions

YOUNG, Justice.

The suit grows out of action taken by the State of Texas through the Commissioners’ Court of Rockwall County to condemn a 200-ft. strip on and over the land of appellants in the relocation of U. S. Highway No. 67. The landowners duly filed objections to award of the Commissioners and, upon jury trial and verdict in County Court, were again dissatisfied, charging various errors for which new trial should be granted. They have in due course perfected this appeal; challenging not only the jury award and judgment under the evidence, but also validity of the entire proceedings.

The 160-acre tract of appellants (north part) is already traversed by the MK&T Railway, running generally east and west, all improvements thereon being located on north boundary line adjacent to a public road. The land condemned, a strip 200 x 2518 ft., comprising some 11.563 acres, likewise runs across from east to west in lower part of tract which is made up of cultivated lands, pasture and meadow, intersected by fences. Grade of the new highway, as appellants claim, will be from one to two feet above ground level, interfering with the north to south natural flow of surface water on said farm.

The jury found the reasonable market value of the land condemned for highway purposes to be $1,445.38 and that there was no decrease in market value in and to the remaining portion.

The pleading of defendant landowners, appealing to County Court from the decision of condemnation Commissioners, alleges various irregularities with respect to choice of Commissioners and their method of procedure whereby the attempted condemnation was void; complaining at length of no attempt by County officials to agree on values or opportunity given defendants to settle any differences before proceeding to condemn; that the reasonable value of the strip taken was greatly in excess of the amount offered by the County; the following amount of damages being claimed: Reasonable market value of strip taken, $2,312.60 (11.563 acres at $200 per acre); lessened value of adjacent land, not less than $2,875.00; cost of additional fencing

[484]*484necessarily resulting from location of highway, $1,000; damage occasioned by change in natural flow of water over their land, $1,000.

Points of appeal may be thus summarized, viz.: Errors of the court (1) in refusing to sustain appellants’ peremptory instruction because of no proof of any effort made on part of the County to agree with the landowners, prior to institution of condemnation proceedings, on value of land involved or damages that would be sustained thereby; (2) in permitting ap-pellee to introduce in evidence before the jury the award of the condemnation Commissioners ; (3) in permitting the introduction in evidence, over objection, of the statement signed by Carl Miller, appellee’s attorney, that the Commissioners’ Court had “offered said defendants the sum of ($1,445.37) Fourteen Hundred Forty Five & 37/100 Dollars for said land and for damage, if any there be due said defendants, which said sum is the reasonable market value of said property, and is in excess of the damages which would be incurred, if any there be, by running said Highway through defendants’ land”; and the court should have sustained appellants’ motion to either withdraw such evidence from consideration by the jury or declare a mistrial; (4) in permitting named witnesses to testify without proper qualification as to knowledge of values with reference to appellants’ land (also to third party sales of land in the vicinity) ; (5) the jury verdict that adjacent land suffered no damage by reason of the Highway going through and that the value of the land taken was only $1,445.38, has no support in competent evidence; which evidence on the other hand fully supported a finding of $1,725 for the land taken and the damages to remaining land of not less than $20 to $25 per acre.

Appellee’s petition or statement in writing (first step toward condemnation, Art. 3264, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St.) followed the statute in allegations of inability to agree with landowners upon value of land or the damages. County Judge Lofland testified in such connection that W. N. Evans, right-of-way man relative to new Highway 67, had died prior to inception of these proceedings; that he (the witness) had written the Curfman heirs advising them of the maximum amount the County would pay for the land to be taken (no amount stated for 'damages in addition), receiving no replies; and had discussed the matter generally with Charles Curf-man, administrator. Glen Curfman testified to receipt of the letter, but that he had made no effort to see Judge Lofland, as “ * * * I was not seeking to sell the land”; Albert Curfman likewise testifying to receipt of the County offer to which he did not respond; and concerning later notices from condemnation Commissioners, that same were turned over to his attorney who told him not to appear. The foregoing is sufficient, we think, to satisfy the statutory requirement of an inability to agree on values and damages after a bona fide effort had been made by the party seeking to acquire the land. 16 Tex.Jur., Eminent Domain, secs. 117-180, pp. 731-816. There are cases where a failure to agree on value and damages has been made a fact issue; Malone v. City of Madisonville, Tex.Civ. App., 24 S.W.2d 483. Here, however, defendants did not except to an absence of a jury finding in such regard, merely requesting a peremptory instruction on ground of a total lack of evidence in that particular. In such state of the record the court was fully empowered to resolve the issue favorably to condemnor in the judgment rendered. Rodriguez v. Higgin-botham-Bailey-Logan Co., Tex.Civ.App., 172 S.W.2d 991, writ refused.

Contrary to a point urged by appellants, the jury award was in evidence before the court for jurisdictional purposes only, as disclosed by the court’s qualification to bill of exception No. 1. Appellee, however, did read to the jury on the trial its application for condemnation which contained allegations to effect that the County had offered a certain sum to defendants for their land and for damages “which said sum is the reasonable market value of said property, and is in excess of the damages which would be incurred * * As shown by similar qualification to bill of exception No. 2, the paper was thereafter placed in [485]*485the record for purpose of jurisdiction “and was not re-read to the jury, when offered in evidence.”

The original statement or application in writing for condemnation required by Art. 3264 is considered the equivalent of an original petition on appeal to the County Court; and a landowner, in his objections to the award, may challenge its sufficiency as in any other civil action. “Thus he may urge the absence or deficiency of jurisdictional allegations or the presence of irrelevant and prejudicial matters therein, * * 16 Tex.Jur., p. 799, sec. 166. In absence of an exception which should have been made to the allegations in question as surplusage, appellants are in no position to complain; Rule 90, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure; the action of ap-pellee being merely in conformity with further Rule 265, Texas Procedure, directing that “Plaintiff’s petition shall be read to the jury.”

Appellants in numerous bills of exception complain that, without proper qualification, the witnesses O. L. Stegar, Mason Gray, and R. L.

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Curfman v. State
240 S.W.2d 482 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
240 S.W.2d 482, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curfman-v-state-texapp-1951.