De Vore v. State Highway Commission

79 P.2d 852, 148 Kan. 20, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 135
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 11, 1938
DocketNo. 33,713
StatusPublished

This text of 79 P.2d 852 (De Vore v. State Highway Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Vore v. State Highway Commission, 79 P.2d 852, 148 Kan. 20, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 135 (kan 1938).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by '

Hutchison, J.:

This was an action for the value of land taken and damages to land remaining, arising out of the condemnation of certain lands for highway purposes, the land taken by condemnation proceedings being in addition to that originally purchased and conveyed when it was found more land was necessary for the construction and completion of the road.

The case has been twice tried to a jury. The judgment first, rendered was reversed on appeal to this court because the verdict was necessarily the result of passion and prejudice on the part of the jury, as decided and reported in 143 Kan. 470, 54 P. 2d 971. In that trial evidence was introduced over objection as to flood and other damage to the remainder of the land by reason of the construction of the highway. At the close of the introduction of the evidence of the plaintiffs the trial court struck out all such evidence and on the motion for new trial reduced the verdict by $1,431, and rendered judgment for the balance. On appeal the case was reversed and remanded for a new trial.

A new trial has been had which resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiffs for the sum of $4,750, of which amount $1,205.75, as shown by answers given by the jury to special questions, was for land taken, leaving a balance of $3,544.25 as damage to the land not taken. The appeal of the highway commission is from this judgment, claiming that the substantial rights of the highway commission were prejudiced by the admission of evidence of damages not flowing out of the condemnation or directly resulting therefrom. The appellant has in mind particularly the evidence of damage on account of obstructing ingress and egress of the farm.

On this last trial there was no evidence introduced as to damages to the remaining land by reason of floods and none by reason of the construction of the highway unless it was, as appellant contends, as to the matter of ingress and egress of the remaining land.

Appellees contend that this evidence as to ingress and egress was limited to the damage done the remaining land by the taking of the [22]*22additional land being now and here condemned and not by reason of -the original land conveyed for a highway or the construction of the highway. This damage to ingress and egress and the existence and condition of the borrow pits are the only two elements of damages here involved.

The petition, described the land taken as two tracts, but the evidence shows that the east tract, which is on both sides of Grouse ■creek, was subdivided into four different tracts, three of them adjoining each other and the fourth slightly separated from the three, but all of them immediately north of the originally conveyed right of way of the highway in question and containing a total acreage of 5.37. One of these four tracts contained 4.44 acres, and on the southern end of this large tract was a borrow pit where about four feet of dirt was taken off about one and a half acres. The other tract described in the petition was east of Silver creek and adjoined the right of way on the north. It was 1,050 feet long, east and west, and 200 feet wide, and contained 4.83 acres. It was used only as a borrow pit and was said to be from four to ten feet deep. The total amount of land taken by this condemnation was 10.2 acres. The farm from which this additional land was taken by the highway commission was one and a half miles east and west and a half mile north and south, all immediately north and adjacent to the highway. The amount of land remaining in the farm after the original conveyance and this condemnation was 552 acres.

Appellant cites Marts v. Freeman, 91 Kan. 106, 136 Pac. 943, which holds that damages to the landowner consequent upon an improvement properly made to a highway was paid for when the right of way was appropriated. This decision is in line with the holding of this court upon the former appeal with reference to damage by reason of floods or construction of the highway, and we have no hesitancy in saying that if this damage as to obstruction of ingress and egress was caused by the original construction of the highway nothing could be recovered therefor. There are some border-line cases cited in this connection where there was a change in the construction by the taking of additional land to widen the street, but the landowners base their entire claim in this case for damages on account of obstructed ingress and egress upon the condemning and taking of additional land and not upon the construction or improvement of the highway.

Special questions 6 and 7, answered by the jury, are as follows:

[23]*23“6. Do you find the ingress or egress to or from appellants’ land has been damaged by reason of the condemnation? A. Yes.
“7. If you answer question No. 6 in the affirmative, state the location of such damage. A. Entrance to feed lot and eighteen (18) acre tract east of Silver creek between Silver creek and bluff. Entrance to 4.44-acre tract east of Grouse creek.”

The evidence shows that east of- Silver creek there is a feed lot of about eighteen acres, and east of the feed lot is a bluff about thirty feet high. The driveway into this feed lot from the house west of Silver creek was on the highway across Silver creek, then to the north and then east along the northern boundary of the right of way. It was a sort of cattle trail about twelve feet wide, and a good, safe driveway past the very large trees and the south end of this high bluff, but when the highway commission condemned this narrow strip north of its original right of way there was not enough room left to drive between the condemned land and the bluff and the large trees on the north. So the entrance to the feed lot was cut off or destroyed by the condemnation of this narrow strip. Instead of the use of this driveway between the highway and the bluff, which was closed by the condemnation of this narrow strip, the commission constructed a private driveway for plaintiffs from the elevated highway down to the feed lot at a grade of about twenty-five percent, which was unfit for use of loaded wagons or the transporting of farm machinery. The question is, Was the obstructing of this private cattle trail or driveway to and from the feed lot, by reason of condemning it, a damage to the land not taken, especially when the substitute attempted to be made by the appellant was unfit for use?

The evidence shows a similar situation as to the three pieces of land condemned near Grouse creek and just north of the original right of way of the highway. The border private driveway had been along the northern line of the highway, and one and a half acres of the largest tract taken was made a borrow pit, which obstructed ingress and egress of land not taken in that vicinity. A possible, but dangerous, route is indicated as being under the bridge on a narrow strip of land at the edge of the creek, but like the new driveway near Silver creek, it was not fit or practicable for loads or machinery.

The evidence is ample as to both private driveways that they were obstructed by the appropriation of land by condemnation, and that the ingress and egress were not disturbed by the original con[24]*24struction of the highway.

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Related

Marts v. Freeman
136 P. 943 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1913)
Smith v. Board of County Commissioners
214 P. 104 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1923)
Claim of Sicks v. Board of County Commissioners
270 P. 607 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1928)
De Vore v. State Highway Commission
54 P.2d 971 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 P.2d 852, 148 Kan. 20, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-vore-v-state-highway-commission-kan-1938.