Dietrichs v. Lincoln & Northwestern Railroad

12 Neb. 225
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 12 Neb. 225 (Dietrichs v. Lincoln & Northwestern Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dietrichs v. Lincoln & Northwestern Railroad, 12 Neb. 225 (Neb. 1881).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

This cause was brought to the court below on appeal by the Lincoln & Northwestern Railroad Company, from the award of commissioners, appointed on the application of said railroad company, to appraise the value of the two lots and the improvements thereon, of William Dietrichs, in the city of Columbus, Platte county, taken by said railroad company for the use of its railroad.

The issue tried by the district court was a plain and simple one. As agreed by stipulation, it was as follows: “What was the market value of lots one and two, in block seventy-five, in the city of Columbus, Platte county, including the buildings and fixtures thereon, on the 80th day of March, 1880?” On the trial the said William Dietrichs was sworn as a witness in his own behalf. Upon his direct examination he testified that he was acquainted with the market value of the property in question, on the 30th day of March, 1880, and that the market value thereof, at that time, was six hundred dollars. That the market value of the buildings, etc,, at that time, was the sum of four hundred dollars, and the market value of the land was two hundred dollars. Thereupon his direct examination closed, and the counsel for [228]*228the railroad company entered upon the cross-examination of the said William Dietrichs, and asked him the following questions, to-wit:

“Q. What did you pay for those lots ?” The counsel for the said William Dietrichs objected to the question as incompetent and immaterial. The court overruled the objection, and decided that the testimony thereby sought ' to be introduced was competent and material, to fix the value of the property in question, which ruling was duly excepted to by the said William Dietrichs, whereupon the witness answered that he did not remember. Thereupon counsel for the said railroad company put the following question to the witness :
“Q. You bought them at the administrator’s sale?” Witness answered, “ I think so.”

Thereupon the counsel of the railroad company, to refresh the recollection of the witness, produced certain records, being court journal “A,” of Platte county district-court, at page 407, being record of administration sale, had and made on the 10th day of April, 1877, in the estate of Alexander B. Maleom, and read to said witness, in the presence of the court and jury, from said record, as follows:

In the matter of the estate of Alexander B. Maleom,. of Pottawottamie county, lot one, block 75, fractional,, was sold to William Dietrichs for seventy-five cents.. Lot two, block 75, sold to William Dietrichs for seventy-five cents.” And then asked of the witness: “ Now-state what you paid for these lots ? ” The said William Dietrichs, by his counsel, objected to the question and the reference by counsel to the said record as incompetent and irrelevant. The court overruled the objection, which was duly excepted to, and thereupon witness answered in substance that the property in question was bought by him about that time at administrator’s sale, and it was the only property ever pur[229]*229-chased by him in that block, and that when the record says that was the price paid, it must be so.

The court instructed the jury, among other things, as follows:

“In determining the value of the lots in question, you .are at liberty to take into consideration the price paid by defendant for them, together with all other evidence given in the ease.”

The jury found the value of the property to be four hundred and fifty dollars, whereupon the court, after overruling the motion of the said William Dietrichs for a new trial, rendered judgment in his favor and against the said Lincoln & Northwestern Railroad Company, for the sum of four hundred and fifty dollars.

The court also adjudged that the court and clerk’s fees be paid by the said William Dietrichs, and that each of said parties otherwise pay their own costs. In this court • error is claimed by both parties.

No other species of property has so rapidly appreciated in value, within the past few years, as the more eli.gibly located lots in our larger railroad towns and cities. The price at which such lots were sold but a few years ago would not furnish the slightest evidence of their market value now.

The question before the supreme court of New Hamp.shire in Marsh v. The Portsmouth & Concord Railroad Co., 19 N. H., 372, cited by counsel for the railroad company, was upon the admissibility of evidence as to the price at which a certain piece of property was sold'at the administrator’s sale, no question being raised as to the lapse of time since such sale.

The price at which the lots in question were sold, according to the record read by counsel for the railroad company, was ridiculously small in 1877, but had it been the fair value of the lots then, that fact would furnish no criterion of their value in 1880, and the admission in [230]*230.evidence — substantially of the record, showing that the whole of the real property in question was once sold for .a dollar and a half, was only calculated to' belittle, and east ridicule upon the claim of the claimant, and shed no intelligent light upon the question being tried.

•Counsel for the Lincoln & Northwestern Railroad Company make the objection that the bill of exceptions does-not even purport to contain all of the testimony given at the trial. This objection would doubtless be well taken, were this a ease in which it is sought to reverse the-judgment on the ground that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence.

Sec. 309 of the code reads as follows: “ No particular form of exception is required. The exception must be stated with so much of the evidence as is necessary to-explain it, and no more, and the whole as briefly as possible.”

Under this provision of law we think the bill of exceptions in this case contains all that is necessary; the exception being to the admissibility of the testimony, and not to its sufficiency. Had none but legal testimony been admitted, there would certainly have been no error in the court telling the jury to consider all the testimony before them, so that the principal error consists in the admission of testimony improper to be considered.

It may not be amiss to say in this connection that, in the matter of settling bills of exceptions, there are some duties devolved upon the attorney representing the opposite side. In this case, the certificate of the judge is that. “ The foregoing is the substance of all the testimony offered or given by either party to this cause, on the subject as to the price paid for said lots by appellee, at the time of his purchase thereof.” And the certificate of the attorneys of the Lincoln & Northwestern Railroad Company thereto is as follows: “ We have examined the foregoing bill of exceptions, and find the same correct,”1 [231]*231etc. "While we are not prepared to say that in all cases a certificate of opposite counsel like the above, would estop them from raising any point as to the sufficiency of the bill of- exceptions, yet in a case like this, where the exception is confined to one point, and that a very narrow one, an objection should not be heg,rd after counsel have agreed to its sufficiency, as above.

The Lincoln and Northwestern Eailroad Company also present a petition in error in this case, and assign the following errors:

1st.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Neb. 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dietrichs-v-lincoln-northwestern-railroad-neb-1881.