Fifer v. Ritter

159 Ind. 8
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1902
DocketNo. 19,836
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 159 Ind. 8 (Fifer v. Ritter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fifer v. Ritter, 159 Ind. 8 (Ind. 1902).

Opinion

Hadley, J.

— Appellees filed before the board of commissioners of Marshall county their petition for a public highway, and afterwards, upon a favorable report of the view[10]*10ers, appellant filed his remonstrance for damages. The reviewers awarded him a small amount, from which award he appealed t'o the circuit court, where the verdict of the jury was against him. A new trial was granted him, whereupon the venue was changed to the Eulton Circuit Court. In the latter court the jury also returned a verdict adverse to appellant.

Some attempt has been made to bring before us the sufficiency of the report of the first viewers, by invoking consideration of appellant’s motion to reject the same filed before the commissioners upon the presentation of said report. The question, however, can not be considered for two reasons: (1) Because the motion to reject is not brought into the record by bill,of exceptions, or otherwise; and (2) because, on appeal to the circuit court, the motion was not renewed or presented. It has been decided by this court very many times that such eases on appeal to the circuit court are triable de novo; and while, on appeal, no question can be considered that was not presented to the commissioners, — those questions that were so presented must be brought forward and properly presented in the circuit court, the same as if they had not been raised below. Trittipo v. Beaver, 155 Ind. 652, and cases collated.

The record does disclose that after the first trial in the circuit court, and after the case had gone into another county for trial and a large amount of costs had accumulated, appellant requested leave of the court to refile his motion to reject the viewers’ report presented to the commissioners. The court refused to open the issues and permit the motion to be filed, which action was but the exercise of a reasonable discretion, and is not reviewable.

This appeal is from the judgment of the circuit court, and, under the state of the record, the judgment comes here upon the assumption that all the proceedings in the case up to and including the appointment of reviewers to assess appellant’s damages were valid. This narrows the appeal [11]*11to the single assignment which calls in question the action of the court in overruling the motion for a new trial.'

Complaint is made of certain instructions given to the jury. Number two informed the jury that they were the exclusive judges of the credibility of the witnesses and of the weight of their testimony, and that in determining these things they must take into consideration the interest, the appearance upon the witness stand, the intelligence, the opportunities for learning the truth concerning the things testified about, the apparent candor and correctness of the statements as compared with the usual and ordinary nature of things. The particular assault upon the instruction is directed against the word must, as being an encroachment upon the absolute and exclusive right of the jury. We can not adopt this view. Must is here employed in the sense of duty, and the term is equivalent to telling the jury that it was their duty to consider the matters enumerated in estimating the credibility and weight of the testimony. And it clearly was their duty. It was unquestionably their duty to decide the case according to the weight, — that is according to the convincing force, of the evidence, honestly arrived at, and just as plainly their duty to test the value of the testimony of each witness by such tests as common experience has proved to be reliable. Will any one say that a juror may discharge his duty by closing his eyes to the manner, conduct, and appearance of witnesses while delivering their testimony, and giving to the naked words of each witness full and equal probative force ? The competency of evidence is one thing, and its weight another. Competency is purely a question of law for the court to declare. Its weight is a question for the jury to determine. So when a judge tells the jury that it is proper for them to consider the interest, manner, etc., of the witnesses, as it is usually phrased, he is but ruling as he may rightly rule that such evidence is competent; and, in searching for the fact established by the evidence, it is the duty of the [12]*12jury to consider all competent evidence that may throw light upon the truth, and it is no less essential to a correct result, and quite as much the jury’s duty to consider facts and circumstances properly before them, which go to discredit a witness or to strengthen his testimony, as it is to consider the statements made by the witnesses. The cases of Woollen v. Whitacre, 91 Ind. 502, Unruh v. State, ex rel., 105 Ind. 117, Duvall v. Kenton, 127 Ind. 178, and perhaps some others, so far as they may seem to hold to a different rule, are no longer authorities upon the question here involved. That which seems the more reasonable view expressed above,'and which follows Deal v. State, 140 Ind. 354, 366, Newport v. State, 140 Ind. 299, 302, Smith v. State, 112 Ind. 288, and Keesier v. State, 154: Ind. 242, may now be said to be the approved rule.

The objections to the third, fourth, and eighth instructions are not urged.

By number five, the court, in substance, instructed the jury that when one’s property is taken for the location of a public highway, the owner is entitled to a just compensation for what is taken, including compensation for inconveniences imposed, and for such additional fences as may reasonably be required by the opening of the highway. But it is not essential that the compensation rendered shall be in money or other property. Benefits accruing to the land upon which the highway is laid by reason of its establishment thereon, if any, are to be reckoned as compensation, and if such benefits equal the amount of damages then there can be no recovery. This was proper. See Gas Light, etc., Co. v. City of New Albany, 158 Ind. 268.

As to the sixth instruction, appellant complains of the following language: “If the new fences add to the value of the farm as much as it was worth to build them, then the plaintiff is not entitled to anything on this account.” We see nothing improper in this.

[13]*13About two acres constituting a fringe along the margin of the river was cut off by the highway from the main farm, and further complaint is made of the sixth instruction because the court told the jury that if they found that the part cut off was rendered useless to the plaintiff, then he was entitled to recover on that account whatever the usable value of the fringe might be. The court made his meaning full and clear and favorable to the plaintiff by adding “he still owns the title, but whatever value has-been taken from him, — that is, taken from his farm by this cutting off, — that he is entitled to recover.”

The most earnest contention is over the seventh.

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Bluebook (online)
159 Ind. 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fifer-v-ritter-ind-1902.