Franklin County v. Bailey

63 S.W.2d 622, 250 Ky. 528, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 739
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 6, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 63 S.W.2d 622 (Franklin County v. Bailey) 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
Franklin County v. Bailey, 63 S.W.2d 622, 250 Ky. 528, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 739 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Reversing.

Mrs. Venia Bailey instituted suit in the Franklin circuit court for the récovery of damages for a 60-foot right of way taken by Franklin county across her farm for a public road, in which action she recovered a verdict and- judgment thereon for $1,054, interest, and costs.

To reverse this judgment, the defendant, Franklin county, prosecutes this appeal.

Mrs. Venia Bailey is the owner of a small farm situated in Franklin county on the old Bald Knob pike and containing 43.07 acres. In 1927, the state highway commission determined to reconstruct and relocate this Bald Knob pike as a part of its State Primary System extending between Frankfort and New Castle. Its relocation of this highway, according to its survey, was made to leave the course of the old county road at this Yenia Bailey farm, where it shifted from the left to the right of the creek and so extended across her farm, as *532 a 60-foot right of way thereover, as to divide her farm, leaving a strip of some 7 acres on its one side, with the remainder of some 35 acres of her land on the other.

Pursuant to such relocation of this road, the highway commission prepared deeds calling for the conveyance to it of the right of way lands along this route that were required for the construction of this road, which it forwarded to the appellant connty to secure due execution thereof by the property owners.

As became the appellant county’s duty, under section 4356U7- of the Statutes, upon the receipt of these deeds, it proceeded to procure the required conveyance of this desired right of way, and after some negotiations looking to this end with the appellee, Yenia Bailey, and 'her husband, they signed and acknowledged a deed conveying this 60-foot strip of land across Mrs. Bailey’s' farm to the commission, for the recited consideration of the benefits to be received from the construction of the new road thereover and upon the further terms, also incorporated in the deed, that the farm spring shown located on said right of way thereby undertaken fo be conveyed was not to be injured or impaired in any way, and, further, that the grantor, Mrs. Bailey, was to be paid for any fencing thereby rendered necessary in case any one else was paid therefor.

While this .deed executed by Mrs. Bailey, purporting to convey this right of way to the commission, was also signed and acknowledged by her husband, A. A. Bailey, he was not mentioned in its nominating clause or in the body of the deed as joining therein with his wife, Venia Bailey, as a grantor.

After deeds to the desired right of way were acquired, construction work upon the road was begun, when the appellant county, finding that appellee’s spring, located within the right of way, would be injured or destroyed thereby, directed the contractor, at the expense of the county, to take such steps as found needed to save it from impairment. Acting upon such instruction, the contractor consulted with Mr. Bailey, appellee’s husband, as to the best way to preserve the spring from its threatened injury by the road construction, when it was decided that this could best be done by digging down to the underground stream and tracing the spring water vein to a point beyond about 10 *533 feet distant and outside of the right of "way, where he would construct and inclose it in a new spring basin. This he testifies he successfully did in every particular in a proper way, at the county’s cost of $472. Also, that when the spring was thus preserved, it was turned over to the appellee in the spring of 1929 and accepted and used by her apparently with entire satisfaction, so far as appellant was informed.

Thereafter, in August, 1930, the appellee, without having ever notified the appellant that the spring as relocated was unsatisfactory or making any complaint as to any failure by the county to perform in any respect its agreement made with appellee for the right of way .as incorporated in the writing purporting to convey it, filed suit in the Franklin circuit court against appellant, Franklin county, wherein she sought to recover: (1) Damages of $100 for the alleged. unlawful taking of the 60-foot strip of her land for the right of way; (2) $340, cost of fencing made necessary; (3) $500 as damages to her tenant house caused by water backing up against it due to the construction of the road fill; (4) $1,000 as damages for injury done the spring; and (5) $1,500 as consequential damage to her farm through the diminution of its value by reason of the taking of her land for highway purposes — or a total of $3,440.

The appellant county, defendant below, filed demurrers to the petition, which were overruled, and also filed its answer and counterclaim, whereby it traversed all the material allegations of the petition, and by paragraph 2 further affirmatively pleaded that the writing signed by appellee, even if ineffectual as a deed, yet constituted a valid signed memorandum of a contract to convey the land; and further that, even if the writing was void for all purposes, the appellee was estopped by her conduct from claiming damages for the commission’s use of her strip of land; also, that appellee could not maintain her action until she returned the $472.20 expended by appellant in performing its contract to preserve the spring; and finally, by counterclaim, sought specific performance of appellee’s and husband’s written instrument, requiring them to execute a deed conveying the strip of land according to its term’s and conditions.

Appellee’s demurrer to each of the affirmative de-. *534 fenses tiras interposed was by tbe lower court sustained, when a trial was bad npon tbe issne presented only npon appellant’s traverse of tbe allegations of tbe petition. Tbe trial conrt, over appellant’s objection, permitted appellee to introduce evidence as to each item of alleged damage, separately, fixing tbe value of tbe land taken, cost of fencing, damage to tbe farm caused by tbe alleged injury to tbe spring, damage to tbe tenant bouse caused by tbe backing up against it of water, due to tbe permanent fill, and tbe damage to tbe farm as a whole caused by reason of tbe taking of tbe strip of land, considering it in relation to tbe entire tract of which it was a part.

At tbe conclusion of tbe evidence, the court overruled appellant’s motion for a peremptory .instruction and submitted tbe question of damage to tbe jury by eight instructions particularizing each item thereof as claimed by appellee in her petition. By instruction No. 9, tbe jury was directed to separate the items of damage awarded, and also it was orally instructed, by agreement of tbe parties, that, nine or more of tbe jury could make a verdict.

On April 30, 193Ü, tbe jury returned tbe following verdict:

“We, tbe jury, find for tbe plaintiff—

Under Instruction for the land used for

tbe right of way ....'..$ 80.00

Under Instruction #2 for the fencing tbe

sum of ... 334.00

Under Instruction #3 for tbe spring tbe

sum of . 500.00

Under Instruction #4 no damage.

Under Instruction #5 for tbe damage to

tbe 7 acres cut off from tbe rest of tbe

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Bluebook (online)
63 S.W.2d 622, 250 Ky. 528, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franklin-county-v-bailey-kyctapphigh-1933.