Jeffery v. Osborne

129 N.W. 931, 145 Wis. 351, 1911 Wisc. LEXIS 52
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 129 N.W. 931 (Jeffery v. Osborne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeffery v. Osborne, 129 N.W. 931, 145 Wis. 351, 1911 Wisc. LEXIS 52 (Wis. 1911).

Opinions

The following opinion was filed January 10, 1911:

WiNslow, C. J.

This is a proceeding by an electric railway company to condemn a strip of land 100 feet in width running through the manufacturing plant of the respondents at Kenosha. The case was once here upon an appeal from the verdict of a jury fixing the damages at $125,000 (Jeffery v. C. & M. E. R. Co. 138 Wis. 1, 119 N. W. 879), and the judgment was reversed and the action remanded for a new trial. While the case was pending here the railway company was placed in the hands of receivers in an action in the federal courts, and upon return of the case to the trial court such receivers were made parties defendant on their own application. A second trial resulted in a general verdict for [354]*354tbe plaintiffs, assessing the damages at $133,000. From judgment against the railway company upon this verdict the receivers have appealed.

Some preliminary questions are raised which will be first considered.

Immediately after the order made by the trial court admitting the receivers as parties to the action, they presented a petition for the removal of the case to the United States court on the ground that the case became one of federal cognizance, such receivers being officers of the United States and the matter in litigation involving property in the hands of such receivers. This application was denied and, as we think, rightly so.

The receivers came into the action not as necessary parties thereto, but simply as proper parties to maintain and defend the property rights which had been placed in their hands. They succeed to the interests of the railway company, but their rights in the case are no broader than the rights of the corporation itself. They take the suit as they find it, subject to the disabilities of the party whose interests they represent. Their presence raises' no question of federal cognizance. Speckert v. German Nat. Bank, 98 Fed. 151; Gableman v. P., D. & E. R. Co. 179 U. S. 335, 21 Sup. Ct. 171.

The judgment in the case was rendered in terms against the railroad company, and further provided that, upon payment into court of the amount of damages awarded, the exclusive use of the condemned premises should vest in the company for railroad purposes. The notice of appeal was entitled in the case, giving the names of both the company and the receivers as defendants, and gave notice that the receivers appealed from the judgment “rendered by the circuit court of Kenosha county in the action above entitled, entered on the 30th day of November, 1909, in said court in favor of the plaintiffs and against said defendants.” The undertaking accompanying the notice also described the judgment as [355]*355one recovered against tbe receivers. Upon these facts the respondents now claim, first, that the receivers have no right of appeal, and, second,, that they have not in fact taken an appeal.

Both contentions must be overruled. As before stated, the receivers were proper parties to the action. By their order of appointment they were required to take possession of the property of the defendant corporation, manage its business, and prosecute and defend all such actions as might be necessary or advisable for the proper protection of the property and the trust vested in them. It was plainly their duty to defend these proceedings, and just as plainly their duty to take an appeal from the judgment if, in the exercise of a reasonable and sound discretion, it seemed that prejudicial error had occurred, by reason of which the amount of the award had been increased. The strip in question had been taken possession of by the railroad company and $50,000 had been paid into court by the company as damages, being the amount awarded by the commissioners. The rights of the company in the strip were valuable and it was essential that those rights be protected by the receivers. As to the right of the receivers to appeal from the judgment there can be no serious question. The general rule is that where interests have been acquired in the subject of the controversy by legal succession, such as the interests acquired by administrators, or assignees in bankruptcy, or receivers, the persons acquiring such interests may, on being made parties to the proceeding, prosecute an appeal from a judgment against the party whose interests they represent. Elliott, Appellate Procedure, §§ 133, 131.

As to the form of the notice and undertaking on the appeal there is doubtless something to be desired. The judgment was not described with exact legal accuracy in either paper; nevertheless there was no possibility of mistake. The action was correctly entitled, and the dates and amount of the judgment properly given. It was called in the notice a judg[356]*356ment against tbe “defendants” and in tbe undertaking a judgment against tbe receivers, naming them in tbeir official capacity. In legal effect tbe judgment might properly be said to be a judgment against tbe receivers in tbeir official capacity, because while it did not bind them personally it way adverse to tbe interests of tbe trust which they represented and were bound to protect and defend, and in this sense was a judgment against them. In any event there could be no question as to tbe judgment which was referred to in tbe appeal papers, and tbe verbal inaccuracy, if any there was, in tbe notice and undertaking cuts no figure.

We pass now to tbe merits of tbe appeal. Tbe piece of land which has been condemned here is a strip 2.3 acres in extent and is 100 feet wide and 1,013 feet long north and south, running through a large automobile manufacturing plant. While it took no substantial buildings, it separated the principal buildings of tbe factory on tbe east from tbe testing track on tbe west and took space upon which a building bad already been begun. Tbe factory was situated in tbe outskirts of tbe city of Kenosha and there was vacant land to tbe west and to tbe north. Tbe witnesses for tbe plaintiff, who placed tbe damages at somewhere from $125,000 to $200,000, all testified that opportunity for expansion bad much to do with tbe value of manufacturing plants and sites, and tbe testimony was further to tbe effect that by tbe taking of this right of way tbe opportunity of expanding tbe factory upon tbe premises owned by the plaintiffs on tbe west was very seriously impaired, if not practically destroyed. Tbe plaintiff Thomas B. Jeffery himself testified that after tbe condemnation proceedings were commenced be bad purchased lands immediately north of bis buildings and east of tbe right of way, comprising something less than thirty acres, at $1,100 to $1,200 per acre, and that be also purchased a block of land on tbe east of bis factory for $24,200. Upon these premises so purchased be bad erected additional factory [357]*357buildings and thus expanded tbe plant. It was also admitted on tbe trial tbat at tbe time of the taking vacant land could be bought immediately north of the plaintiffs’ buildings for $1,100 to $1,200 per acre.

Mr. F. L. Mitchell, being called as a witness for the plaintiffs, testified that in his opinion the plaintiffs’ plant was worth $500,000 before the taking of the strip in question and $350,000 to $315,000 immediately after the taking, and that opportunity for expansion had much to do with the value. Upon cross-examination Mr. Mitchell was asked the following question in several different forms and upon objection the evidence was excluded:

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Bluebook (online)
129 N.W. 931, 145 Wis. 351, 1911 Wisc. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffery-v-osborne-wis-1911.