Joint Highway District No. 9 v. Ocean Shore Railroad

18 P.2d 413, 128 Cal. App. 743, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1205
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 18, 1933
DocketDocket No. 8134.
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 18 P.2d 413 (Joint Highway District No. 9 v. Ocean Shore Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joint Highway District No. 9 v. Ocean Shore Railroad, 18 P.2d 413, 128 Cal. App. 743, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1205 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

SPENCE, J.

This is a proceeding in eminent domain. Upon a trial by the court sitting without a jury plaintiff had judgment against defendants Ocean Shore Railroad Company and McNee, condemning a right of way for highway purposes over the property of said defendants. In its findings the trial court determined that the “fair market value” of the property of the defendant Ocean Shore Railroad Company was $95,000 and that the “fair market value” of the property of defendant McNee Company was $17,000, and entered its judgment accordingly. From this judgment plaintiff appeals.

As the entire controversy on this appeal involves the evidence and findings relating to the market value of the property condemned, it is appropriate that said property be briefly described. It consists of a strip of land 60 to 100 feet in width and approximately five miles in length, located in San Mateo County near the Pacific Ocean. This is a continuous strip, except for a small gap in the center which is of no concern on this appeal, extending from a point north of Pedro Point to a point to the south thereof. It is a part of the right of way which was used for railroad purposes until 1920 by the Ocean Shore Railroad, and a large portion of the property is located about 200 feet above the water on the steep bluffs overlooking the Pacific Ocean. It had been graded for the use of the Ocean Shore Railroad and was suitable for use for either railroad or highway purposes.

Pedro Point, above referred to, is on the shore line at the end of a spur which-runs in a westerly direction to the sea from a range of hills. This range of hills stretches southerly from the southwestern part of San Francisco to a point near the town of Boulder Creek, in the Santa Cruz Mountains, practically paralleling the shore line of the ocean for most of that distance. These hills rise to a considerable height, being approximately 2,500 feet above sea level at a point between Pescadero and Redwood City. There are heavily wooded watersheds on the westerly slopes of these hills where Pescadero, Butano and Q-asez Creeks run *749 down through fertile valleys to the ocean. Owing, to the existence of this range of hills and the spur running to Pedro Point, it is practically impossible at the present time to enter the territory on the ocean side of the range and south of the spur from the territory on the north or east thereof without climbing over either the range or the spur. In order to afford transportation facilities into this territory the Ocean Shore Railroad Company many years ago acquired the strip around Pedro Point and made improvements on this right of way which need not be described in detail. Suffice it to say that the grading project, in making a shelf around the precipitous cliffs near Pedro Point, was a difficult one, involving the removal of 1,600,000 cubic yards of material, almost one-half of which was solid rock. Por financial or other reasons the Ocean Shore Railroad was not built beyond Tunitas, but trains were run to that point for several years. The operation of the road was abandoned by the company in 1920 and its financial difficulties are now a matter of history. The rolling stock was sold and the tracks and ties were removed. All that remained was the roadbed, a portion of which is still owned by the company and is the subject of this litigation, together with that portion of the roadbed running across the McNee property. It is not disputed that the property here involved constitutes the only practical railway gateway into the territory referred to above and that the grading thereon constitutes ninety-five per cent of the work necessary to complete a roadbed for either a railroad or a highway. Various estimates were given of the reproduction cost less depreciation, the lowest of which estimates was well in excess of $600,000.

Upon the trial the parties asserted their respective claims regarding the market value of this property. Experts were called and the estimates of those produced by plaintiff were widely at variance with the estimates of those produced by defendants. Appellant’s witnesses saw no value in this strip of land other than its value as bare land located where “it was too steep to even raise goats”, and they therefore found it to have only a nominal market value. They admittedly did not take into consideration its availability for railroad or highway purposes. On the other hand, respondents’ witnesses did take into consideration the availability of the property for transportation purposes, and their *750 estimates of the market value ran from $250,000 to sums in excess of $500,000. To the testimony of all of these witnesses for respondents, counsel for appellant entered repeated objections. Practically all of these objections were overruled and it was agreed that the testimony was admitted "subject to a motion to strike. Such motion was thereafter .made by appellant to “strike out all of that testimony of the witnesses, Archibald Baker, H. G-. Butler, P. L. Burr, William James Ford, Harry G-. Burrows, Hussey, Sutton, "Middleton and Crosby, Lane and Wood”. This motion was made upon the ground “that the testimony here introduced • has not been testimony which showed market value, the testimony simply showing the value of the highest available use.” (Italics ours.) There were other grounds stated for striking the testimony of certain witnesses, but as they are not urged on this appeal we will not discuss them. The motion to strike was taken under submission with the cause upon its merits, but no ruling upon the motion appears in the record. A memorandum opinion was filed by the trial court at the time of announcing its decision and thereafter the findings and judgment were entered as above indicated.

Before proceeding to a discussion of the merits of the appeal we may state that a review of the record shows that there was ample evidence to support the trial court’s findings regarding the market value of the property. This is apparently conceded, but appellant contends that the “testimony of defendants’ witnesses was incompetent” and that appellant’s objections should have been sustained and appellant’s motion to strike should have been granted. Although appellant devotes a great deal of space to attacking certain statements of the trial court in its memorandum opinion, we shall proceed to a consideration of the above contentions which are directed to those matters which are properly before us and which, we believe, are determinative of this appeal.

As appellant’s motion to strike was directed at all of the testimony of all of respondents’ witnesses who had testified as to market value, we should first inquire as to whether there was any competent evidence given by any of said witnesses on this subject. Our examination of the record convinces us that there was much of the testimony on this *751 subject which was competent and was properly admitted by the trial court. The qualifications of these witnesses are not disputed. They were highly trained men, most of whom had devoted many years of their lives to engineering work, with particular reference to railroad construction, maintenance and valuation. In the opening brief counsel for appellant concedes that “they were all high-class experts” and we will not pause to state their respective qualifications.

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Bluebook (online)
18 P.2d 413, 128 Cal. App. 743, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joint-highway-district-no-9-v-ocean-shore-railroad-calctapp-1933.