Kohn Enterprises, Inc. v. City of Overland Park

557 P.2d 771, 559 P.2d 771, 221 Kan. 230, 1977 Kan. LEXIS 213
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 7, 1977
Docket48,092
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 557 P.2d 771 (Kohn Enterprises, Inc. v. City of Overland Park) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kohn Enterprises, Inc. v. City of Overland Park, 557 P.2d 771, 559 P.2d 771, 221 Kan. 230, 1977 Kan. LEXIS 213 (kan 1977).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered ’by

Harman, C.:

This is an appeal by the condemner in an eminent domain proceeding in which the landowner was awarded damages by a jury in distriot court for restriction of access to its property.

On October 29, 1971, the city of Overland Park filed its petition in eminent domain to acquire an interest in land owned by Kohn Enterprises, Inc., in connection with the city’s improvement of the intersection located at 63d street (U. S. highway No. 50) and Foster street. The interest to be acquired was described as a temporary construction easement on an L-shaped tract on Kohn’s land consisting of a strip ten by seventy-eight feet along U. S. 50 and fifteen by fifty feet along Foster street. Kohn owned a rectangular tract in the northwest quadrant of the intersection with a frontage of 170 feet on U. S. 50 and 610 feet on Foster street upon which it operated a restaurant and a ninety-three unit motel. The petition made no mention of the acquisition or restriction of Kohn’s access to its land.

Prior to the improvement a rock wall existed along the east side of Kohn’s property adjoining Foster street southward to a stop *231 sign along the northeast side of a large sign on Kohn’s property which advertised its business. North of the sign there was no access to Kohn’s property on Foster street. This sign was about forty to forty-four feet north of a catch basin or storm sewer at the intersection. Kohris south property line was about fifteen to seventeen feet south of the sign; however, there was no defined boundary line or demarcation at the comer of the intersection between the asphalt on die streets and that on Kohns property leading into its restaurant and motel, with the result traffic could and did regularly turn oflf Foster street, south of the commercial sign, onto Kohn’s property. Traffic could similarly turn oif U. S. 50 onto the motel property. The motel restaurant and office were in a building adjoining the west line of Kohn’s property with two separate motel units, separated by a swimming pool, to the north or rear. Prior to the taking there was free access to Kohns property along its 170-foot frontage on U. S. 50 although the front part of the restaurant and office building was less than a car length north of the highway right-of-way.

The court-appointed appraisers filed their report appraising Kohn’s damage by reason of the temporary construction easement. The amount so awarded was paid into court December 17, 1971. Kohn appealed the matter to district court.

Thereafter as a part of its street improvement program the city made several changes in the intersection, which program had been completed at the time of trial. The grade along Foster street adjoining Kohn’s property on the west was lowered. At the intersection both U. S. 50 and Foster streets were widened to provide protective left turn lanes and an exclusive right turn lane on Foster; the lanes were clearly defined and channelized by the use of raised medians; on the outside new curb- and guttering were provided; a large steel pole with a mast arm out from the pole for a traffic signal was. installed at the northwest corner of the intersection; the pole was on the existing right-of-way between the curb and Kohn’s property line. A curb about five or six inches high was erected around the northwest -comer of -the intersection in order to protect the pole. The curbing extended from -the commercial sign around the corner and continued westward for a distance of seventy-eight feet along U. S. 50.

Recause of these changes restricting its access Kohn constructed a new thirty foot driveway from Foster street onto its property about 100 to 130 feet north of the sign.

*232 After Kohn had taken its appeal from the appraiser’s award and prior to trial herein this court decided the case of McCall Service Stations, Inc. v. City of Overland Park, 215 Kan. 390, 524 P. 2d 1165, opinion filed July 17, 1974, involving a property in the same condemnation which was directly across the intersection east of Kohn’s motel. Thereafter the city attempted to secure from the trial court a pretrial ruling that no evidence should be received as to anything that happened after December 17, 1971, the date of the taking of the property, and further that there has been no compensable taking of access from Kohn. Its argument was that the city had not taken access but had only regulated trafile in a reasonable manner and in no event should an inverse condemnation for a restricted access claim be combined with a proceeding involving a direct condemnation. The trial court declined to make the pretrial rulings sought but in doing so made it clear the taking of access would be an issue in the trial, that it would hear evidence and then rule on the matter prior to submission of the damage issue to the jury.

Trial proceeded accordingly at which both sides offered evidence. The jury found the value of the entire tract prior to the taking to be $600,000 and after the taking to be $580,750, thereby awarding Kohn $19,250 damages. This appeal by the city ensued.

The three points raised by the city on appeal are closely related, with some overlapping in the arguments made in support. As stated in its brief they are:

“I. The Court erred to the prejudice of the condemnor in its ruling that parol evidence was admissible to show an alleged taking of access or other interest in landowner’s property.
“II. The Court erred to the prejudice of the condemnor in failing to determine as a matter of law prior to trial whether or not the condemnor acquired access to landowner’s property thereby requiring the case to be tried on two different conflicting and inconsistent theories.
“HI. The Court erred to the prejudice of condemnor in its ruling that the evidence showed a compensable taking of access rather than a noncompensable regulation of traffic.”

The argument in support of the first two amounts to this: Evidence as to any damage to Kohn’s property beyond that which was stated to be taken in the eminent domain petition (a temporary construction easement) was, over the city’s objection, improperly received by the trial court; an alleged taking, not mentioned in a formal condemnation proceeding, is a de facto taking and the subject of an inverse condemnation, which should not be combined *233 and heard at the same time with a formal condemnation; that to do so requires a case to be tried on two different, conflicting and inconsistent theories; that the court’s failure to rule prior to trial whether or not access had been taken had this result, all to the city’s prejudice.

In Brock v. State Highway Commission, 195 Kan. 361, 404 P. 2d 934, we said:

“In all condemnation cases the only question presented for the jury’s determination is the loss to the owner because of the property taken. The fact that there was a taking has been previously determined by the court. . . .
“. . . [I]n an inverse condemnation proceeding a trial court should either instruct the jury that there was a compensable taking or direct a verdict for the defendant.” (pp. 366-367.)

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Bluebook (online)
557 P.2d 771, 559 P.2d 771, 221 Kan. 230, 1977 Kan. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kohn-enterprises-inc-v-city-of-overland-park-kan-1977.