M & a Electric Power Cooperative v. True

480 S.W.2d 310, 1972 Mo. App. LEXIS 835
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 27, 1972
Docket9101
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 480 S.W.2d 310 (M & a Electric Power Cooperative v. True) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M & a Electric Power Cooperative v. True, 480 S.W.2d 310, 1972 Mo. App. LEXIS 835 (Mo. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

STONE, Judge.

In this proceeding, M & A Electric Cooperative (Cooperative) has condemned a perpetual easement for a right-of-way, 110 feet in width, across certain described tracts in Dunklin County, Missouri, including two noncontiguous farms owned by Chester True and Martha Virginia True, his wife, for the construction and maintenance of high voltage electric transmission lines. One of the True farms was an 80-acre tract referred to as Tract 17, the other a 40-acre tract referred to as Tract 18. In accordance with our statutory procedure [Chapter 523, RSMo 1969, V.A.M.S.], commissioners were appointed who assessed damages of $5,720 for the right-of-way easement across Tract 17 and $345 for such easement across Tract 18. The issues raised by subsequent exceptions of the Cooperative and of defendants True as to each tract were, by agreement of the parties, consolidated for trial by jury in the circuit court with a separate verdict to be returned as to each tract. From the judgment entered upon such verdicts assessing damages of $8,000 as to Tract 17 and $500 as to Tract 18, the Cooperative appeals.

The Cooperative’s 110-foot right-of-way easement runs diagonally across Tract 17 and subjects approximately 5.2 acres to that servitude; and the Cooperative’s 161M-volt overhead transmission lines are carried across that tract on two dual-pole structures, in each of which two 75-foot poles are set approximately 15 feet apart, and a third dual-pole structure in which two 80-foot poles are similarly set, with a minimum above-ground line clearance of 28 to 29 feet between structures. There is one dual-pole structure in a corner of Tract 18 and about .26 acre is subject to the Cooperative’s easement.

With the exception of “the farm site” where the dwelling and outbuildings were located, Tract 17 was devoted principally to cotton. As one witness described it “that is good land” which always has had “a very rank crop on it . . . very tall matted cotton.” Six witnesses for defendants True offered opinions (a) as to the fair market value of 80-acre Tract 17 prior to the taking of the right-of-way easement which ranged from $46,000 to $40,000, (b) as to the fair market value of that tract after the taking which ranged from $35,000 to $30,000, and (c) as to the resulting damage which ranged from $12,-000 by two witnesses and $10,000 by another to a low figure of $8,000 by three witnesses. In explanation and support of their opinions concerning resulting damage, witnesses for defendants True mentioned several elements, including allegedly severe hindrance in and limitation of aerial spraying of crops upon 25 to 30 acres by reason of the transmission lines angling across that portion of Tract 17, the inconvenience and difficulty of using modern farming equipment such as a six-row cultivator near the dual-pole structures, the necessity of and the labor and expense incident to controlling Bermuda or Johnson grass and weeds in the uncultivated areas around those structures, and the “ugliness” and “unsightliness” of the angling trans *313 mission lines and the structures. 1 Four witnesses for the Cooperative offered opinions (a) as to the fair market value of Tract 17 prior to the taking which ranged from $40,000 to $32,000, (b) as to the fair market value of that tract after the taking which ranged from $38,800 to $31,100, and (c) as to the resulting damage which ranged from $1,200 by one witness and $1,050 by another to a low figure of $900 by two witnesses.

With respect to 40-acre Tract 18, the six witnesses for defendants True offered opinions (a) as to the fair market value of that tract prior to the taking which ranged from $21,000 to $19,000, (b) as to the fair market value of the same tract after the taking which ranged from $19,600 to $17,800, and (c) as to the resulting damage which ranged from $1,400 by one witness, $1,200 by another, and $1,000 by two witnesses to a single low figure of $500. The four witnesses for the Cooperative offered opinions (a) as to the fair market value of Tract 18 prior to the taking which ranged from $20,000 to $16,000, (b) as to the fair market value of that tract after the taking which ranged from $19,800 to $15,900, and (c) as to the resulting damage which ranged from $225 by one witness and $200 by another to a low figure of $100 by two witnesses.

Appellant Cooperative’s first point is that “the trial court erred in not declaring a mistrial at plaintiff’s request when defendants’ counsel injected ‘financial condition’ and made other prejudicial erroneous, inflammatory statements before the jury during his voir dire examination.’’ The statement of which the Cooperative complains was that: “The other parties involved in this lawsuit are the Production Credit Association and John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company, who have deeds of trust against the property here involved, and also named as defendants, who are not present in court today.” No other portion of the voir dire examination is preserved in the transcript. However, it is shown affirmatively that other segments of the voir dire both preceded and followed the quoted statement, and that the “voir dire [way] concluded without objection,” after which certain “proceedings” were had out of the hearing of the jury panel, in the course of which the Cooperative’s legists reverted in this wise to the above-quoted statement by opposing counsel: “At this time, out of the hearing of the jury, plaintiff objects to that statement to this entire panel, and moves for a mistrial . This was a deliberate attempt to place financial conditions before this jury by reciting about a deed of trust, et cetera.” (All emphasis herein is ours.)

It would appear that, since no objection or motion for a mistrial was interposed when the statement of which the Cooperative now complains was made, the subsequent motion at the dose of the voir dire examination was not timely and thus no reversible error could be predicated upon the denial of that motion. 2 Nevertheless, we have, ex gratia, considered this point on its merits.

The argument of Cooperative’s counsel rests on these facts, to wit, (a) that prior to trial on October 15, 1970, i. e., on January 27, 1970, defendant John Hancock Life Insurance Company (John Hancock), the cestui que trust in a deed of trust executed by defendants True on February 10, 1967, by which they conveyed Tract 18 to defendant Hugh G. Duncan, as trustee, had *314 filed in this cause its written “Disclaimer” of “any interest in any award in the condemnation proceedings” but in which it declared that this “shall not affect the priority, validity or enforceability” of the aforesaid deed of' trust, and (b) that trustee Duncan had filed a similar “Disclaimer” on February 17, 1970. On these record facts, counsel assert that “John Hancock no longer retained its status as a ‘party’ in this proceeding” and that reference by the Trues’ attorney “to the deed of trust could have no other purpose except to inject the financial condition of [the Trues] before the jury.”

“A party to an action is a person whose name is designated on the record as plaintiff or defendant” and those named as defendants remain parties, even though not served with process. Downey v.

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Bluebook (online)
480 S.W.2d 310, 1972 Mo. App. LEXIS 835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-a-electric-power-cooperative-v-true-moctapp-1972.