McCall Service Stations, Inc. v. City of Overland Park

524 P.2d 1165, 215 Kan. 390, 1974 Kan. LEXIS 511
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 17, 1974
Docket47,350
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 524 P.2d 1165 (McCall Service Stations, 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
McCall Service Stations, Inc. v. City of Overland Park, 524 P.2d 1165, 215 Kan. 390, 1974 Kan. LEXIS 511 (kan 1974).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Schroeder, J.:

This is an appeal by the landowner in an eminent domain proceeding, initiated by the City of Overland Park, from the award of the court appointed appraisers.

On the 29th day of October, 1971, the City of Overland Park (defendant-appellant), filed a petition in eminent domain pursuant to K. S. A. 26-201, et seq., to acquire real property for the improvement of the intersection of 63rd Street (U. S. Highway 50) and Foster Street. McCall Service Stations, Inc. (plaintiff-appellee) was the owner of the property on the northeast comer of the intersection with 190 feet of frontage on U. S. Highway 50 and 155 feet of frontage on Foster Street. The city acquired a permanent street right-of-way of approximately 1,500 square feet, consisting of a ten foot strip along Foster Street, and a construction easement containing 4,580 square feet, which was a strip of varying width along all of the Foster Street frontage and along the west 130 feet of the U. S. Highway 50 frontage. No additional street right-of-way was acquired along U. S. Highway 50.

The court appointed appraisers filed their report on the 6th day of December, 1971, awarding to the landowners the sum of $15,030. The city paid that sum to the clerk of the district court and acquired the described real estate on the 17fh day of December, 1971. The landowner perfected a timely appeal therefrom.

The matter came regularly on for a pretrial hearing on October 17, 1972, and for trial on October 17th, 18th and 19th, 1972.

At the time of trial construction of the intersection improvement had commenced and was nearly completed. Included in the construction was the installation of a raised curbed medial strip in the center of U. S. Highway 50 east of the Foster Street intersection, the widening and/or realignment of U. S. Highway 50 and Foster Street *392 and the construction of curbs along a part of the north side of U. S. Highway 50 and the east side of Foster Street on the street right-of-way in front of the McCall Service Station.

The curbs had been constructed in such a way as to regulate ingress and egress to the McCall property from U. S. Highway 50. Prior to the improvement there was a grass area or island directly in front of the station between the east and west driveways on the public right-of-way. This island between the highway and the McCall property was enlarged by extending it to the west, still on public right-of-way, so as to block off the west drive onto 50 Highway and require vehicles to enter or leave the station on Foster Street. No easements were taken in the area of the east driveway from which entrance could be made from Highway 50 to the McCall property — it remained unchanged as did the driveway onto Foster Street.

At the pretrial conference the cotut determined the improvement made by the taking of property in the condemnation action had the effect of taking access previously enjoyed by the landowners on 63rd Street, or U. S. Highway 50; that the loss of access was a compensable factor to be considered by the jury, but that the city should be allowed to show in diminution of the landowners contention that their access had been abolished, except as to the one driveway; that people could get in and out of the property on Foster Street.

The trial court further determined at the pretrial conference, as a matter of law, that the temporary construction easement upon the McCall property must be considered a permanent taking, because there was no ascertainable date as to when the construction would cease. No objection was made by the city to this ruling. Furthermore, there was no objection to the court s instruction which described this particular easement as a “permanent construction easement”. No complaint is made of this ruling on appeal to this court. The ruling of the trial court on this point therefore becomes the law of the case.

At the pretrial conference the court stated the access to the remaining land may be considered in arriving at just compensation in the case, not as a separate item of damage, but it may be considered along with all the other factors in determining total compensation and damages; that the measure of damages for the taking of the access was the difference between the market value before the taking and the market value after the talcing.

*393 The McCalls purchased the service station cite in question on August 31, 1971, and paid $250,000 for it This condemnation proceeding was filed 60 days thereafter.

All witnesses for the landowner and all witnesses for the city, except one, placed the value of the property prior to the taking at $250,000. The landowners witnesses placed the value of the property after the taking in a range from $100,000 to $125,000. The major factor considered by the landowner s witnesses in valuing the property after the taking was the loss of access resulting from the efimination of the west driveway on U. S. Highway 50. Two expert witnesses for the city placed the value of the property after the taking in a range from $234,970 to $238,000.

Jack Forbes, an expert witness for the city, placed the before value at $224,150 and the after value at $211,100.

The damages for the taking determined by the landowner s witnesses therefore ranged from $150,000 down to $125,000; while the damages placed by the city’s expert witnesses ranged from $15,030 down to $12,000.

The jury after being instructed on the matter returned a verdict which valued the subject property prior to the taking at $250,000 and after the taking at $190,000, thereby allowing the landowner $60,000 damages for the taking.

It is from this award of damages that the city has perfected its appeal.

The primary contention of the appellant on appeal is that the trial court erred in ruling the city acquired access rights to the landowner’s property.

The appellant argues that no access rights were taken by condemnation, since neither the petition nor the appraisers’ report described any access as being taken. It is contended that parol evidence should not have been admitted to show that the effect of the improvement amounted to a taking in the nature of inverse condemnation.

Relying upon Sutton v. Frazier, 183 Kan. 33, 325 P. 2d 338, the appellant argues that the property acquired by the city was not a fee but an easement for street purposes. The appellant asserts that neither the petition nor the appraisers’ report described any access rights, and therefore if the landowner had any rights of access to U. S. Highway 50 or Foster Street prior to the taking, he had those same rights after the taking.

*394 The appellant relies upon Sutton v. Frazier, supra, and Roberts v. Upper Verdigris Watershed, 193 Kan. 151, 392 P. 2d 914 for the proposition that in the eminent domain proceeding the report of the appraisers must show what is taken, and what the landowner parts with. Nothing is taken by implication or intendment and the landowners may rely implicitly on the report filed which becomes the evidence and the only evidence of the commissioners’ doings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
524 P.2d 1165, 215 Kan. 390, 1974 Kan. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccall-service-stations-inc-v-city-of-overland-park-kan-1974.