McCandless v. United States

74 F.2d 596, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3478
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 7, 1935
DocketNo. 6961
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 74 F.2d 596 (McCandless v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCandless v. United States, 74 F.2d 596, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3478 (9th Cir. 1935).

Opinion

NORCROSS, District Judge.

A petition in condemnation was filed in the District Court for the District of Hawaii by the United States as petitioner against Lincoln L. McCandless and others, defendants, to acquire title to and possession of 4,080 acres of land in the Island of Oahu, Territory of Hawaii, for a naval ammunition depot, and for other public purposes and uses. The case was tried with a jury and verdict rendered fixing the value of the land at $206,563.51 and the value of the improvements at $14,000. A motion for a new trial was denied and judgment entered in accordance with the verdict. From the judgment and order denying said motion Mc-Candless and wife appeal.

The land is situated in Lualualei Valley approximately 35 miles from Honolulu. The land of Oahu is 46 miles in length and 25 miles in width and is, roughly, divided by two approximately parallel ridges, Koolau Range, extending in length approximately 37 miles along the northeast or windward side of the Island, and the Waianae Range, extending about 18 miles along the southwest side of the Island. Lualualei Valley is the broadest coastal valley on Oahu, is rectangular in shape, and bounded on the eastern end by the Waianae Range, on the western end by the sea, and on the south by a mountain spur, separating it from the Nanakuli Valley, and on the north by a mountain spur separating it from the Waianae Valley. The land condemned is rectangular in shape and is situated in the eastern end of the Lualualei Valley, the western border being at the southern extremity, approximately 2yí miles from the sea. The tract extends about 3 miles across the valley and has a depth of about 2 miles.

The evidence submitted by petitioner and the defendant property owners respectively is voluminous and conflicting. Three witnesses on behalf of the petitioner testified that the land including improvements was worth $98,865, and one of the witnesses estimated the value of the improvements thereon to be about $15,400. Witnesses for defendants testified that the land was worth from $791,000 up to approximately $1,600,-000. One witness testified that the cord-wood alone on the land was worth $90,000. A witness for defendants testified the present depreciated value of the improvements is $126,918.71. There was also offered by petitioner and admitted in evidence over the objection and exception of defendants the tax return for the year 1930, verified by defendant L. L. McCandless, that “to the best of my knowledge and belief the full cash-value” of the land in question is $15,162.

While there are twenty-three assignments of error, as stated in the brief of appellants, but three principal questions are presented by this appeal. They may be stated as follows:

(a) Whether the trial court under the circumstances of this case could exclude all or any of the evidence offered by the landowner to show that water was available in such a condition and location as to give the land a market value as potential sugar land.

(b) Whether the court erred in allowing the petitioner to introduce in evidence certain lease contracts of other lands claimed to be similarly situated to the land sought to be condemned.

(c) Whether the verdict of the jury, under a statutory requirement to make a “separate assessment” of the value of improvements, can be sustained where such “separate assessment” is not within the range of the testimony of witnesses as to the value of improvements.

The evidence is without conflict that the major portion of the land in question, 2,600 [598]*598to 3,000 acres, was adaptable for the production of sugar cane providing there was an adequate water supply for irrigation. For illustration, Ernest Brecht, a witness on behalf of the petitioner, testified: “I live at Waianae on the Island of Oahu and now am and have been manager of the Waianae Plantation for the past eleven years. Waianae is the 'valley adjoining Lualualei. I have been connected with the cultivation of sugar cane for twenty-five years. The plantation has sugar cane lands makai (seaward) of the McCandless land. The soil in the valley is suitable for sugar, cane but the water supply is limited. The McCandless ranch lands, which are the subject matter of this suit, at the time suit was started, were suitable for the cultivation of sugar cane except that there was a shortage of water. With sufficient water a portion of the land cultivated by Waianae Plantation is the best sugar cane land in the Territory of Hawaii and the land, which is the subject matter of this suit, is by and large as good cane land as there is in the Territory if there were water. There is good land in spots right up to the forest reserve, but above the three hundred foot contour line the land is much steeper than below the three hundred foot contour line. The Waianae Plantation is engaged in developing water at Waianae. If the land involved in this suit had water it would be 90% as good as the land of Ewa Plantation but it would require more water than Ewa Plantation.”

The court limited the landowner in his showing of available water for irrigation purposes to the land itself and to the 289-acre tract on the Haleakala Ridge immediately adjoining the land, a portion of which tract was being condemned. The testimony was to the effect that on the 289-acre tract the maximum quantity of water that could be developed was from two million to three million gallons per day. Limited to the land itself for sources of water it was clear from the evidence that the land could not be made available for sugar cane purposes, since for this purpose twenty-five to thirty million gallons of water per day would be required.

An offer of proof was made upon the part of the landowners and denied, as follows :

“1. That any prospective purchaser of the tract of 4080 acres at Lualualei, Oahu, owned by respondent L. L. McCandless, and the subject of this suit, would at the time of the institution of this suit take into consideration the reasonableness of the possibility of securing a supply of water for this tract for the purpose of irrigating the same for the cultivation of sugar cane.
«2. * * * That the tract of land sought to be condemned is by reason of its area, location, soil and climatic conditions adapted to and suitable for the purposes of a sugar plantation if water is available. * * *
“3. That nearly all of the sugar cane lands in the Territory of Hawaii require the bringing of water from other lands to such cane lands for irrigation purposes, and that the availability of water for such purposes is a factor, and is by all persons familiar with cane cultivation considered a factor in determining the value of such cane lands. I am adding to that, — that such water is, in many instances, transported much greater distances than would be required in this case.
“4. That there'are certain artesian basins or isopiestic areas located in the vicinity of Waipahu and Pearl City, Island of Oahu, on and from which there is now, and has been for many years last past, fresh artesian water unused and flowing to waste amounting to a minimum of approximately 60,000,-000 gallons per day.
, “5. That respondent, L. L.

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Bluebook (online)
74 F.2d 596, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccandless-v-united-states-ca9-1935.