Miss. State Highway Com'n v. Viverette

529 So. 2d 896, 1988 WL 75951
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 20, 1988
Docket57824
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 529 So. 2d 896 (Miss. State Highway Com'n v. Viverette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miss. State Highway Com'n v. Viverette, 529 So. 2d 896, 1988 WL 75951 (Mich. 1988).

Opinion

529 So.2d 896 (1988)

MISSISSIPPI STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION
v.
E.S. VIVERETTE.

No. 57824.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

July 20, 1988.

*897 John M. Huff, Forest, Edwin Lloyd Pittman and Mike Moore, Attys. Gen. by Kenneth S. Crawford, Sr., Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, for appellant.

Jerry L. Bustin, Forest, for appellee.

Before PRATHER, ROBERTSON and ZUCCARO, JJ.

ROBERTSON, Justice, for the Court:

I.

This is an eminent domain case arising out of a highway relocation project in rural Scott County, Mississippi. The Highway Commission is taking a thirty foot strip across the frontage of landowner's property, some one-fourth of an acre in the aggregate. The jury awarded $10,000.00 in compensation to the landowner. This is simply too much, given the facts of this case. We reverse and remand for a new trial.

II.

Prior to August 7, 1985, E.S. Viverette owned a parcel of land approximately 9.85 acres in size fronting on State Highway 21 in Scott County, Mississippi. Viverette had purchased the property from Rex Dolan in September of 1982 paying $15,000.00. Viverette had done some clearing and fencing but no construction of any kind.

On August 7, 1985, the Mississippi State Highway Commission (MSHC) commenced these eminent domain proceedings by filing its application in the Circuit Court of Scott County, Mississippi. The taking is described as a thirty foot strip across the eastern right-of-way of Highway 21 being a distance of 347.7 feet in width, some 0.24 acres in size.

MSHC's initial statement of value filed November 22, 1985, suggested the fair market value of the property condemned at $375.00, plus damages to the remainder at $1,725.00, for a total compensation and damage due of $2,100.00. Miss. Code Ann. § 11-27-7 (1972). The damages to the remainder were largely attributable to the destruction of a tier-beam wood and metal fence with a steel wedged archway which had been placed across the highway frontage by Viverette's predecessor in title, Rex Dolan.

While the case was pending, a highway department civil engineer, Franklin A. Greer, Jr., surveyed the property and determined that all except a 30 foot strip of *898 the fence was located on the preexisting highway right-of-way. Accordingly, on February 20, 1986, MSHC filed an amended statement of values declaring damage to the remainder as only $450.00, reducing the total compensation and damage due Viverette to $825.00.

On the eve of trial, Viverette filed his statement of values, alleging that he was due $4,950.00. This figure was composed of a $500.00 fair market value placed on the quarter of an acre being condemned — computed at the rate of $2,000.00 per acre. Viverette said that the damages to the remainder amounted to $4,450.00.

The case was called for trial on Tuesday, August 5, 1986. The evidence regarding the fair market value of Viverette's property was not seriously disputed. Jay Dilmore, the MSHC appraiser, testified that in his opinion the fair market value of the property was $1500.00 per acre or $375.00 for the quarter acre being taken. Scott Palmer, landowner's appraiser, offered his opinion that the fair market value was $2,000.00 per acre, yielding a $500.00 fair market value of the land taken. Both appraisers agreed that the highest and best use of the property was residential and both agreed that the comparable sales or market data approach to value was the preferable approach to use in this case. In short, on the question of the value of the land taken, there was hardly enough difference to make such a federal case out of this.

On the question of damages to the remainder, Palmer testified for Viverette that taking the thirty foot strip would destroy a potential homesite because of the location of a pond at the rear of the potential homesite. He put this damage at $2,000.00. Palmer attempted to testify about damage to the fence, but this was excluded — and no cross-appeal has been taken. In the end, Palmer testified that the value of the property before the taking was $24,200.00 and that the value after the taking was $21,700.00, yielding a total damage payable to Viverette of $2,500.00.

Viverette testified in his own behalf and estimated the value of his land at $35,000.00. He too said that a two-acre homesite had been lost as a result of the taking and he attempted to value this loss at $3,000.00 per acre for $6,000.00 damages, only to have MSHC's objection sustained. He claimed $5,000.00 to replace the fence and $2,000.00 for the destruction of trees. Suffice it to say that there is little if anything in the record to support or lend credibility to the values testified to by Viverette.

MSHC real estate valuation expert, Jay Dilmore, offered his opinion that the value of the Viverette tract before the taking was $15,225.00 and that its value after the taking was $14,400.00 for a net compensation due of $825.00. The differences between Dilmore's opinion and Palmer's was that Dilmore concluded that the value of the land per acre was $1500.00 as compared to Palmer's higher $2,000 per acre fair market value, and Dilmore proceeded on the assumption that only thirty-one feet of the rail fence with two strands of barbed wire were on Viverette's property — the remainder being on the highway right-of-way.

Greer, the MSHC surveyor, testified regarding the location of the fence and gave his opinion that most of it was already on the highway right-of-way. Greer's view was strongly attacked by landowner. No competent counter proof, however, was offered on the subject, a point about which we will say more later.

In this state of the proof, the matter went to the jury who returned a verdict fixing the compensation and damages due Viverette at $10,000.00. Judgment was entered thereon on August 22, 1986.

MSHC timely moved for a new trial charging, inter alia, that the verdict was contrary to the weight of the evidence and grossly excessive and evincing bias, passion and prejudice and, further, that the verdict exceeded the statement of values filed by Viverette. After a hearing thereon, the motion was overruled. MSHC now prosecutes this appeal charging error on the overruling of its motion for a new trial.

III.

MSHC first argues that the Circuit Court erred when it allowed the $10,000.00 verdict *899 to stand in the face of landowner's $4,950.00 statement of values filed August 4, 1986.[1] MSHC argues that a landowner is bound by his statement of values and may not recover compensation in excess thereof.

Miss. Code Ann. § 11-27-7 (1972) requires that both MSHC and the landowner file separate statements of values and provides further that the statement of value shall

constitute the pleadings of the parties with respect to the issue of value, and shall be treated as pleadings are treated in civil cases in the circuit court.

Since the statute was enacted, however, the office of pleadings in our civil practice has changed — and has been diminished. See Stanton & Associates, Inc. v. Bryant Construction Co., 464 So.2d 499, 505 (Miss. 1985). Our case law construing Section 11-27-7 by and large lies before January 1, 1982, and the advent of the new view of pleadings.

For example, in Coleman v. Mississippi State Highway Commission, 289 So.2d 918 (Miss.

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Bluebook (online)
529 So. 2d 896, 1988 WL 75951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miss-state-highway-comn-v-viverette-miss-1988.