Mississippi State Highway Commission v. Brooks

123 So. 2d 423, 239 Miss. 308, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 287
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1960
Docket41526
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 123 So. 2d 423 (Mississippi State Highway Commission v. Brooks) 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
Mississippi State Highway Commission v. Brooks, 123 So. 2d 423, 239 Miss. 308, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 287 (Mich. 1960).

Opinion

*310 Kyle, J.

This case is before us on appeal-by the Mississippi State Highway Commission from a judgment rendered by the Circuit Court of Lamar County in favor of Charles A. Brooks and his wife for the sum of $5,000 as damages for the taking of a parcel of land containing 1.30 acres in eminent domain proceedings for use as a part of the right of way for interstate highway No. 59, a limited access four-lane highway, which is being constructed as a part of the Federal interstate highway system. The parcel of land sought to be condemned is a strip of land 897 feet in length off of the west side of a 27.31 acre tract of land owned by Brooks and his wife and described as a fractional part of the SE^ of the SE% of Section 12, Township 4 North, Range 14 *311 West. The strip of land sought to he condemned is 62.3 feet in width at the north end and 58.4 feet in width at the sonth end. There were no improvements on the 1.30 acre strip sought to he condemned, except a fence erected thereon hy H. S. Ford as a boundary line fence between the Brooks land and the land owned hy Ford, which lies immediately west of the Brooks land.

The case was tried in a special court of eminent domain on May 5, 1959, and the jury after hearing the testimony returned a verdict in favor of the landowners for $1,000. Judgment was entered for that amount and from that judgment Brooks and his wife prosecuted an appeal to the circuit court. The case was tried de novo in the circuit court at the July 1959 term, and a verdict was rendered in favor of the landowners for the sum of $5,000. The State Highway Commission filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and from the judgment rendered in favor of the landowners for the amount last mentioned the State Highway Commission has prosecuted this appeal.

The record in the case shows that the Brooks 27-acre tract of land lies immediately west of the corporate limits of the City of Hattiesburg, and that the eastern boundary line of the 27-acre tract coincides with the county line between Forrest County and Lamar County. The land is situated about one-half mile south of State Highway No. 98, and access to said highway is provided hy a gravel road running southwardly from the point where said highway crosses the county line to the northeast corner of the Brooks tract. The gravel road mentioned is referred to in the. record as ‘ ‘ South 40th Avenue.” The Brooks property is situated about one mile east or southeast of Mississippi Southern College and about the same distance from the Forrest County General Hospital. The testimony of the witnesses shows that there are several dwelling houses on the land lying north of the Brooks property and south of Highway No. 98. There are no dwelling houses on the land *312 lying south of the Brooks property within a half mile of the Brooks property. H. S. Ford owns the land lying immediately west of the Brooks property; and the Lamar Parks Subdivision, which has been partially developed as a residential section, lies immediately west of the Ford property. The Panama Park Subdivision, which is situated within the corporate limits of the City of Hattiesburg, is about one-half mile east of the Brooks property. The Brooks land is cut over woodland or grazing land on which there is located a small amount of growing timber. Part of the land is level and part of the land is hilly, but there are no gullys. There is a seven-room dwelling house on the land, which is occupied by the Brooks family as a homestead. The dwelling house is a frame building located on the north side of the 27-acre tract and several hundred feet east of the new highway. The house is equipped with a butane gas system and is amply supplied with running water from a deep well located on the premises. Approximately 200 feet south of the dwelling house there-is a three-acre pond or lake, which is supplied with water draining into it from a hollow extending back westwardly across the Brooks land and the adjoining 40-acre tract owned by H. 'S. Ford.

Four witnesses testified for the State Highway Commission during the trial in the circuit court.

W. K. Magee, Project Engineer of the State Highway Commission, who identified a plat of the Brooks land showing the location of the strip of land to be taken, testified that the highway right of way was to be 300 feet in width, or 150 feet on each side of the center line. The strip sought to be taken from the Brooks tract, as stated above, was approximately 60 feet in width. The remaining part of the 300-ft. right of way was to be taken off the Ford tract. Magee stated that, when the highway was completed, the highway embankment at the northwest corner of the Brooks property would be about two feet above the present ground *313 level; at the southwest corner there would he a cut of about two feet; and about the center of the 900-ft. strip the fill at one point would be about 17 feet high. Magee stated that the pattern of drainage of the watershed west of the highway would be changed in one respect only, namely, that there would be a 48-inch pipe line in the bottom of the hollow. There would be approximately 23 acres of the watershed west of the highway, and drainage of that area would be taken care of by the 48-inch pipe. Magee was asked on cross-examination whether after the pipe line was put there it would dump water on the property on the east side. He stated that in his opinion there would be but little difference in the amount of water which would pass.through the 48-inch pipe line onto the Brooks land after the construction of the fill and the amount of water which was accustomed to pass down in its natural channel before the construction of the fill; that the flared-end headwall of the 48-inch culvert would allow the water to. spread out on a concrete apron; and that the water would flow onto the Brooks land in about the same manner as it was accustomed to flow in its natural state. Magee stated that there might be some erosion down into the lake as a result of the construction, but the type of clay soil found on the Brooks land did not wash easily.

Three witnesses testified for the,Highway Commission concerning the value of the Brooks property before and after the taking. J. F. Ruffin, Jr., real estate broker of Hattiesburg, with many years experience in making appraisals for the HOLC, the FHA, the YA and other money lending agencies, testified that he was familiar with the Brooks land and the 1.30 acres proposed to be taken. In his opinion the total value of the property before the taking was $21,000; after the taking, $20,000; that the difference in value before and after the taking being $900. On cross-examination Ruf-fin stated that he valued the residence house at $7,500, the lake at $2,000, the timber at $1,500 and the 25 acres *314 of land at $10,000, or $400 per acre, before tbe taking. He valued tbe 1% acres of land wbicb was to be taken at $525; be placed tbe damage to tbe timber at $100, and other resulting damage at $275.

B. J. Beard, a real estate dealer of Hattiesburg, with many years experience as an appraiser, testified that be valued tbe property before tbe taking at $19,450, and after tbe taking at $14,489.50. He valued 24 acres of land as woods and pasture land at $400 an acre. He did not value the land for residential purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
123 So. 2d 423, 239 Miss. 308, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mississippi-state-highway-commission-v-brooks-miss-1960.