Montana Power Company v. Wolfe

545 P.2d 674, 169 Mont. 234, 1976 Mont. LEXIS 661
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1976
Docket13022
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 545 P.2d 674 (Montana Power Company v. Wolfe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montana Power Company v. Wolfe, 545 P.2d 674, 169 Mont. 234, 1976 Mont. LEXIS 661 (Mo. 1976).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this eminent domain proceeding plaintiff Montana Power Company appeals the judgment entered on a jury’s award of compensation for a strip of defendant’s land condemned as an easement for plaintiff’s 161-KV power transmission line. We affirm the judgment.

*236 The easement condemned is a strip of land 80 feet wide, stretching 1,167 feet along the upper bench portion of defendant’s 5200 acre ranch located on the east side of the Bitterroot Valley, east of Stevensville in Ravalli County. This strip contains an area of 20.5 acres. The remainder of defendant’s property subject to depreciation in value resulting from this taking constitutes 319.5 acres. Eleven pole structures of the plaintiff utility’s transmission line between its Missoula No. 4 substation and Hamilton Heights occupy the easement. The pole structures are approximately 58 feet tall. There are 9 double pole structures with 2 triple pole structures in this easement. The structures are visible for a distance of about 5 miles, and placed on knolls or promontories in defendant’s timbered pasture and on a small portion of his cultivated land.

Defendant’s ranch as a whole contained a small amount of irrigated hay and pasture land, some dry land crop acreage, and a large amount of dry land grazing, both open and timbered.

Plaintiff utility commenced these eminent domain proceedings in the district court of the fourth judicial district pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 99, Title 93, R.C.M.1947. Both parties appealed the commissioners’ award for the easement and depreciation in value of the remainder to the district court.

Following a jury trial before Hon. Edward Dussault, district judge, a judgment of $15,382.50 for the value of the 20.5 acre easement and $23,961.75 for depreciation in value to the 319.5 acre remainder was entered for defendant, pursuant to the verdict.

Plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was denied by the district court and this appeal is taken from the judgment and the order denying a new trial.

Two issues are presented on appeal:

1. Whether sales comparable in size, but not in shape, to the land taken should have been admitted into evidence?

2. Whether the jury committed reversible error by not *237 following court’s Instruction No. 19 when it awarded $750 per acre for the easement?

First, considering plaintiff’s objection to the evidence of comparable sales, we note this Court has approved the use of such evidence in eminent domain proceedings. State Highway Commission v. Jacobs, 150 Mont. 322, 328, 435 P.2d 274; State Highway Commission v. Tubbs, 147 Mont. 296, 303, 411 P.2d 739. Further, when the value of another piece of property is testified to for the purpose of showing the basis for an expert’s opinion, as was done here, the requirement of similarity is not so strict. State Highway Commission v. Jacobs, supra.

Essentially plaintiff argues that the differences between the 80 foot easement and the residential tract sales testified to by defendant’s expert are so great as to make the sales not judicially comparable. Yet it is well established that appellate review of comparable sale evidence admitted by the district court is limited. 5 Nichols on Eminent Domain, § 21.31, pp. 21-54 to 21-59, states:

“Similarity does not mean identical, but having a resemblance. Obviously, no two properties can be exactly alike, and no general rule can be laid down regarding the degree of similarity that must exist to make such evidence admissible. It must necessarily vary with the circumstances of each particular case. Whether the properties are sufficiently similar to have some bearing on the value under consideration, and to be of any aid to the jury, must necessarily rest largely in the sound discretion of the trial court, which will not be interfered with unless abused. The exact limits, either of similarity of difference, or of nearness or remoteness in point of time, is difficult, if not impossible, to prescribe by any arbitrary rule, but must to a large extent depend on the location and the character of the property and the circumstances of the case. It is to be considered with reference to the light thrown on the issue, and not as a mere method of raising a legal puzzle.”

The background of one Roy Rodenberger’s testimony on *238 comparable sales and his opinion on value can be briefly summarized. The area of the Wolfe ranch on Burnt Fork Creek, about eight miles out of Stevensville had, in 1972, an attraction for rural homesites. Its highest and best use was for that purpose. Rodenberger determined that certain sales of small homesite tracts were of value in determining the ultimate value of the land taken here and the damage to the remainder. In this connection he was carefully examined, both on direct and cross. A synopsis of his thinking is probably best expressed in this question and answer on cross-examination:

“Q. And your theory was that if the transactions that are in your list number one were indicative of a twenty acre sale, they would be indicative of the value of the land within the easement?

“A. Yes, they would be indicative. However, the lands that are in these sales are regular tracts of land in a planned manner, and there is no way to actually compare a regular planned tract of land that may be oblong or square or even triangular on the edge of a ranch, to an eighty foot ribbon two miles through the center of the ranch. So, during the whole time of comparison I tried to make these tracts regular in this ranch taking, and the only way you can do it is take the forty-acre tracts and say: All right, what are they doing to this tract? They are taking two and a third acres out of this tract, and it’s kind of on the edge. The next forty-acre tract they might be going right through the middle of it as that overlay shows. Although it is indicative of the market, it isn’t a true comparison because, I think, the fact that it is splitting a piece of property in an eighty-foot ribbon two miles long, which is definitely an irregular type shape tract, these comparisons are conservative on the market on that type of a tract.”

Plaintiff was taking, besides the easement, the use of existing roadways and access by “reasonable means”. It was clear that the quality of the land taken, the quantity, and the access easement, were being considered and that because of all the *239 circumstances the easement value was substantially the same as the fee value, except for the grazing left. Mr. Rodenberger considered all of these matters.

However, plaintiff condemnor contends that the requisite elements of comparability of land values do not exist where a 20 acre fee homesite is likened to an easement strip 80 feet wide, and two miles long. That area alone cannot be a controlling consideration. We agree, but as shown by the foregoing quote of the appraiser Rodenberger, he did not literally do this.

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Bluebook (online)
545 P.2d 674, 169 Mont. 234, 1976 Mont. LEXIS 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montana-power-company-v-wolfe-mont-1976.