Morse v. Board of Com'rs of Marshall County

1934 OK 700, 38 P.2d 945, 169 Okla. 600, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 444
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 4, 1934
Docket23404
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1934 OK 700 (Morse v. Board of Com'rs of Marshall County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morse v. Board of Com'rs of Marshall County, 1934 OK 700, 38 P.2d 945, 169 Okla. 600, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 444 (Okla. 1934).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

As the parties hereto occupy the same relative positions they occupied in the trial court, they will be referred to as the plaintiffs and the defendant.

This is an action brought by the plaintiffs, as the owners and lienholders of certain real estate which was taken and appropriated by the said defendant for its own use and purpose, to wit, a public highway, without the consent of, or compensation to, said plaintiffs, who claim that said appropriation by said defendant was wrongful and without any process of law whatsoever, and was taken under a purported right-of-way grant given said defendant by one Alec Chastain, the owner of the legal title, which said grant was dated November 24, 1925, and recorded May S, 1926, in the office of the county clerk of Marshall county; that at the time of the said taking by the defendant, the said plaintiffs had an existing mortgage for $4,000, dated May 26, 1923, and a second mortgage on said land, through which said highway was constructed by said defendant, which said mortgages were and had been duly recorded in the office of the county clerk of Marshall county, thereby giving notice to said defendant, at the time of said taking, of the existence of a lien in favor of said plaintiffs by virtue of said mortgages. That on December 16, 1925, a suit was instituted to foreclose said second mortgage, and after judgment thereon, a sheriff’s deed was executed on December 5, 1927, and a deficiency judgment taken for more than the amount of damages claimed by the plaintiffs in this cause.

On October 1, 1928, a claim was filed with the board of county commissioners for the sum of $147 for the taking of 2.1 acres of land for said highway purposes. Said claim was disallowed. On October 29, 1928, suit was commenced by said plaintiffs for the sum of $147 and attorney fees, against said defendant.

The defendant filed its answer and cross-petition on October 31, 1928, which consisted of a general denial, and the allegation that plaintiffs were guilty of laches and allowed said highway to be constructed without asserting any right, title, or interest in and to said land; that the statute of limitation had run in that said plaintiffs had failed for more than two years to file said claim for damages with the defendant, after said highway was constructed, and said plaintiffs were barred from setting up any claim against said defendant.

A jury was waived and said cause tried to the court. The court made the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

"That the defendant, the board of county commissioners of Marshall county, state of Oklahoma, has filed herein its answer by its county attorney, which answer was filed October 31, 1928, and upon the issues joined, the court finds that plaintiffs at the time of filing suit herein were the owners of the legal and equitable title in fee simple in and to the premises herein and that at the time of filing suit herein a foreclosure of a second mortgage owned by Geo. R. Eish & Company had been made and deeds conveying said lands were executed to Agnes L. Morse, and that there is a $4,000 mortgage outstanding on said land and premises. That sheriff’s sale was confirmed herein on foreclouse of the second mortgage on the 5th day of December, 1927.
"That in the spring of 1926 the board of county commissioners of Marshall county, state of Oklahoma, surveyed a road across the premises and lands described in plaintiffs’ petition and said road was 60 feet in width and approximately 1,657 feet in length, and that said right of way was taken and appropriated without the consent of plaintiffs in this suit, the holders of the first and second mortgage at the time of the taking thereof, and that the same cut diagonally across a 40-acre tract of said land and premises herein, leaving approximately 12 acres on one side and the balance on the other side of the road, and that the county constructed a road, being a gravel road, across said land aforesaid. That in con *602 structing said road the county took and appropriated for the use of said road approximately two and one-tenth acres of land.
“The court further finds specifically that the value of plaintiffs’ security was not diminished by reason of the road going through the land, and that plaintiffs in fact were benefited by reason of said road, and that said road provided a way and means of transportation through said farm, which was more convenient than that used prior to the construction of said road and that the security of the plaintiffs was not diminished by reason of the construction of said road, and that plaintiffs being benefited thereby, because of said road, and are not entitled to recover against the defendant for any sum whatsoever, to which finding of the court the plaintiffs then and there excepted and their exceptions are allowed.
“The court concludes as a matter of law as follows: That plaintiffs would be entitled, under the evidence submitted, to the value of the diminution of the land and premises, but that said land and premises were benefited by reason of the construction of said road. As a matter of law they are not entitled to recover anything herein, to which conclusion of the court on the matter of law, the plaintiffs except and their exceptions are allowed.
“It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that the plaintiffs take nothing and that the defendant recover its costs and go hence, and to which action of the court the plaintiffs except and their exceptions are allowed, and plaintiffs in open court give notice of appeal to the Supreme Court. ”

Thereafter a motion for a new trial was properly filed by said plaintiffs and overruled by the court, with the proper exceptions and notice of appeal.

For reversal, the plaintiffs have filed herein their petition in error containing eight assignments of error, all of which are argued in their brief under two general propositions. to wit:

“1. The judgment of the court that the value of the plaintiffs’ security was not diminished is not sustained by competent evidence. Assignments 1, 2, 3, 4.
“2. The court erred, as a matter of law, in failing and refusing to assess the damages done to the property of the plaintiffs irrespective of any benefits derived from the improvements. Assignments 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8.”

Tinder these assignments, it will be necessary to briefly set forth the evidence especially in view of the findings of facts and conclusions of law by the court, to which the plaintiffs excepted.

The facts shown by the evidence briefly are as follows:

The owner of the land, Alec Chastain, on May 26, 1923, gave to Geo. R. Fish & Company a first mortgage for $4,000, payable November 1, 1932, and a second mortgage for $1,500. The first mortgage was filed for record May 29, 1923, and was introduced in evidence. The second mortgage was filed for record, but date not given.

On November 24, 1925, Alec Chastain executed and delivered to the county of Marshall, Okla., a right of way grant, consideration $1, which was paid to him, whereby he conveyed, “All of a certain tract or parcel of land 60 feet in width across the S.E. % of section 26, township 5, south, and range 5 east of the Indian base and Meridian” in Marshall county, Okla.

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Bluebook (online)
1934 OK 700, 38 P.2d 945, 169 Okla. 600, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morse-v-board-of-comrs-of-marshall-county-okla-1934.