Norman K. Winston, David Muss, Joshua A. Muss, Helene Muss Harpman v. United States

342 F.2d 715
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMay 4, 1965
Docket19106_1
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 342 F.2d 715 (Norman K. Winston, David Muss, Joshua A. Muss, Helene Muss Harpman 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
Norman K. Winston, David Muss, Joshua A. Muss, Helene Muss Harpman v. United States, 342 F.2d 715 (9th Cir. 1965).

Opinion

*717 THOMPSON, District Judge:

This is a Wherry Act condemnation case. The housing project in question, known as the Bayview Project, situated near the San Diego Naval Base, was completed in December, 1954. The federal legislation under which the project was constructed and the legal relationships created for the purpose of the construction and subsequent leasing, control, operation and maintenance of the housing project are identical with those which have been fully discussed, described and analyzed in other Wherry Act condemnation cases. See, for example, Fairfield Gardens, Inc. v. United States (9 CCA 1962), 306 F.2d 167; Likens-Foster Mon-terey Corporation v. United States (9 CCA 1962), 308 F.2d 595; United States v. Certain Interests in Property (2 CCA 1964), 326 F.2d 109. Here, again, the leasehold interests of Appellants, subject to the existing FHA insured mortgages, have been condemned pursuant to the mandatory provisions of the Cape-hart Act (42 U.S.C. § 1594). The date of taking was June 1,1959, and the issue, tried before a jury, was just compensation for the interests taken.

The ground rules for the jury trial were laid by a pre-trial order entered after comprehensive pre-trial proceedings. Pertinent portions of this order are quoted in the margin. 1 After entry of the *718 pre-trial order, a separate court trial of the “windfall” issue was held pursuant to stipulation 2 The Court entered findings of fact and found that there was a windfall. The findings are quoted in the margin. 3 Finally, a Supplemental PreTrial Order was entered 4 and the stake was set for the jury trial.

*719 COURT’S COMMENTS TO THE JURY

Appellants’ first Specification of Error attacks a comment made by the trial court in the course of its instructions to the jury. The particular comment, a portion of eleven transcript pages of comments, was:

“Wherry legislation had for its purpose the providing of low-cost housing for military and Naval personnel and for civilian personnel employed by the armed forces. The purpose of the legislation was to make the building and operation of Wherry housing attractive to sponsors, builders and operators. It was not the purpose of the legislation to drop any vast amount of money into the pockets of the sponsors. You will have to decide whether, as contended by the defendant owners, upon the completion of the project and four or five years’ operation it was then worth in excess of two million dollars as fair market value, or whether, as contended by the plaintiffs, it had a value of two hundred fifty thousand dollars to two hundred eighty thousand dollars plus the reserve fund which defendants had retained, or whether it had some other amount as fair market value.
“This is the end of my comments. You may disregard them entirely. I am certainly not telling you what kind of verdict to bring in, in this case. I am trying to give you some help in how to approach this problem. You may disregard these comments entirely, because they are not instructions of law.”

In addition to the concluding remarks quoted, the Court had also prefaced its comments on the evidence with a like warning that the jurors were the sole judges of the facts and might entirely disregard the comments. Before the jury retired for deliberation, Appellants excepted to the comment, and after the jury retired, by motion, sought to have the Court recall the jury for reception of additional evidence and clarification of the instructions relevant to the comment.

In the context of this trial, we do not consider the comment to be wrong, unfair or prejudicial. Both parties had elicited considerable testimony regarding the purpose of the Wherry legislation. Such purpose, and the Federal Housing Administration policies implementing the purpose, were treated as questions of fact to be considered by the jury for their impact upon issues of the probability of approved rental increase schedules and mandatory garage occupancy with each unit — issues which had been injected into the case by Appellants. Appellants rely upon a criminal case, Quercia v. United States, 1933, 289 U.S. 466, 53 S. Ct. 698, 77 L.Ed. 1321, for their conclusion that the verdict should be reversed because of the trial judge’s allusion to “any vast amount of money” in his factual comment. In Quercia, the trial judge, referring to the defendants’ testimony, had said: “I think that every single word that man Said, except when he agreed with the Government’s testimony, was a lie.” Before the Supreme Court, the defendant was assisted by the Solicitor General’s confession of error, and the Court held the flat statement to be not an analyzation of the evidence and not a fair comment, but a hostile, argumentative denunciation of the defendant’s testimony. We agree with Appellee that this civil case falls within the rule enunciated in Doyle v. Union Pacific *720 Railroad Co., 1893, 147 U.S. 413, 13 S.Ct. 333, 37 L.Ed. 223:

“It is true that the remarks made by the judge must have indicated to the jury that his own view was against the plaintiff’s right to recover. But it has often been held by this court that it is not a reversible error in the judge to express his own opinion of the facts, if the rules of law are correctly laid down, and if the jury are given to understand that they are not bound by such opinion. Baltimore & P. R. R. Co. v. Fifth Baptist Church, 137 U.S. 568, 11 Sup.Ct.Rep. 185, [34 L.Ed. 784;] [34:784]; Simmons v. United States, 142 U.S. 148, 12 Sup.Ct.Rep. 171, [35 L.Ed. 968].”

Viewing the comment as a whole, we think the trial court here specifically left it to the jury’s judgment to return any verdict within the entire scope of the opinion testimony of the valuation experts.

To buttress their assertion of error, Appellants quote copiously from the record to show that outside the presence of the jury, the trial court had plainly announced its opinion that Appellants’ claims for just compensation were exorbitant. A trial court’s comments outside the jury’s hearing are irrelevant.

INADEQUACY OF VERDICT

The jury returned a verdict of $692,300 as just compensation for the leasehold interests condemned, subject to outstanding mortgages of $6,549,937. The most liberal government appraiser’s opinion of value was $281,511 as contrasted with the top opinion of Appellants’ appraisers, $2,111,063. Appellants assign as error that the award was grossly inadequate.

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Bluebook (online)
342 F.2d 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norman-k-winston-david-muss-joshua-a-muss-helene-muss-harpman-v-ca9-1965.