Northeast Missouri Electric Power Cooperative v. Cary

485 S.W.2d 862, 1972 Mo. App. LEXIS 886
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 28, 1972
DocketNo. 34124
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 485 S.W.2d 862 (Northeast Missouri Electric Power Cooperative v. Cary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northeast Missouri Electric Power Cooperative v. Cary, 485 S.W.2d 862, 1972 Mo. App. LEXIS 886 (Mo. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

LACKLAND H. BLOOM, Special Judge.

Appellant appeals from a $9,000 judgment entered in favor of respondents after jury verdict. Appellant successfully condemned a right-of-way for a power line across respondents’ 335 acre farm in Marion County. Commissioners assessed respondents’ damages at $1500. Exceptions were filed and the cause was tried to a jury resulting in the verdict and judgment aforesaid.

The easement taken was a strip 150 feet wide and approximately 4696 feet long running diagonally across respondents’ farm. This farm contains 253 acres of crop land plus a slough and timber area. It is bottom land protected by a levee. There was no dispute as to the highest and best use of the land being for agricultural production. Appellant has placed on the easement six “H” frame structures consisting of poles, wires, crossarms, insulators, guy wires, and anchors. Each structure has two adjoining poles approximately fourteen feet apart. The entire easement taken consists of 16.2 acres.

The easement taken was perpetual for the purpose of constructing, operating and maintaining thereon an electric transmission and distribution line for that section of rural Missouri. Appellant obtained the right to clear and keep clear the right-of-way and the immediately adjoining land of structures, obstructions and growths. Appellant also obtained a perpetual easement to temporarily open fences now or hereafter constructed within the right-of-way and to cut down and trim trees and remove structures and obstructions within the right-of-way or near or extending into the right-of-way that may endanger the electric transmission and distribution lines. Appellant claimed the right to pile timber and brush cut and cleared on and from the right-of-way along the edge of the right-[864]*864of-way. The Petition contained the following covenant:

" . . . Petitioner hereby covenants and agrees to pay to the owner or owners of the said lands the actual damages to the realty (other than resulting from clearing and keeping clear the rights of way) and damages to growing and harvested field crops occasioned by reason of entries upon said lands for the purpose of construction, reconstruction, replacement, repair, maintenance and operation of said electric transmission and distribution line. The use by the owner or owners of said lands over which the rights of way are sought will not be obstructed or interfered with by petitioner except insofar as this may necessarily result from the activities set forth above and provided for in Paragraph IV hereof.”

Since the errors claimed by appellant go primarily to issues relating to the reception of evidence, the facts with respect thereto will be more fully considered in passing upon the various points of error raised.

Appellant claims the trial court erred in allowing the respondents in their opening statement to refer to damage to the realty and to crops during and after construction of the power line. Since the validity of appellant’s position depends upon the admissibility of the evidence with respect to damage to the realty or to the crops, which appellant also claims as error, these contentions will be reviewed together.

During his opening statement to the jury respondents’ counsel stated that their witnesses in valuing the land would take into consideration, “That during the construction of this power line the 150 foot strip, the sixteen-plus acres was considerably roughed up.” Objection of appellant was initially sustained. Following a conference outside the hearing of the jury the legal issue between the parties as to the propriety of the evidence to be offered by respondents was fully framed both for the balance of the trial and on this appeal. Because their respective contentions were and are contained in the argument to the Court relative to the opening statement they are set out, in part, as follows :

“MR. MITCHELL: Well, in the opening statement the defendants will tell the jury that they are going to show that during construction of this power line, the easement area, the 150 foot easement area was cut up by ruts two to two and a half feet deep; that they dug holes and all around the whole 150 feet where the poles were put in, it was rough, that they didn’t clean up this damage, and that it was necessary for the land owner and his tenant to clean it up. Also that, even after they had smoothed it out, there were still low places and that for the last two years since that time there has been a reduction of the production on the easement area, or at least, the cut-up part of that area, and we intend to try to show that by our witnesses, and that this was directly caused by the manner in which the construction work was done, and that it could have been foreseen at the time they started the construction.”
“MR. RENDLEN: We object to the statement of counsel in the opening .statement, and introduction of any evidence thereafter, with respect to matters which occurred after the taking on December 10, 1968, as being beyond the realm and scope of this trial; that the construction work was done under a contract by an independent contractor, and that any damage which this contractor may have inflicted upon the land is the responsibility of the contractor, and not of the plaintiff in this matter. Secondly, that the damage to the land itself one way or another, would not be an item foreseen by the plaintiff as reasonably to follow the construction; that it could not have been foreseen by the plaintiff that [865]*865the contractor, if he failed to exercise due and proper care in the construction, would not himself remedy any conditions which he created. . . .”
“MR. MITCHELL: . . . And it is our contention that any prospective buyer of this ground on a date immediately before the taking would have bought it with the idea that this construction process was going to go on, that he would have bought it with the idea the poles— that there had to be holes for those poles and that that was going to throw dirt out on the ground, and he would have bought it with the idea that they would not have finished that construction project in any one week, and that there would be rainy periods and soft ground during that time, and that the ground would thereby be rutted or cut up, or roughed up, and that these are elements of damages foreseeable and which any prospective buyer would have considered.”

The trial judge, apparently impressed with respondents’ contention that the damages respondents claimed would have been foreseeable by a prospective purchaser on the day of taking, reversed his ruling and permitted the statement to be made and thereafter the evidence to be received.

The evidence complained of is summarized as follows:

Vivian J. Cary, one of respondents, now deceased, stated that she saw the easement area and there were “very deep ruts”, “very rough and very deep”.

Howard Pyle, the tenant who farmed the land, testified the ruts were two and one-half feet deep and deeper in some places. To farm the area it was necessary for him to level the ground with a disc and it took him three days working 14 to 16 hours a day. Because of the necessary leveling work he was delayed in getting in the crop three days and rains came and caused an additional ten day delay. As a result the crop grown in 1969 and 1970 was 25 bushels less per.acre on the easement than on the rest of the farm.

The witness also complained that two inches of white rock was spread around the poles making it hard on a scythe.

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Bluebook (online)
485 S.W.2d 862, 1972 Mo. App. LEXIS 886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northeast-missouri-electric-power-cooperative-v-cary-moctapp-1972.