Oil Fields & Santa Fe R. Co. v. Treese Cotton Co.

1920 OK 56, 187 P. 201, 78 Okla. 25, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 284
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 3, 1920
Docket9453
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1920 OK 56 (Oil Fields & Santa Fe R. Co. v. Treese Cotton Co.) 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
Oil Fields & Santa Fe R. Co. v. Treese Cotton Co., 1920 OK 56, 187 P. 201, 78 Okla. 25, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 284 (Okla. 1920).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J.

The Treese Cotton Company, defendant in error, was the owner of approximately one and three-quarter acres of land situated in the city of Cushing, upon which it owned and operated a cotton gin. While this gin was being operated the Oil Fields & Santa Fe Railway Company, plaintiff in error, constructed its line of railroad along the street immediately south of the gin company’s property extending its line eastward along this street and along the public highway leading to the country for a distance óf more than a mile. In 1915, the gin company sued the railroad company for damages for obstructing the street south of its property. In 1917, while this suit was pending, the railroad company commenced condemnation proceedings to condemn and take the street immediately south of the gin company’s property and 60 feet off the south side of the lot or tract of land upon which it operated its gin, leaving about one acre. Upon the land taken there were situated the scales, an office building, and a portion of the cotton house, and upon the portion not taken were erected the gin, well, seed house, water tank, and other necessary buildings. Prior to the taking, the gin lot was bounded on the east by a private road, on the west by the tracks of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company, an unused road to the west, and on the south by a street, and prior to the construction of the road the travel from Yale came by this gin, and it is contended that three-fourths of the cotton entering the town came over this street. After the taking, the egress and ingress and *26 use of the street to the south were cut off, leaving the other boundaries as heretofore described. The gin faced the private road, and the only public thoroughfare left was the unused road to the back and west of the gin. On the portion of the lot left, to the west of the gin house, there had been a pond in time past and the ground was low and damp. In the condemnation proceedings the gin company was awarded damages in the sum of $820, from which award an appeal was taken to the district court. When the appeal came on to be heard, by agreement of the parties, they were consolidated and both tried at the same time. At the request of the railroad company the jury was by the court instructed that in assessing the damages they should do so as if the condemnation case alone were being tried. To this instruction no exception was taken by the gin company. The jury assessed the damages at $2,650, and after deducting the award of $820 therefrom, the court entered up a judgment for the gin company for $1,850, from which judgment plaintiff in error appeals to this court.

The plaintiff in error sets forth three propositions why this cause should be reversed. First, error of the court in its instructions as to measure of damages; second, error of the court in admitting evidence of- the obstruction of the street beyond the property line of the gin company; and, third, for failure to give certain instructions.

As to the first proposition, the instructions as to the measure of damages are as follows :

“No. 3. You are instructed that the issue for you to determine in this case is the amount of damages, the land owner, Treese Cotton Co., had sustained by reason of the appropriation of the said strip of land ninety-three feet wide and extending along the south portion of said strip of land, and with the injury that the landowner has sustained to the remaining portion of the land not condemned for right of way purposes, together with such damages as the owner actually sustained as to the real or personal property by such appropriation of its land.
“No. 4. You are instructed that, in determining the amount of compensation to be awarded to the Treese Cotton Company, in this case, you may properly take into consideration all evidence tending to show the actual value of the premises of what it is proposed to deprive it of, the actual loss to be suffered by the Treese Cotton Company, from the loss, destruction, or depreciation of the improvements placed by them on this property especially adapted to the conduct of its business, the reasonable cost of removal, and of refitting in other locality for the further conduct of business as shown by the evidence.
“No. 5. In determining what is the value of the property in controversy, however, the law does not permit you to fix speculative or fancy values upon it, but the law requires you to determine the reasonable market value of the property if the owner was offering to sell on the usual terms and the purchaser desiring to buy. The phrase ‘market value’ does not mean what you may ask for it, but said phrase means the fair selling value of the property in the market, either in its present condition or any condition to which it is susceptible of being changed.”

The plaintiff in error requested this instruction :

“You are instructed that the measure of damages in this case is the fair market value of the property taken at the time of the taking thereof. And should you find in addition that by reason of the taking of a portion of the defendant’s property, the market value of the remaining portion of the defendant’s property has been and will be diminished, that difference in value would be the measure of damages to the remaining portion, if any, by reason of such taking. In other words, the difference between the market value of defendant’s property before the taking and market value of the remaining portion thereof after the taking, and after the railroad has been built and in operation, is the measure of damages, if any, in this cause.”

It will be seen that, taking the court’s instruction as a whole, there is no fundamental difference between the instructions §iven by the court and the instruction requested by the plaintiff in error, further than that instruction given by the court wherein the reasonable cost of removal of the gin and fitting it up on another locality is given as an element of damages to be considered by the jury. It is the settled law of this state that when the necessity exists for the removal of property from lands taken in a condemnation proceeding, the reasonable cost of removal is a proper element of damages to be considered, and it is so held in Blinco v. Choctaw, Okla. & W. R. Co., 16 Okla. 286, 83 Pac. 903. In that case the trial court refused to submit to the jury the cost of removing a lumber yard from the lot taken, and this court reversed the cause, holding that the cost of removal was a proper element of damages. The instructions of the court follow the law as laid down in Arkansas Valley & Western R. Co. v. Witt, 19 Okla. 262, 91 Pac. 897, and Blinco v. Choctaw, Okla. & W. R. Co., supra.

The plaintiff in error complains of instruction No. 4, for the reason that the court assumed therein the necessity of a removal of the gin. The defendant in error contends that if this be error, then it is cured by in *27 struction No. 3. We find that the language in instruction No. 4 is such that the court apparently assumed the. necessity of a removal of the gin, and that if this he error, then the same is not corrected by instruction No. 3. In order to ascertain if there he error in this assumption on the part of the court, it will he necessary to search the record and consider all evidence adduced, throwing any light upon the necessity of removal of the gin to another location.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1920 OK 56, 187 P. 201, 78 Okla. 25, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oil-fields-santa-fe-r-co-v-treese-cotton-co-okla-1920.