Public Water Supply District No. 2 of Jackson County v. Alex Bascom Co.

370 S.W.2d 281, 1963 Mo. LEXIS 687
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 9, 1963
Docket49365
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 370 S.W.2d 281 (Public Water Supply District No. 2 of Jackson County v. Alex Bascom Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Public Water Supply District No. 2 of Jackson County v. Alex Bascom Co., 370 S.W.2d 281, 1963 Mo. LEXIS 687 (Mo. 1963).

Opinion

STORCKMAN, Presiding Judge.

This suit is for the condemnation of land to be used as a site for water storage, pumping, and distribution facilities. The plaintiff is a public municipal corporation organized under Chapter 247, RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S., for the purpose of supplying water to the public. The land taken consists of three lots in the southeast corner of defendant’s platted subdivision. The commissioners appointed by the trial court made a damage award of $20,300 and both parties filed exceptions. The jury awarded *283 damages in the amount of $28,215. The plaintiff’s motion for new trial was overruled and it has appealed.

Since the judgment is for $28,215 and the appellant contends the maximum the respondent is entitled to recover is $12,-250, the amount in dispute, exclusive of costs, exceeds the sum of $15,000 and this court has jurisdiction of the appeal. Section 3, Art. V, Constitution of Missouri 1945, V.A.M.S.; § 477.040, RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S.

On December 12, 1960, the defendant contracted to purchase 41.69 acres of land in the City of Raytown, Jackson County, Missouri. The sale was consummated on February 17, 1961, and on the same day the defendant recorded a plat dividing the tract into a residential subdivision designated South Brooke Estates consisting of 141 lots. On or about January 20, 1961, the plaintiff began negotiating with the defendant for the purchase of a portion of the tract as a site for water storage, pumping, and distribution facilities. No agreement was reached and on March 20, one month and three days after the plat was filed, the plaintiff instituted this condemnation action.

When platted, South Brooke Estates was bounded on the south by 75th Street and on the other three sides by other residential subdivisions. The condemnor took lots numbered 20, 21, and 22 in the southeast corner which had a combined area of about one acre, a depth of 170 feet, and a frontage of 245 feet. At the time of the taking, the defendant was the owner of lots abutting the site on the north and of lots across Willow Street to the west. The defendant claims these adjacent lots were damaged by reason of their exposure to the site for water storage, pumping, and distribution facilities. The plaintiff contends the damages must be restricted to the market value of the three lots actually taken.

The lots taken had a higher elevation than any other lots in the subdivision and also a greater depth. Mr. Alex S. Bascom, president of the defendant company, testified that because of their elevation and location these lots were more desirable and he intended to build model homes on them for display purposes in connection with the sale of other lots in the subdivision and the building of homes on them. He further testified that the three lots had a reasonable market value of $18,375 based on a valuation of $75 per front foot. Other witnesses for the defendant fixed the value of the three lots at $12,240 and $12,550 on a basic value of $50 per front foot. One of the plaintiff’s witnesses testified that the value of the three lots was approximately $10,000 and the other $9,800.

Mr. Bascom testified that other lots in the vicinity of the site were damaged in the sum of $38,000 and that the defendant’s total damage was $56,375. Two other realtors and appraisers testified on behalf of the defendant that adjoining lots in the subdivision were damaged by the taking. One fixed this damage at $26,559.50 and the other at $26,715. The plaintiff’s evidence tended to prove that the present plan of the water district was to install water pumps and a concrete water storage tank 125 feet square with a capacity of 1,500,000 gallons of water on this site; that the tank and pumps would be entirely covered with earth except for two concrete vents and access towers about four feet square and five feet high; and that the surface of the site would be grass-covered and landscaped. Two witnesses for the plaintiff testified that the site in that condition would cause no damage to the remaining subdivision lots. One of plaintiff’s witnesses admitted that, if the plaintiff fenced the site, installed an office, or used the site for pipe storage, the value of lots in the vicinity would be depreciated about 50 percent.

The water district’s first contention is that the trial court erred in giving on behalf of the defendant instruction 1, in refusing plaintiff’s instructions 3 and 8, and in overruling plaintiff’s objections to evidence of alleged damage to lots in the sub *284 division other than the three lots actually-taken. The plaintiff asserts that the defendant’s right of recovery is limited to the fair market value of the three lots actually taken because the lands comprising the subdivision were laid out and platted by the defendant with the intention of constructing residences thereon and selling the improved lots separately. The fact of platting and the intention to develop the tract as a residential subdivision were admitted by the defendant.

Instruction 1 directed the jury to allow the defendant the fair and reasonable market value of the three lots “actually taken and appropriated” by the water district and further to allow damages, if any, “to the remainder of defendant’s subdivision as of March 20, 1961, caused by the taking of said three lots for water storage, pumping and distribution facilities” if the jury further found that the land was being used and developed by the defendant “as one tract or body of land on March 20, 1961.” The plaintiff’s offered instruction 3 would have instructed the jury that “you may not take into consideration either benefits or damages to any other property of defendant” except the three lots actually taken. To the same effect, plaintiff’s offered instruction 8 limited the jury to “damages at the fair market value of the three lots actually taken”. The essence of the plaintiff’s claim of error is that evidence of damage to lots other than the three actually taken was inadmissible because the subdivision had been platted and the lots were being developed as residential sites to be separately owned. At the time of the taking, none of the lots in question had been developed or sold and no streets or improvements had been installed in that vicinity. There was some evidence that at the time of the trial lots had been sold and residences constructed in other parts of the subdivision but not in the vicinity of the water storage site.

In support of its first point, the plaintiff relies solely on School District of Kansas City v. Phoenix Land & Improvement Co., 297 Mo. 332, 249 S.W. 51, a proceeding to acquire certain subdivision lots as a site for a high school. The condemnee appealed and the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial on the ground that it was improper to permit a witness for the condemnor to disclose to the jury that he was one of the commissioners appointed by the circuit court to assess damages and further that it was prejudicial error to permit the witness to testify concerning the amount of damages fixed by commissioners since the report of the commissioners became functus officio when a jury trial was ordered on the issue of damages. The appellate court also considered a further claim of the condemnee that the trial court had erred in refusing to allow him to prove damages to remaining lots in the subdivision. The court complained of the failure of the appellant to set out the evidence excluded, but from its.

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Bluebook (online)
370 S.W.2d 281, 1963 Mo. LEXIS 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-water-supply-district-no-2-of-jackson-county-v-alex-bascom-co-mo-1963.