R. H. Phillips and Jessie E. Phillips, His Wife v. United States

243 F.2d 1, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4825
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 22, 1957
Docket15156_1
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 243 F.2d 1 (R. H. Phillips and Jessie E. Phillips, His Wife 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
R. H. Phillips and Jessie E. Phillips, His Wife v. United States, 243 F.2d 1, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4825 (9th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

LEMMON, Circuit Judge.

Never niggardly in its standards for the compensation of the expropriated landowner, the Supreme Court has grown progressively more liberal in its canons for the reimbursement of those who are dispossessed through the exercise of the right of eminent domain.

In evaluating condemned real estate, the total worth of the property must be considered. It frequently has been remarked that expropriation is an action in rem. It is not concerned with the taking of the rights of different persons, but with the seizure of the property itself.

If we attempt to cut a condemnation proceeding into slices, it bleeds.

1. Statement of Facts

The appellants were the owners of a ranch.in the eastern part of the State of Washington, of which the greater part, consisting of 33,213.13 acres, was taken by the appellee under the power of eminent domain.

Four condemnation proceedings involving the property were brought by the ap-pellee against the appellants in the Court below. On October 26, 1955, the four cases were consolidated for trial.

On November 4,1955, the jury brought in verdicts as follows:

Civil No. 452: Leasehold interest in 4,086.69 acres; taken on February 10, 1950; verdict, $5,062 per annum.

Civil No. 488: Leasehold interest in 3,034.84 acres; taken on July 5, 1950; verdict, $2,954 per annum.

Civil No. 762: Leasehold interest in 6,-868.22 acres; taken on October 28, 1952; verdict, $7,240 per annum.

Civil No. 892: Fee interest in 33,213.-13 acres; taken on February 15, 1954; verdict, $514,801.56.

Judgments on the verdicts were rendered on November 30, 1955.

During the trial, counsel for the appellants made repeated proffers of exhibits and testimony tending to prove “that this is an active leasing area now * * * and the reasons why it is, * * * and that there is a value incident to mineral rights as a result of its being an active leasing area.” Specifically, counsel made the following offers:

1. The testimony of Valentine, a geologist of the Shell Oil Company, relating “to the presence of the factors necessary for exploration for gas and oil,” with “data as to all of the existing leases in this field and showing almost all the land in and about this ranch to have been leased by various major oil companies.”

2. The testimony of Beam, a former employee of the Carter Oil Company, to the effect “that he himself has bought mineral rights in such situations as the geologist will describe exist at this area on this ranch, and he himself has bought them for his personal account and for the account of leasehold mineral right companies”.

3. Testimony that “in this region oil and gas have been developed, gas furnished for 14 years * *

4. Exhibit 96, “an option for mineral ■rights lease which encumbered this title *3 at the time the government took title to this property in February, 1954.” The option is from Phillips, Haggerty, and Walter Swanson to Regimbal.

5. Exhibit 97, “the oil and gas lease which was executed by the owners of this property to the Shell Oil Company prior to the time that the government took this property in 1954.” In making this offer, counsel for the appellants explained:

“It is the theory of this offer that this jury should find the whole value of everything of this property that is taken — mineral rights, underground, surface and everything else —and that a division later is made between the parties to the lawsuit, all of the defendants.”

The lease is from Phillips, Haggerty, and Swanson.

In connection with Exhibits 96 and 97, counsel offered checks “written for a year in advance”, “as payments that have been made * * * In advance * * *. At the time of the taking * *

6. Exhibit 120, a deed of mineral rights from the appellants individually to the Cold Creek Company, composed of the appellants and the Swansons.

Later, counsel for the appellants elaborated at some length on these offers, naming the expected witnesses, and giving details of the proffered testimony, including the several factors that govern the decision as to drilling by the major companies, such as a source bed and an anticline area with a closure; corroboration by the geology departments of five other major oil companies in addition to Shell; reservations of mineral rights in recent sales of lands adjoining the property in question; dealings in areas similar to the one at bar, where there has not been a strike of oil, etc., etc.

We have no doubt that the appellants’ offer of proof was sufficiently specific and circumstantial fully to apprise the District Court of the nature of the evidence that was sought to be introduced.

In any event, the District Judge ruled that he would not submit to the jury “the leases which have been received in evidence. They will be here for the purpose of showing the state of the title.” The Court also instructed the jury as follows:

“Now, there has been some mention made of mineral rights here. I think I should tell you that that question has been carefully considered by the Court and the Court has come to the conclusion as a matter of law, and you are instructed, that there has been shown no substantial value here for mineral rights and you are not to award any value for mineral rights. You are to utterly disregard any evidence that may have come in or any mention of that matter.”

The appellants specify as errors the rejection of Exhibits 96 and 97 — the lease option and the lease — offered as proof of the “Value of appellants’ mineral estate, through rental payments and possibility of oil or gas production” and of the “Highest and best uses of land not inconsistent with agricultural use”; proffers of testimony of Valentine,- the Shell Oil Company geologist, and Beam, formerly of the Carter Oil Company, supra ; and the “Requirement by the Trial Court that the appellants conduct their case in accordance with the desires of the Court as to order and manner of proof,” etc.

2. In Compensation Cases, the Market Value of the Property Is to Be Fixed With Consideration of ALL Its Available Uses.

We believe that the learned trial judge erred in apparently assuming that the appellee was obligated to pay . the appellants for the appropriated land only “on the basis of its highest and best uses”. Although the Court did make a passing reference to the fact that “property is to be valued with reference to all the uses to which it is adapted”, on four separate occasions the District Judge stressed the view that “the constitutional provision of just compensation” for the taking of land is “on the basis of its highest and best uses.” Two of those obser *4 vations were contained in the Court’s instructions to the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
243 F.2d 1, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-h-phillips-and-jessie-e-phillips-his-wife-v-united-states-ca9-1957.