Rawson-Works Lumber Co. v. Richardson

141 P. 74, 26 Idaho 37, 1914 Ida. LEXIS 47
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 141 P. 74 (Rawson-Works Lumber Co. v. Richardson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rawson-Works Lumber Co. v. Richardson, 141 P. 74, 26 Idaho 37, 1914 Ida. LEXIS 47 (Idaho 1914).

Opinions

SULLIVAN, J.

This is an action under the eminent domain law of the state. The plaintiff is a lumber manufacturing corporation and has considerable timber land in this state. The entire acreage involved in this proceeding, including the interest owned by the appellant corporation, is 48.53 acres, of which appellant is the owner of 33.01 acres and the defendants of about 15.52 acres.

On the trial the jury awarded the defendants the sum of $6,352, and the court entered judgment for that amount in favor of the respective defendants in accordance with their respective interests in and to said 15.52 acres of land. The appeal is from the judgment.

Counsel for appellant contends that the value of the land fixed by the jury is excessive and that the court erred in the admission of evidence as to -the value of the land; in giving certain instructions to the jury and refusing to give certain instructions requested, and in assessing the damages [41]*41to a portion of the land owned by respondent A. C. Richardson not condemned under this proceeding. Some forty-three errors are specified.

(1) Assigned errors 1 to 32, inclusive, are argued by appellant in his brief as one assignment of error. Those assigned errors relate to the admission of certain evidence and the refusal of the court to strike out certain evidence.

The case was tried upon the theory that the proper measure of damages to be awarded was the value of this particular tract of land to the appellant corporation. Nearly all of the opinion, evidence given by the witnesses as to the value of said land was based upon the benefits that the appellant would derive from obtaining said land and not upon the damages suffered by the respondents or the actual market value of the land, and the trial proceeded upon the theory that the land owner was to be compensated, not in the amount he is damaged, but in the amount the party seeking to condemn is benefited; and the compensation was not reckoned from the standpoint of what the land owner loses by having his property taken, but by the benefit which the property may be to the condemning party.

The following are samples of question after question that were propounded to witnesses, which the witnesses were permitted to answer over the objection of counsel for appellant:

"Q. Mr. Nichols, if this tract of land sought to be condemned is the only available tract of land that the RawsonWorks Lumber Company could condemn for the purpose for which they seek to condemn, and if they had approximately a million dollars invested in timber and in their flume and in their sawmills and in their planing plant and power-house, and they owned one-lialf of this tract of land, what would you say the other half of the tract of land would be worth to them per acre for the purpose for which they seek to condemn ? ”
"Q. If this land sought to be condemned, this flat, is the only practical and available ground for the terminus of the flume for the planing-mill plant and piling yards, and if this Rawson-Works Lumber Company desires it for the outlet [42]*42to something like $700,000 or a million dollars’ worth of lumber, wouldn’t that enhance its value, the fact it is the only available ground for that purpose?”
“Q. From your knowledge of the works which have been constructed by the Rawson-Works Lumber Company, and from the proposed erection of their planing plant, powerhouse, and western terminus of this flume, and considering that they have approximately one million dollars invested in their timber holdings, and in their flume and mills, and that this particular tract of land is suitable and available for this purpose, what would you say this land is worth per acre as a terminus of this flume, or for a planing plant or for the purpose to which the plaintiff seeks to put it?”
“A. Taking into consideration, as they state, having all of this vast amount of timber, and no other place for a mill site, I wouldn’t let it go — I would have it if it cost me a thousand dollars an acre if I were in their place; that is the straight of it.”

Much evidence along the line indicated by the above questions and answer was introduced over the objection of counsel for the defendant. This evidence clearly shows that the witnesses based their opinions almost wholly upon the fact that said land would be very valuable to the appellant company. The admission of all of this class of evidence was highly prejudicial to the appellant and placed a false value upon the land in question, for the reason that such valuation was not based on the real market value of the land but on the necessities of the appellant and the importance of its acquiring this particular tract of land for the conduct of its business. The court recognized that this was not proper evidence, but still permitted it to go in over the objection of the defendant, and undertook by an instruction to the jury to prevent their considering it at all, which instruction the jury clearly did not follow in its verdict, but gave more attention to this prejudicial evidence than to the instruction of the court. Why a court will permit highly prejudicial evidence to be repeated time and again in a case and permit its introduction on the trial over the objection of the defendant, is beyond [43]*43our comprehension. It is a well-recognized fact that a court by an instruction cannot eradicate from the minds of a jury prejudicial evidence that has been testified to many times by different witnesses and admitted over the strenuous objection of counsel.

Compensation in condemnation cases must not be based on the benefits to be derived by the appellant, but upon the damages suffered by the respondent or the owner of the land— in other words, its market value. The numerous comments made by the court in regard to the matter on objection being made by counsel for appellant were clearly prejudicial. The rule that the land owner is to be compensated, not in the amount he is damaged, but in the amount the party seeking to condemn is benefited, is an erroneous rule.

It is stated in the text in 15 Cyc. 757, that compensation in such cases must be reckoned from the standpoint of what the land owner loses by having his property taken, and not by the benefit the property may be to the other party to the proceedings, and that authority holds that the particular purpose for which the condemnor seeks the land cannot be considered as an element of damages to the land owner.

In 2 Lewis on Eminent Domain, 3d ed., p. 1229, the author says:

“It is not a question of the value of the property to the owner. Nor can the damages be enhanced by his unwillingness to sell or because of any sentiment which he has for the property. On the other hand, the damages cannot be measured by the value of the property to the party condemning it, nor by its needs of the particular property.”

This doctrine is fully sustained by the numerous authorities cited by said authors, and is also fully sustained by this court in Portneuf-Marsh Valley Irr. Co. v. Portneuf Irr. Co., 19 Ida. 483, 114 Pac. 19.

(2) The 33d error assigned goes to the court’s instruction directing the jury to compute the amount of interest to each of the defendants in the land sought to be condemned, and to include the streets and alleys in such computation. It appears from the record that said tract had been platted and [44]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 P. 74, 26 Idaho 37, 1914 Ida. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rawson-works-lumber-co-v-richardson-idaho-1914.