Schoppe v. APPLIED CHEMICALS DIV., ETC.

418 So. 2d 833
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 25, 1982
Docket53371
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 418 So. 2d 833 (Schoppe v. APPLIED CHEMICALS DIV., ETC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schoppe v. APPLIED CHEMICALS DIV., ETC., 418 So. 2d 833 (Mich. 1982).

Opinion

418 So.2d 833 (1982)

Billy W. SCHOPPE, J. McDonald Williams, Trammel S. Crow, Lee Bean, and Durant Estates Corporation N.V., d/b/a the Refuge Plantation Company
v.
APPLIED CHEMICALS DIVISION, MOBLEY COMPANY, INC.

No. 53371.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

August 25, 1982.

*834 Barrett, Barrett & Barrett, Pat M. Barrett, Jr., Lexington, for appellants.

Upshaw & Ladner, Tommie Williams, Greenwood, for appellees.

Before PATTERSON, C.J., and BOWLING and DAN M. LEE, JJ.

DAN M. LEE, Justice, for the Court:

This is an appeal from the Circuit Court of Holmes County wherein Billy W. Schoppe, J. McDonald Williams, Trammel S. Crow, Lee Bean and Durant Estates Corporation N.V., d/b/a The Refuge Plantation, plaintiffs/appellants, brought suit against Illinois Central Gulf Railroad Company, Mobley Company, Inc., and Applied Chemicals Division, Mobley Company, Inc., defendants/appellees, for damages to soybean and cotton crops which resulted from the negligent application of chemicals along the Illinois Central Gulf Railroad tracks, for defoliant purposes, which drifted onto appellants' crops, causing a reduction in yield in 1977.

Prior to trial, Illinois Central Gulf Railroad Company and Mobley Company, Inc., were nonsuited. Applied Chemicals Division, the sole remaining defendant and appellee, admitted liability for the damage, however, denied the extent of the damages claimed. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiffs/appellants in the amount of $41,000. However the trial court, upon the motion of Applied Chemicals Division, Mobley, Company, Inc., ordered a remittitur of $30,000 or a new trial on the issue of damages if plaintiffs declined to accept the remittitur, which reduced the award to $11,000. Aggrieved of the trial court's actions, plaintiffs appeal to this Court as authorized by Mississippi Code Annotated section 11-7-213 (1972) urging reinstatement of the jury verdict. We reverse and reinstate.

*835 The Refuge Plantation consists of 2700 acres of farmland located in Leflore and Holmes Counties. This land was purchased by appellants in 1977 for the purpose of raising soybeans and cotton. The length of the plantation spans approximately 3 1/2 miles. The property is bisected by the Illinois Central Gulf Railroad tracks and Highway 49 which traverse the property in a northeasterly direction.

In April 1977, approximately 1000 acres of soybeans and 600 acres of cotton were planted on the Refuge Plantation. On June 18, 1977, appellee applied Spike, Karmex, Paraquat and Banvel 720 on the Illinois Central Gulf Railroad right-of-way through the Refuge Plantation for defoliation of the railroad right-of-way. The chemicals were applied twenty-five feet from the track's center line. On the day of the application, the wind was blowing from the west with a varied velocity of zero to six miles per hour.

Although appellee readily admitted liability for any damages caused by its application of the chemicals, it denied the extent of damages as claimed by appellants. Bill Schoppe, a partner in Crow Farms, compared the plants in five representative locations by making boll counts on the cotton plants and pod counts on the soybean plants. According to Schoppe, the area affected by the chemical spray was 275-300 yards east of and parallel to the railroad tracks. Schoppe testified that 225 acres of the cotton crop were affected by the spray which reduced the yield on that acreage by 75%. He also asserted that 102 acres of soybeans were affected which reduced the soybean crop on that acreage by 65%. Schoppe approximated their damages in the amount of $81,485.03.

Robert Kennedy, an employee of the Refuge Plantation for some twenty-six years, asserted the crops were damaged halfway between the railroad tracks and the highway. Fred Grossman, who began managing the Refuge Plantation in July 1977, testified that 200-225 acres of cotton were affected by the spraying while 100-125 acres of soybeans were affected by the chemical defoliant. According to Grossman, the reduction in yield on the affected acreage was substantially the same as that testified to by Schoppe.

The appellee produced two expert witnesses in crop damages and Bill Doyle, the plantation manager before Fred Grossman. These witnesses substantially undermined appellants' damage estimates. Albert Lee Frazier, Jr., a crop-damage claim investigator, was contacted by Bill Doyle to investigate the crop-damaged area. According to Frazier, boll counts were not an accurate measure of determining what yield a crop would produce. Frazier asserted only thirty acres of cotton were affected by the chemical spray. Of the thirty acres, ten acres were affected moderately to severely, which would reduce yield, while twenty acres were only affected slightly, producing little or no yield loss.

As to the soybean crop, Frazier testified approximately twenty acres of beans were affected which would have produced a tenbushel-per-acre loss. Frazier approximated appellants' damages at $2850. Dennis F. Bouchard, who was employed by the Refuge Plantation as an entomologist, asserted the damage was mainly confined along the railroad track bed. Bouchard estimated ten acres of the cotton crop were severely damaged so that between 75% and 80% of that crop would be lost. Bouchard asserted another forty acres of the cotton crop suffered symptoms. However, the yield therefrom would only be affected some 0% to 10%. As to the soybeans, Bouchard asserted twenty-five acres were affected enough to see some response and possibility of slight yield reduction. Five of these acres were described as being hit pretty hard while the remaining twenty acres had symptoms ranging from 0% to 10%. Bouchard placed the total amount of damages at $5500.

Bill Doyle, employed at the Refuge Plantation as farm manager in 1977, testified the chemical spray damaged approximately twenty-seven acres of cotton and sixty acres of beans. Doyle estimated a 75% yield reduction on the twenty-seven acres of cotton and a 50% yield reduction on the sixty acres of soybeans.

*836 At the conclusion of the trial, the cause was submitted to the jury which returned a verdict in favor of appellants, assessing their damages at $41,000. However, upon motion of the appellee, the trial court ordered a $30,000 remittitur or a new trial on the issue of damages if appellants chose not to accept the remittitur. Appellants declined to accept the remittitur and appeal to this Court, urging reinstatement of the jury verdict.

I. Did the trial court abuse its discretion in granting a new trial on the issue of damages conditioned upon appellants' refusal of a remittitur?

The scope of review, when an appellant declines to accept a remittitur and appeals from an order granting a new trial because of excessive damages, is limited to the question of whether the trial court abused its discretion in granting a new trial. Cortez v. Brown, 408 So.2d 464 (Miss. 1981). Generally, this Court looks with favor upon the action of the trial court in granting an additur or remittitur pursuant to Mississippi Code Annotated 11-1-55 (Supp. 1981). Mississippi State Highway Comm. v. Antioch Baptist Church, Inc., 392 So.2d 512 (Miss. 1981). By appealing the trial court's granting of a new trial due to inadequacy of damages, the appellants are asking that this Court reinstate the judgment and by their very act of appealing they must be willing to accept the verdict in all other respects, including the determination of liability. Screws v. Parker, 365 So.2d 633 (Miss. 1978).

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Bluebook (online)
418 So. 2d 833, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoppe-v-applied-chemicals-div-etc-miss-1982.