Schulte v. Oklahoma City

1972 OK 7, 494 P.2d 638
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 18, 1972
DocketNo. 43209
StatusPublished

This text of 1972 OK 7 (Schulte v. Oklahoma City) 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
Schulte v. Oklahoma City, 1972 OK 7, 494 P.2d 638 (Okla. 1972).

Opinion

LAVENDER, Justice.

This appeal, from the District Court of Oklahoma County, involves matters of evidence in the jury trial of a condemnation proceeding brought by the City of Oklahoma City. The jury’s verdict was for less than the amount of the commissioners’ award, which had been deposited with the court clerk of the city and withdrawn by the landowners. The trial court entered judgment for the city and against the landowners for the difference, with interest from the date of the verdict. The landowners appealed to this court.

The condemnation proceeding was commenced, on December 3, 1962, by the defendant in error, City of Oklahoma City, pursuant to a resolution of necessity adopted by its City Council on March 20, 1962, to acquire title to the Southeast Quarter of Section 26, Township 11 North, Range 4 West, in Oklahoma County, for airport purposes and for the construction, operation and maintenance of an airport thereon, and uses incidental thereto.

Title to the 160-acre tract in question in the plaintiffs in error, Frank Schulte, Wm. J. Schulte, and The First National Bank and Trust Company of Oklahoma City as Trustee for Annette Vogt Gravitt and Jeanette Vogt Bollman, is not questioned, and the city’s right to take the title to the tract is not questioned. According to the pre-trial order, damages to property not taken are not involved.

Commissioners appointed by a judge of the district court reported the total damages to these landowners as a result of the taking of this tract to be $340,000.00. Demands for a trial by jury on the question of just compensation were filed upon behalf of the city and upon behalf of these landowners. The amount of the commissioners’ award was paid into the office of the court clerk by the city for the benefit of these owners on February 13, 1963, and was disbursed to them on January 3, 1964, after they withdrew their objections to the right of the city to take a fee title to the entire tract.

Jury trial resulted in a verdict for these landowners in the amount of $256,000.00. Based on that verdict and the landowners’ withdrawal of the $340,000.00 award money, the trial court entered judgment for [641]*641the city and against the landowners in the amount of $84,000.00, with interest tfrere-on at the rate of six per cent per annum from the date of the verdict (March 21, 1968).

On appeal, the landowners present their assignments of error under three propositions. The first two propositions involve the same legal theory and are argued together :

1. “The trial court erred in refusing the introduction into evidence of testimony and documents to show the value of the property as it would have been if no airport expansion had been contemplated or announced.”
2. “The trial court erred in refusing to allow witnesses to testify as to public knowledge and personal knowledge of the announced and impending condemnation.”

They do not question this court’s many decisions to the effect that, when private property is taken for public purposes, just compensation is the fair market value of the property as of the time of the taking, which, when the amount of the commissioners’ award is paid into the court clerk’s office for the benefit of the landowners, is the date such deposit is made — in this instance, February 13, 1963.

Their theory is that, if the value of the property as of the time of the taking has been depressed by the condemnor’s prior announcement that the property would be taken for public use, the principles of just compensation for property so taken require that the landowner receive what its fair market value would be, at the time of the taking, if it had not been subject to the threat of condemnation and was not being taken.

The landowners do not cite any Oklahoma case in support of this theory. They do cite cases from five other states (Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Minnesota, and Texas) which would support the principle that a condemnor cannot take advantage of a depressed valuation which results from its own acts.

The cited Florida case, State Road Department of Florida v. Chicone et al. (1963), 158 So.2d 753, is the one most nearly in point on the facts contended for by the landowners herein, and does support the principle of law relied upon by them.

In that case, the Florida Road Department had publicly announced, in 1957, the route for an interstate highway through the City of Orlando. Four of the parcels required for the announced right-of-way were owned by the appellees and, at the time of the announcement, had improvements thereon, all of which were leased out to others. Proceedings to condemn those parcels were not commenced until May 10, 1960 (the time of taking, under the Florida decisions). Expert witnesses for the Department stated that their valuations as of May 10, 1960, reflected a discount from the value as of the date the announcement had been made, based upon the resulting decrease in the rental value of the property in the interim. The trial court refused to strike their testimony as to value, but later granted the landowners a new trial because of error in doing so. A District Court of Appeal affirmed the trial court in granting a new trial, and, on certiorari to review the decision of the Court of Appeal, the Supreme Court of Florida held that the result was correct:

In doing so, the Supreme Court of Florida concluded that the value of the property taken at the time of the taking, as depreciated or depressed by the prospect of condemnation, is not a proper basis or measure of compensation for the property taken. It held that, in such circumstances, compensation should be based on the value of the property as it would be at the time of the taking if it had not been subjected to the debilitating threat of condemnation and was not being taken.

In the present case, it is not necessary for us to determine whether or not those principles of law would be applicable in Oklahoma. Contrary to the land[642]*642owners’ contention, their expert witnesses concerning value of the property taken were not prevented from testifying as to the value of the property as it would have been at the time of the taking if it had not been subjected to the threat of condemnation and was not being taken. Those were the valuations they gave, and those valuations were given without the landowners having been required to show public knowledge that this land would be condemned, or even a public announcement that it would be taken.

As of the date of the taking- (February 13, 1963), the 160-acre tract of land involved herein was “raw” farm land with no buildings thereon, and, except for a very few years when it had been farmed by Frank Schulte or by Wm. J. Schulte, had been leased to others for agricultural purposes. It had not been developed, or even platted for development, at that time. It was abutted on the south by a graveled county road known as Southwest 74th Street, and on the east by a hard-topped county road known as South Portland, both of which were extensions of Oklahoma City streets with the same names.

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Related

State Road Department v. Chicone
158 So. 2d 753 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
1972 OK 7, 494 P.2d 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schulte-v-oklahoma-city-okla-1972.