Shell Pipe Line Corp. v. Woolfolk

53 S.W.2d 917, 331 Mo. 410, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 667
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 22, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 53 S.W.2d 917 (Shell Pipe Line Corp. v. Woolfolk) 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
Shell Pipe Line Corp. v. Woolfolk, 53 S.W.2d 917, 331 Mo. 410, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 667 (Mo. 1932).

Opinion

ATWOOD, J.

This is a proceeding commenced in the Circuit Court of St. Louis County by the Shell Pipe Line Corporation, a common carrier for the transportation of oil, and petroleum and its products, by means of pipe lines, to condemn a right of way for additional pipe line or lines” twenty feet in width and extending for a total distance of 4055 feet on land belonging to Alice V. Woolf oik and John L. Woolf oik, her husband, and consisting of about 331 a^res situated on both sides of the St. Charles Rock Road, now U. S. Highway 40, three or four miles west of the city of St. Louis. The parties stipulated for the appointment of commissioners by the court to assess the damages to defendants’ land by reason of this condemnation pro *413 ceeding. Commissioners were accordingly appointed wbo subsequently filed their report in which defendants’ damages were shown assessed at the sum of $24,900. Plaintiff filed exceptions thereto which were sustained, and trial by jury was demanded, allowed and had. The jury’s verdict was for defendants in the sum of $30,000. Judgment was entered in accordance therewith and from this judgment plaintiff has appealed.

The first point urged by appellant is that the trial court “erred in excluding evidence offered by plaintiff that the latter does not fence its right of ways and would not fence the right of way across defendants’ land, because this testimony would have tended to reduce the damages to defendants’ land.”

We find only two references in the record to the matter of fencing or not fencing the right of way. In the course of his examination of plaintiff’s vice-president and general manager, counsel for plaintiff, after directing attention to defendants’ plat of the Woolf oik property, asked him “whether or not tile company Will Í6HC6 IÍp¡ílt OÍ 'Wayl The trial court sustained objection of defendants’ counsel thereto, counsel for plaintiff excepting and saving exception. Later in the examination of the same witness counsel for plaintiff inquired whether any of plaintiff’s right of way from McOairey, Texas, to East Chicago. Indiana, was fenced. This inquiry was objected to by defendants’ counsel as not material. Plaintiff’s counsel then said: “ I think wc should be permitted to go into this to get it into the record, so that we would be bound by the testimony; this right of way which crosses Mr. Woolfolk’s property will not be fenced.” The objection was sustained, counsel for plaintiff excepting and saving exception.

In arguing the above point counsel for appellant do not contend that the rights that may be acquired by an oil pipe line corporation as the condemning party under the statute which authorizes this proceeding (Sec. 1340, R. S. 1929) do not include the right to fence the right of way condemned. Nor do they claim that plaintiff’s petition in this case contained any reservation to the landowner not contained in the statute itself, or any limitation upon the full rights available under this statute to the condemning party in the land sought to be condemned. Their argument is that it was proper without such pload-ing, for the purpose of minimizing the full damages that might be awarded defendants for all rights available to condemning party under the statute, to inquire of this witness whether or not plaintiff’s use of the proposed right of way would be so limited.

Section 1342, Revised Statutes 1929, provides that after the commissioners have assessed damages against the condemning company and filed their report with the clerk of the court in which the proceeding is pending “such company shall pay to the said clerk the *414 amount thus assessed, for the party in whose favor such damages have been assessed; and on making such payment it shall be lawful for such company to hold the interest in the property so appropriated for the uses aforesaid.” Section 1344, Revised Statutes 1929 provides for review of said report upon exceptions filed, order for new appraisement for good cause shown by a jury if requested by either party, “and any subsequent proceedings shall only affect the amount of compensation to be allowed.”

The well-established doctrine in this State is that the condemning party may appropriate less than the full rights available under the statute, and the fact that the use is so limited is a proper matter for consideration in fixing the amount of damages to be allowed. [Ry. Co. v. Clark, 121 Mo. 169, 194, 25 S. W. 192, 196; City of Cape Girardeau v. Hunze, 314 Mo. 438, 462, 284 S. W. 471; 20 C. J. pp. 766, 767, notes 63, 64.] But, as said in 20 Corpus Juris, pages 768, 769, notes 67, 68 citing, St. Louis, etc., Railroad Co. v. St. Louis Union Stock Yards Co., 120 Mo. 541, 25 S. W. 399, and cases in other jurisdictions:

‘ ‘ The probability that the appropriator will not exercise, or the fact that there is no present intention of exercising, to the full extent the rights acquired should not be considered in reduction of the damages, where there is nothing to prevent a full exercise of such rights, since the presumption is that the appropriator will exercise his rights and use and enjoy the property taken to the full extent.”

And our decisions hold that the condemning party’s purpose to exercise less than the full rights available under the statute should appear with reasonable certainty in the petition or be brought in by way of amendment thereto. [Ry. Co. v. Clark, 121 Mo. 169, 194, 200, 25 S. W. 192, 196; Ry. Co. v. Knapp, Stout & Co., 160 Mo. 396, 407, 61 S. W. 300; 20 C. J. 957, n. 96.]

Counsel for plaintiff evidently proceeded on the theory that without pleading any limitation whatever upon the right of appropriation theretofore acquired under and by virtue of the commissioner’s report duly filed and payment in court of the damages as assessed, plaintiff could on the new appraisement by the jury, for the purpose of minimizing defendants’ damages, inquire of this witness whether or not plaintiff would in the future exercise the right to fence the right of way. In justification of this informal effort to accomplish what plaintiff clearly could have done upon amendment of the petition on which this reappraisement was proceeding, counsel for appellant quote the following excerpt from the Clark opinion, 121 Mo. 169, 197:

“No good reason can be seen why the condemning company should not have the right to announce, upon the trial, and have made a *415 matter of record, if not done in its petition, the manner in which the right of way should be used, otherwise the jury would have the right to make the award on the basis of the most injurious use to which the easement could be lawfully applied in the construction and operation of the road.”

It must be borne in mind that in the Clark case the condemning party had offered in evidence a stipulation, signed by its engineer, containing an explicit offer to construct and maintain two open crossings for defendants’ use not provided by statute. In this case plaintiff did nothing of the kind. The witness never answered the questions propounded and plaintiff’s counsel made no formal offer of proof as to what his testimony would be, made no request for leave to amend the petition, and presented no stipulation to be “made a matter of record” in the case to so limit plaintiff’s use.

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.W.2d 917, 331 Mo. 410, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shell-pipe-line-corp-v-woolfolk-mo-1932.