State Ex Rel. Kansas City Power & Light Co. v. Cave

230 S.W.2d 850, 360 Mo. 795, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 646
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 13, 1950
Docket41772
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 230 S.W.2d 850 (State Ex Rel. Kansas City Power & Light Co. v. Cave) 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
State Ex Rel. Kansas City Power & Light Co. v. Cave, 230 S.W.2d 850, 360 Mo. 795, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 646 (Mo. 1950).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

This case was brought here by the plaintiff-appellant Kansas City Power & Light Company on a petition for writ of certiorari directed to the Judges of the Kansas City Court of Appeals for alleged conflict of their decision with decisions of this court. But under our Rule 2.06 the petition will be treated as one to transfer the underlying cause- — which was a condemnation suit instituted by appellant in the circuit court of Clay County to condemn a right-of-way for an electric transmission line across a tract of land owned by the defendants-respondents Mollie Barnes Gauld and her husband. In a trial on exceptions filed by both parties to the report of commissioners a jury awarded respondents $2000. And the circuit court’s judgment sustaining that award was affirmed by the judges of the Court of Appeals, as reported in 222 SW. (2d) 940.

Appellant’s chief contentions are that: (1) certain of respondents’ witnesses on land values failed to qualify as experts; (2) the award is based on elements of damage which were remote and speculative and inadmissible in evidence under the decisions of this court, as disclosed on the cross-examination of respondents ’ witnesses who gave *799 the testimony, to which testimony appellant’s counsel made proper objection at the time; (3) the closing argument of respondents’ counsel was inflammatory and prejudicially erroneous.

The underlying facts, in brief, were as follows. The right-of-way condemned was a strip of land 100 feet wide and 1876.8 feet long. The tract from which it was taken contained 60.8 acres. It was farm land most of which was adapted to the production of such crops as corn, small grain and hay. All of it had been cleared of timber and brush except about 12-15 acres. Eighteen acres were hilly and 40-50 acres creek bottom land. It was a tenant farm, the improvements consisting of an old dwelling house, a barn, poultry sheds and a corn crib erected on space not traversed by the transmission line. The transmission line consisted of three wires strung on two 2-pole structures and one 3-pole structure, called towers. It carried 154,000 volts of electricity. The poles were 60 to 90' feet long and set crosswise on the strip of land 15.5 feet apart with a crossarm, like a letter H. They were spaced at distances of 750 feet with a wire clearance of about 27 feet above the ground. The wires were equipped with circuit breakers so that if they should break the current would be shut off in 1/10 second. The poles, at their bases, interfered to some extent with the planting and’ plowing of corn at those places.

The condemnation petition and proceedings pursuant thereto reserved to the Power Company the “right * * * to trim, top or remove now and at any future time trees and brush upon said easement or right-of-way, and to trim or top any trees within fifty (50) feet of the said easement or right-of-way; to have ingress and egress over and across said easement or right-of-way and to install gates in all fences crossing the same; and the defendants, their personal representatives, successors, or assigns, shall not construct or maintain upon said easement or right-of-way any building or structure of any kind or character or permit or maintain upon said easement or right-of-way trees, brush, weeds or personal property of any kind and character that might obstruct or become a fire hazard 'to the lines of the plaintiff; * *

Both parties filed exceptions to the report of commissioners, but the defendants assumed the burden of going forward. They presented 10 witnesses familiar with farm land values in the vicinity oh the money damage to the 60.8 acre tract resulting from the condemnation. These witnesses variously estimated the original value of the tract at from $200 to $275 per acre, and the damage from the condemnation at $45 to $75 per acre, making the total depreciation range from $2700 to $4500.

In the direct examination of the witnesses, defendants’’ counsel called their attention to the condemnation plan outlined in the plaintiff’s petition and set out in the second and third preceding paragraphs. On that basis the witnesses were asked to express their *800 views on the money damage to the tract. On cross-examination appellant’s counsel interrogated them concerning reasoning and grounds on which they had arrived at' the conclusion that the depreciated value of the tract was in the amounts they had severally stated. These questions were asked with a view to determining the admissibility of their testimony in chief on damages, under the decisions of our appellate courts, pro and con, cited below. 1

Likewise on cross-examination appellant’s counsel interrogated respondents’ witnesses Davidson and Thompson on their qualifications as experts on valuation and damage. Both said they had never been on the land before the appellant utility had done work on the transmission line. But Davidson said he had passed by the land many times, and had inspected it after the line was completed. Thompson had inspected the land and the line after its completion, but did not say he had ever been on it before the construction work began. But he did testify he had lived in the county at Liberty, the county seat, for 30 years and had been in the real estate brokerage business there for 11 years, and as a licensed real estate broker for 6 years. He further said he was familiar with farm land values in the county and vicinity; and that during the year preceding the condemnation he had farms listed with him for sale of the aggregate value of $500,000; that in 1947 he had made 15 or 16 farm sales in the county; in 1946 about 20 sales; and in 1945 about the same number.

Appellant’s first contention in its brief is that the trial court should have ruled the testimony last foregoing of these two witnesses was not sufficient to qualify them as experts competent to give opinion testimony on the value of the tract involved and the money damage resulting from the condemnation. It relies on the Creed case, supra, 1 32 SW. (2d) l. c. 787(5) which stated that such testimony must come from witnesses “who show themselves to be acquainted, both with the property condemned, and the effect of the construction and operation of the public utility upon it.” We think the court’s ruling should" stand. It was largely in the discretion of the trier of the facts, who saw and heard the witness.

In our opinion it was not essential that the two witnesses should have gone on and inspected the land both before and after the condemnation. Witness Davidsoii had passed by the land many times before the condemnation and witness Thompson said farm land in the *801 vicinity had been listed with him, though he had not sold any of it. Both inspected it after the construction of the line and doubtless could ascertain the physical effect of the work upon it. And as brought out by appellant’s own counsel, if the witnesses had inspected the land before the condemnation started they would not have known where the transmission line was to be located. See State ex rel. State Highway Com. v. Devenyns (Mo. App.) 179 SW. (2d) 740, 743(4, 5); Lee v. Allen (Mo. App.) 120 SW. (2d) 172, 173, 174(2-5); Funk v. St. L.-S. F. Ry. Co., 225 Mo. App. 347, 355(c), 35 SW. (2d) 977, 987 (6, 7), and the Peak

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Bluebook (online)
230 S.W.2d 850, 360 Mo. 795, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-kansas-city-power-light-co-v-cave-mo-1950.