State ex rel. Missouri Highway & Transportation Commission v. Behle

863 S.W.2d 898, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 1578, 1993 WL 402934
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 12, 1993
DocketNo. 63070
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 863 S.W.2d 898 (State ex rel. Missouri Highway & Transportation Commission v. Behle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Missouri Highway & Transportation Commission v. Behle, 863 S.W.2d 898, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 1578, 1993 WL 402934 (Mo. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

KAROHL, Judge.

The Missouri Highway and Transportation Commission (MHTC) appeals from a jury verdict in favor of the owner of Trautman Farms (landowner) in the amount of $160,000 in condemnation damages. MHTC raises two points on appeal, both of which depend on the admissibility of evidence consisting of construction period damages affecting landowner’s property abutting the condemned parcel and construction easement. MHTC charges error first in the admission of construction damage evidence, and second in the failure to give the jury a withdrawal instruction for such evidence. We reverse and remand.

Trautman Farms is a 118-acre rectangular’ parcel of land located near the intersection of Ferguson and Missouri Bottom Roads in St. Louis County. It was one of several properties included in MHTC’s condemnation petition grounded in the need to construct Route 115. A June 15, 1989 order condemned a 16.91-acre portion of Trautman Farms. The condemned strip bisected the farm diagonally, leaving roughly 78 acres on one side of the proposed highway and 23 acres on the other side. A farmhouse and some out buildings on the land were not affected by the taking. The commissioners awarded the owner of Trautman Farms $73,300, an amount that included damages for the permanent partial taking as well as a temporary construction easement. On August 30, 1989, this award was paid to the court. Landowner filed timely exceptions to the award, requesting a jury trial.

The jury trial on the issue of damages resulting from the taking was set for September 14, 1992. By this time, much of the construction of Route 115 had occurred. The work was carried out by a contractor hired by MHTC. The highway was built on sand used as fill material to elevate the highway approximately 15 feet above the surrounding ground. The sand was pumped in from the Missouri River using a system devised to filter out the sand and return the water to the river. Temporary berms were built on both sides of the highway to stop the water from flowing onto the Trautman Farms parcel. The drainage ditches between the berms and the fill material for Route 115 carried the water back to the river.

On several occasions during the period of construction, water mixed with sand flowed over the berms onto landowner’s crops because the return path for the water became blocked. On some of these occasions, the contractor intentionally cut the berms. Testimony and pictures were admitted demonstrating that some six to ten acres were harmed by the sand and water breaching the berms. In addition, evidence of a “compaction problem” caused by trucks and bulldozers driving on an uncondemned strip of the farm and evidence of damage from a pipe which was temporarily placed on the farm outside the right of way during construction were admitted.

The parties agreed that the highest and best use of the property was for agricultural purposes. The jury heard testimony of valuation figures ranging from $960 to $9000 an acre. One witness testified to $60,000 worth of consequential damages, $42,500 of which was for crop damage incurred during the construction period. The jury assessed landowners’ damages at $160,000, and MHTC appealed.

MHTC’s first point is the trial court erred in admitting evidence of damages that occurred during the period of construction to [900]*900abutting, not condemned, property because landowner failed to lay a proper foundation establishing the damages were foreseeable at the time of taking and not the result of subsequent tortious activity on the part of the contractors. MHTC first raised this issue in a motion in limine before trial. The motion was overruled after lengthy discussion. MHTC preserved the matter with repeated objections during trial. MHTC maintained the position that Missouri cases on condemnation clearly restrict the evidence on damages to those which are foreseeable before construction begins. We agree.

To measure damages in condemnation, the factfinder is required to compare the value of the property prior to the taking against its value after the taking. State v. Starling Plaza Partnership, 832 S.W.2d 518, 520 (Mo. banc 1992). “The date of the taking is the date upon which the condemnor pays the commissioners’ award into court.” Id. In the present case, the date of the taking was August 30,1989, therefore, the valuation of damages is temporally restricted to this date. The injuries to the property during construction of Route 115 all occurred in 1991. The trial on landowner’s exceptions was held in 1992.

When only part of a tract of land is taken, “the damages are not limited to such as result from the mere severance of title caused by the taking, but include damages caused by the use of the property for the purpose for which the condemnation is made. Such use embraces the construction of the work or improvement and the maintenance, use and operation of the same.” KAMO Elec. Coop., Inc. v. Baker, 365 Mo. 814, 287 S.W.2d 858, 861-62 (1956) (Quoting Lewis, Eminent Domain (3d ed.) § 710.) It is proper for the jury to consider factors resulting from the appropriation that would be reasonably apparent and material to a hypothetical willing purchaser of the land at the time of the taking. Id. at 862. Where construction is completed by the time of trial, “the actual damage that was done by the condemner on the right of way during the construction ... may be shown as evidence of the extent of the burden cast upon the land at the time of the appropriation, provided that the acts were not tortious and the damage could have been reasonably anticipated.” Id. (Emphasis in original text.)

If the benefit of hindsight on the date of trial is going to give rise to the admission of construction damages to landowner’s property, landowner is required to establish a direct evidentiary nexus between construction damages and the extent of the burden cast upon the land at the time of the appropriation. In other words, a foundation must be laid that the construction damages were reasonably foreseeable at the time of the taking and the result of non-tortious acts on the part of the contractors involved. State ex rel. Missouri Highway and Transp. Comm’n v. McNary, 664 S.W.2d 589, 593 (Mo.App.1984). When “reasonably foreseeable” or “reasonably apparent” is measured at the time of the taking, which in practice means before construction begins, we construe such terms to mean only those construction damages which are inherent, inevitable, automatic or certain.

In Northeast Missouri Elec. Power Coop. v. Cary, 485 S.W.2d 862 (Mo.App.1972), the admissibility of evidence of construction damages during the erection of power lines was upheld. The dispositive question was framed in terms of whether a prospective buyer on the date of the taking, in appraising the depreciation in the fair market value of the land by reason of the proposed construction, would have anticipated a delay in the planting of the current crop, and resulting inferiority of the harvest on the right-of-way for the next two seasons because of gravel and compaction around the utility poles. Id. at 866. Both the trial court and this court answered the question affirmatively.

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Bluebook (online)
863 S.W.2d 898, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 1578, 1993 WL 402934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-missouri-highway-transportation-commission-v-behle-moctapp-1993.