State Ex Rel. State Highway Commission v. Dockery

300 S.W.2d 444, 1957 Mo. LEXIS 762
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 8, 1957
Docket45754
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 300 S.W.2d 444 (State Ex Rel. State Highway Commission v. Dockery) 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. State Highway Commission v. Dockery, 300 S.W.2d 444, 1957 Mo. LEXIS 762 (Mo. 1957).

Opinion

HOLLINGSWORTH, Presiding Judge.

The State Highway Commission of Missouri, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, has appealed from a judgment awarding damages in the sum of $61,000 to Cardinal Paint Company, a corporation domiciled in the City of St. Louis, Missouri, hereinafter referred to as defendant, as the value of its factory site and factory taken in condemnation by plaintiff for State highway purposes. The basic question for determination is whether the trial court erred in permitting defendant’s witnesses to give in evidence their estimates of the damage sustained by defendant and in instructing the jury to arrive at its award through a process of totalling separate reckonings of the value of the land, the value of the factory building and the value of the machinery and equipment installed in the factory. Plaintiff contends that such a method of estimating and awarding damages in condemnation proceedings is contrary to established procedure and was prejudicially erroneous. Defendant contends that such a method is approved procedure in the instance of a factory designed and equipped with fixed machinery with the intention and purpose of making such machinery a permanent part of the building.

Defendant was incorporated in 1937. It is engaged in the manufacture of paint, enamels and varnishes and the sale thereof, principally through the medium of jobbers, to retail stores. Defendant acquired the lot on which its factory is situate prior to March, 1946, and the lot immediately to the south thereof in 1950. These lots, being the land taken by plaintiff, have a total frontage of 79 feet, 3 inches, on the west side of North Sixth Street, near the intersection of North Sixth Street, Cass Avenue and Broadway, and extend back westwardly to an alley. There was a two-story building situate on the north lot when defendant purchased it. The building was 40 feet in width and had a varying depth of from 98 to 109½, feet. It had been vacant for several years. Its arrangement and condition was such as to make its interior wholly unadaptable to defendant’s use and its exterior was in a bad state of repair. The site, however, was of particular advantage to defendant because it is in the heart of the trucking district and all of defendant’s shipments are made by trucks. It is also close to the Mississippi River bridges connecting the City of St. Louis with Illinois, in which State defendant does a substantial portion of its business.

Upon acquisition of the property, defendant began, and between 1946 and 1951 completed, extensive remodeling and rehabilitation of both the exterior and interior of the building. The old front of the building was replaced with a new front, consisting of pressed brick and glass blocks, together with new and additional windows. The outer walls were tuckpointed and repaired. An opening was made in an outer wall from which a boom was projected and a power hoist that rolls upon tracks was installed. Inner partition walls were removed; wooden floors were replaced with concrete. A large balcony, in effect a third floor, extending over 80 per cent of the square footage of the building was installed. The heating system was converted to steam, a sprinkler system and complete power wiring were installed throughout the building. An old elevator was removed and a conveyor extending through the floors was installed. New offices, new lavatories, and a laboratory and storage racks were built. The interior was arranged and machinery and equip *447 ment were installed so as to convert the building into a “gravity feed plant” for the handling of the materials and the manufacture, packaging, labeling and storing of defendant’s products. In that process, the materials necessary to manufacture are assembled and roughly mixed on the third floor, fed downward through conduits to the floor below, where they receive further processing, thence to a lower floor, where they are still further refined, thence “finally simmering” into the can-filling and packaging department. The lot adjoining the building on the south was made into a parking area, supported by a retaining wall in the rear; a concrete driveway was laid thereon and the area, as thus improved, was enclosed with a chain fence and gates.

The equipment installed by defendant consists of mixing, grinding, thinning and filling machines, storage tanks and racks and labeling and packaging devices. The third floor was constructed to withhold the weight of the materials. Holes are cut in the third (balcony), second and first floors to permit the materials to pass downward through conduits and conveyors as they go through the various stages of manufacture. The machinery, much of it heavy, is affixed to the building. Some of it is “lagged” into the floor; other machines are recessed in or bolted to the floor. Belts and pulleys used in the operation of the motor-driven machinery extend from floor to floor through openings provided therefor. These machines, storage tanks, conveyors, etc., are either connected with each other or are permanently affixed to the building. Some of these machines weigh 10,000 to 12,000 pounds. Hoisting and conveying apparatus is suspended from heavy timbers installed in the ceilings for that purpose.

Al J. Klump, president of defendant company, testified that defendant expended “approximately $60,000” for the purchase of the land and rehabilitation of the land and building. However, upon motion of plaintiff, the trial court struck the testimony for the reason “thát he said approximate and not the exact cost”.

George H. Hetlage, a duly qualified expert, appraised the value of defendant’s property, as follows: The construction cost of the building, new, including plumbing, heating, lighting and sprinkling system, would be $100,879. The land value is $14,-000, the power feed wiring cost was $2,-082, and the reproduction cost of the fixed machinery and equipment would be $41,-376. The total of the value of the land, reproduction cost of the building, improvements, power feed wiring, fixed machinery and equipment is $158,337. The property is well adapted to the requirements of a paint manufacturer and it is in good condition. The reasonable market value of the land, building and fixed machinery and equipment, as a whole, on the date of taking, was $105,194. This figure does not include movable personal property such as office furniture, tools, etc. Each piece of machinery and equipment included in the' above appraisal was actually affixed to the building. The property was appraised at its market value. Witness did not assign a peculiar or special value to the property because it was an operating business. He did assign a value that reflected what a willing buyer, who was going to use the-property in the form in which it then existed, would pay.

During the direct examination of witness Hetlage, he testified as follows:

“Q. And what basis did you use in determining' that value ? A. I relied principally upon what is — the process that is known as the ‘Summation Process’. That process consists of valuing land as though it were bare land except that the land is valued in recognition of the improvements that exist, on it; then by this process the improvements are valued, and then the-two are combined to furnish a total value of the improved property. The process consists first of valuing the-land and second of calculating the construction cost new of the improvements *448

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Bluebook (online)
300 S.W.2d 444, 1957 Mo. LEXIS 762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-state-highway-commission-v-dockery-mo-1957.