State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Johnson

392 S.W.2d 251, 1965 Mo. LEXIS 762
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 12, 1965
DocketNo. 51025
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 392 S.W.2d 251 (State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Johnson) 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. Johnson, 392 S.W.2d 251, 1965 Mo. LEXIS 762 (Mo. 1965).

Opinion

PRITCHARD, Commissioner.

This is a condemnation action for the taking of a strip of land about 455 feet long, consisting of .37 acre, along old U.S. Highway 66 which fronted upon defendants’ “Skylark Motel” property. The motel is located about 2J4 miles west of the city limits of St. Clair, in Franklin County, Missouri. The jury’s verdict, upon which final judgment was entered, was $8,000; defendants claimed damages in the amount of $98,000. We have appellate jurisdiction by reason of the difference in these amounts exceeding $15,000. Mo.Const.1945, Art. V, § 3, V.A.M.S.; State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Howald, Mo., 315 S.W.2d 786, 787 [1]; State ex rel. Kansas City Power and Light Company v. Salmark Home Builders, Inc. et al., Mo., 375 S.W.2d 92, 94 [1]. Plaintiff’s motion to dismiss this appeal for insufficient jurisdictional statement is overruled. From defendants’ reference in their jurisdictional statement to the record, which we have examined, we have determined the foregoing jurisdictional matters.

Prior to the date of taking herein (August 14, 1963), defendants’ motel was upon the northerly side of old U.S. Highway 66. Defendants had an access road directly thereto through an entrance 40 feet wide. The highway ran in a general southwest-northeast direction. Along the westerly side of defendants’ property ran Route “WW”, also known as Reiker-Ford Road, which intersected at a grade old Highway 66 approximately at right angles, running northerly therefrom. Defendants had an entrance 60 feet wide to Route “WW.” Defendants’ total property was 20 acres upon 3 acres of which was located the 14 unit motel and a residence. There was a chat driveway 20 feet wide, outlined in shrubbery, directly in front of the office building. There was also a large neon sign advertising defendants’ motel between the chat drive and the highway. In the area of the driveway were too small entrance signs. Between the east and west bound lanes of old U.S. Highway 66 was a grass median strip which was improved with crossovers at the intersection with Route “WW” and also about where defendants had their entrance in front of the motel office. According to plaintiff’s plans, both of these crossovers will be removed when the outer roadway, below mentioned, is continued in its construction westwardly to an interchange.

The strip of land taken, being in depth about 40 feet and about 455 feet long, was for the purpose of constructing a new outer roadway to limited access Interstate Highway 44. Within the .37 acre appropriated were the sign, 13 evergreens and a portion of the chat driveway. Defendants’ entrance now enters the new outer roadway which fronts all along defendants’ property in lieu of old U.S. Highway 66. Defendants’ en-tranceway of Route “WW” remains the same.

In answer to interrogatories, plaintiff stated that the Reiker-Ford Road (Route “WW”) will not have direct access to Interstate 44, but will in the future have access to and directly join the outer roadway or service road; and that along the outer roadway the nearest interchange would be almost 1/2 mile to the east of defendants’ property, and there would be another interchange to the west thereof an unknown distance.

Inasmuch as the decision here will turn upon the effect of or the construction of reservations of access to the highway in [253]*253deeds given to plaintiff, the above statement of facts suffices for the purposes of this appeal. One deed was made July 8, 1949, by Charles and Eliza Johnson (for $100.00) who then owned 10 acres fronting on the highway, and was recorded in Book 169 at page 23 in the Franklin County records. The other was given by Otto and Amanda Meyer, who owned a strip of land similar to the Johnsons, and which was recorded in Book 169 at page 23 in said records. Both properties were thereafter acquired by defendants herein as joint tenants, and from 1951 to 1953 the motel in question was constructed. The reservation in the two deeds is as follows:

“The grantors, for themselves, their heirs, successors, assigns and invitees, reserve the usual right of direct access between their abutting land and any adjacent outer-roadway which may be maintained by a governmental agency on the state highway now designated as Route 66, and over such outer-roadway to the thruway, and during (and only during) such time as no adjacent outer-roadway is so maintained the right of direct access is reserved to and from such thruway over a location indicated on the West side of the road plans as ‘P.E.’, being 40 feet wide and centered on the right-of-way line opposite Station 714/90 but convey and relinquish all other abutter’s right of direct access between said abutting property and the highway (including its right of way) and ownership of said abutting property shall not give any other rights of access greater than or different from those belonging to the general traveling public.”

On motion granted October 4,1963, plaintiff amended its second amended petition by which it struck its former allegation of acquisition of the access rights, and pleaded that it was not acquiring specifically any abutter’s rights of direct access from defendants, and that it had acquired such rights by the deeds above mentioned. Prior to the trial, which began May 18, 1964, and out of the jury’s hearing, the court ruled that defendants could not introduce evidence bearing on the value of the loss of direct access to the central throughway upon the ground that such access had been acquired in 1949 by said deeds. The case was tried upon the theory that no rights of direct access were being acquired by condemnation. To this ruling of the trial court defendants’ first point is directed. They say that the trial court erred in denying recovery for the taking of the right of direct access because the deed of July 8, 1949, in favor of plaintiff, reserved to grantors, their heirs and assigns, a perpetual right of direct access to U.S. Highway 66. Plaintiff, on the contrary, contends that defendants’ predecessors in title by said deeds relinquished all rights of direct access to the throughway except for a temporary right of direct access which terminated on construction of an adjacent outer roadway to new Interstate 44.

We do not regard the wording in the above set forth deed reservation to be ambiguous on its face so that extrinsic evidence would have to be adverted to in order that grantors’ true meaning could be ascertained. Defendants point to no ambiguity and seem not here to claim any. They .do, however, set forth in the argument portion of their brief certain testimony elicited in the pre-trial hearing upon their motion to strike plaintiff’s amendment to its petition, ostensibly to show the intention of the grantors in making said reservation. The trial court did not err, in the pre-trial conference and hearing (at which a proffer of the extrinsic, explanatory testimony was made), in ruling that such extrinsic evidence should not be admitted. Korneman v. Davis, 281 Mo. 234, 219 S.W. 904, 906 [2]; Haley v. Sippley, 317 Mo. 505, 297 S.W. 362, 365 [3, 4]; White v. Kentling, 345 Mo. 526, 134 S.W.2d 39, 43 [3-6]. The true meaning of the reservation here can and should be ascertained from the deed itself, considering it as a whole. Korneman v. Davis, supra, loc.cit. 219 S.W. 907 [3, 4] ; Bay v. Stout Sign Company, Mo., 301 S.W. [254]*2542d 786, 788

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Bluebook (online)
392 S.W.2d 251, 1965 Mo. LEXIS 762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-state-highway-commission-v-johnson-mo-1965.