State Ex Rel. State Highway Commission v. Jones

15 S.W.2d 338, 321 Mo. 1154, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 595
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 28, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 15 S.W.2d 338 (State Ex Rel. State Highway Commission v. Jones) 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. Jones, 15 S.W.2d 338, 321 Mo. 1154, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 595 (Mo. 1929).

Opinion

*1157 RAGLAND, J.

This proceeding ivas commenced in] Platte County by the State Highway Commission for the purpose of condemning a right-of-way for State Highway No. 3, across the land of W. Z. Jones. The cause eventually found its way to the Circuit Court of Buchanan County on change of venue. On a trial to a jury in that court, J ones, the defendant, was awarded damages in the sum of $1800. From such award the Highway Commission in due course perfected this appeal. Pending the appeal Jones has died and the cause has been revived in the name of his executrix.

Jones owned a farm, in Platte County consisting of four quarter sections lying in the form of a square, except for eighty acres, the east half of the northeast quarter — 560 acres in a contiguous body. *1158 The strip appropriated for the right-of-way was sixty feet in width and extended from the middle point of his south boundary north-westwardly, thereby cutting off from the main body of his land, at the southwest corner, a triangular tract of approximately 120 acres. All of the improvements — dwelling, bam, etc., and running spring sufficient to serve with water the whole farm, if employed in stock raising, were on the larger tract, and so cut off from the smaller tract by the proposed road. About six acres of land were taken for the right-of-way.

The road for which the right-of-way was condemned was a primary state highway, traversing the State from its. northern boundary south through St. Joseph and Kansas City to its southern boundary. The sixty-foot roadway was to be graded and paved with the highest type concrete slab, eighteen feet wide, and was to have bridges and culverts, of reinforced concrete and steel: the estimated cost of the road — for right-of-way and construction — was $40,000 per mile. It has now been constructed in part and is known as United States Highway No. 71.

* It seems that there were public roads along the south and west sides of Jones’s land: they were roads of the old type — -"dirt roads.”

According to the estimates of the witnesses, the market value of Jones’s land was from $150 to $250 an acre: Jones himself placed the value at the latter figure. As no ruling of the trial court touching the consideration by the jury of the value of the land taken and the damages to the remaining land by reason of such taking is called in question, there is no necessity for summarizing the evidence with respect to those matters. The controversy in this court hinges on a question relating to special benefits. As having a bearing thereon there was substantial evidence tending to show that the market value of Jones’s land would be increased from $10 to $25 an acre by reason of its being “on the road,” its “frontage on the road,” its “accessibility” to the road.

At defendant’s instance the .trial court gave to the jury the following instruction:

“The court instructs the jury that in estimating damages growing out of the appropriation of defendant’s land by the State Highway Department for a public road across said land, the jury should consider the quantity and the value of the land taken, and the damages, if any, to the tract of which it is a part, by reason of the road running through it, and from the sum of these should deduct the benefits, if any, peculiar alone to such tract arising from the running of the road through it, and by peculiar benefits is meant such benefits, as that land alone derives from the location of said road through it, as are not common to the other lands in the same neighborhood through which the road runs.”

Another instruction given for defendant concluded as follows:

*1159 “And from sucb sum as you may so find, if any, you should deduct the benefit, if any peculiar alone to such, tract arising from the running of the road through it, and by peculiar benefits is meant such benefits as that land alone derives from the location of said road through it, as are not common to the other lands in the same neighborhood through which the road runs.” .

There were of course many other farms lying adjacent to the proposed road; it is obvious therefore that the instructions quoted, in limiting the benefits which could be deducted from the damages to those which were peculiar alone to Jones’s land, in effect declared that as a matter of law frontage on the highway — immediate accessibility thereto — was not a special benefit. That is complained of as error.

I. Preliminary to a consideration of the specific question involved, the relation of special benefits to the just compensation to which the landowner is entitled where a part of his property is taken for a public use will be briefly noticed. That relation is. indicated in a general way in an instruction which has been so frequently given and so uniformly approved in railroad condemnation proceedings as to become a classic. It is as follows:

“In estimating the damages to the land in controversy, the jury will consider the quantity and value of the land taken by the railroad company for a right-of-way and the damages to the whole tract by reason of the road running through it; and deduct from those amounts the benefits, if any, peculiar to the said tract of land, arising from the running of the road through the same. And by peculiar benefit to that land, is meant, such benefits as that land derives, from the location of the road through it, as are not common to other lands in the same neighborhood. ” [Quincy Railroad Co. v. Ridge, 57 Mo. l. c. 601.]

General benefits, those accruing to the owners of property in a neighborhood or vicinity generally, are not deductible from the damages; to make such a deduction would be to require the landowner whose property is taken in part to liquidate his damages by contributing his share of the benefits which inure to the public as a whole. Special benefits stand on a different footing: they are such as accrue directly and proximately to the particular land remaining by reason of the construction of the public work on the part taken. Such benefits must of course be reflected in an increase in the market value of the land.

While there is often a contrariety of opinion as to whether the benefits in specific instances are general or special, the general distinction is well understood. “A general benefit is an,, advantage not peculiar to the remainder of a tract part of which is, taken, but conferred by the public work upon all property within range of its utility.” [Randolph, Em. Dom., sec. 269, p. 250.] It is also well settled that a benefit, though conferred upon several tracts of land *1160 similarly situated, may nevertheless be a special and not a general benefit.

“A special benefit is an advantage conferred upon a tract by reason of the maintenance of public work on it — an advantage differing in kind, or at least in great degree, from a general benefit. But it is to be noted, that an advantage is none the less a special benefit because it is conferred upon all the tracts of land upon which the public work is constructed. Indeed, a benefit may be special, although it is conferred: also upon land not taken.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.W.2d 338, 321 Mo. 1154, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-state-highway-commission-v-jones-mo-1929.