State Ex Rel. State Road Commission v. Sanders

23 S.E.2d 113, 125 W. Va. 143, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 22
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1942
Docket9326
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 23 S.E.2d 113 (State Ex Rel. State Road Commission v. Sanders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court 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 Road Commission v. Sanders, 23 S.E.2d 113, 125 W. Va. 143, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 22 (W. Va. 1942).

Opinion

. Kenna, Judge:

In this condemnation proceeding from the Circuit Court of Boone County no land of the defendants, C. Sanders and Elizabeth Sanders, his wife, was taken, its purpose having been to ascertain the amount necessary to com *144 pensate defendants for damages sustained by their property on Main Street in Madison by broadening the hard surface and regrading Route 119. To the report of the commissioners ascertaining the damage the landowners excepted, the' case was thereafter submitted to a jury, its verdict of fifteen hundred dollars was set aside by the circuit court, and upon the petition of the landowners to reverse the finding of the circuit judge, reinstate the verdict and remand with direction to enter judgment upon the verdict, this Court awarded a writ of error.

The position taken by the plaintiffs in error is that the clear preponderance of the testimony sustained the verdict of the jury, and that it therefore constituted prejudicial error for the circuit court to set it aside. To meet that contention, the defendant in error says that the verdict was plainly excessive due to the fact that evidence was permitted to go to the jury that was unrelated to the question of damage to the plaintiff’s property and concerned only the alteration of the physical condition of land other than regrading, over which the State held a previously acquired easement, such as the removal of shade trees and stone steps which were part of a stairway ascending to the level of the Sanders property, in order to properly make use of the easement with which the State was vested, and that in so submitting the case to the jury the circuit court approved and gave several erroneous instructions, particularly instruction number C-c given by the court in lieu of instruction number C tendered by the State, and informing the jury that they might include in their verdict a sum sufficient to reconstruct certain steps from the level of the right-of-way to the level of the Sanders lot, located entirely upon the land over which the State held a preacquired easement.

In order to state his reasons for setting aside the verdict, the circuit judge prepared a written opinion which is made a part of the record, which, among other reasons assigned, makes it plain that the court was influenced by what he had learned upon viewing the property with the jury which caused him to realize what should have been the observation and knowledge of the jury as well con *145 cerning the value of the property affected, and the extent to which it had been damaged by the regrading of the highway located at that point entirely upon the State’s easement, although that information might run counter to the plain preponderance of the testimony which properly became a part of the record.

U. S. Highway Number 119 passes through Madison on Main Street, and facing south toward Logan the Sanders property, upon which there is a six-room'frame dwelling, lies on the left of the street over which the highway runs. The front line of the Sanders property is above the road grade, and not being level, the difference in height varies so that about half its frontage is supported by a retaining wall, while on the south there was a slope from the property line to what may be termed the original hard surface. When the hard surface was broadened and the road regraded, its center line was raised two inches at the north and eight inches at the south corner of the Sanders lot, and in broadening the hard surface, the stone steps that intersected the retaining wall were removed to the line of the right-of-way, while the slope at the south within the right-of-way was removed to the level of the hard surface. As has been said, in putting the broadening project into effect, a shade tree that stood upon the State’s right-of-way was removed.

In instruction number C-c the trial judge told the jury that it might allow sufficient damages to reconstruct the stone steps located entirely upon the State’s right-of-way that had been removed in the widening of the hard surface. This, we believe, was clearly erroneous. We think that so long as an easement is legitimately used to carry out a known purpose for which it was acquired, without resultant physical damage to the abutting property, that there is no right within the boundary line of the easement itself, not specifically reserved and not acquired by long user, for the destruction of which the owner of the easement is legally responsible. Since there was no reserved right in the owner of the abutting property shown in this record, and since there cannot be a right acquired by adverse possession against the State, such use of the stone *146 steps as was made by the occupants of the Sanders property could have been only a permissive use, the withdrawal of which, no matter how great the resultant inconvenience and depletion of sale attractiveness, could in no wise legally affect the value of the servient property. Jones v. City of Clarksburg, 84 W. Va. 257, 262, 99 S. E. 484. The same principle is, of course, controlling in considering the removal of shade trees within the boundary of the State’s easement The State’s right was acquired for a definite purpose which extended to all of the land within the area over which the easement passed. We are not here concerned with the value of that right as originally acquired, and it must now be assumed that in acquiring title to an easement, a grant from the property owner to the State, whether made voluntarily or as a result of a condemnation proceeding, took into account the immediate and. future use for whict the right-of-way was intended.

Based upon what has already been said, we are of the opinion that the trial court was justified in setting aside the verdict due to the fact that instruction number C-c contained an erroneous statement of the law, but that the trial court’s written opinion is incorrect in basing that holding in part upon the knowledge the court had derived from viewing the premises, or otherwise than by evidence which was made a part of the record.

There are two separate and distinct theories concerning the manner in which the courts should permit a view to operate on the minds of the members of a jury, the first restricting its effect to the development of facts established by other evidence properly a part of the record, and the second treating it as a possible means of disclosing to the jury facts which, standing alone, constitute proof not of record. The case before us, we think, is an illustration of the outcome of a rule that bases a verdict in varying degrees upon evidence not appearing of record. We think it quite evident that the difference-in the rules, in a practical sense, alters the jury’s method of approach very little, if at all. However, treating the re- *147 suit of a view as independent evidence undoubtedly greatly enlarges the discretion of the trial judge.

In attempting to discuss any settled rule regarding the effect of a jury’s view, we are fully conscious of the fact that the elements involved in the abstract to some extent fail to harmonize with their actual effect in practice.

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Malamphy v. Potomac Edison Company
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State v. Sanders
36 S.E.2d 397 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 S.E.2d 113, 125 W. Va. 143, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-state-road-commission-v-sanders-wva-1942.