State Highway Commission v. Marsh

527 P.2d 573, 165 Mont. 198, 1974 Mont. LEXIS 406
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1974
Docket11816
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 527 P.2d 573 (State Highway Commission v. Marsh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Highway Commission v. Marsh, 527 P.2d 573, 165 Mont. 198, 1974 Mont. LEXIS 406 (Mo. 1974).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE JOHN C. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal by a landowner from a jury verdict in a condemnation action tried on June 4, 1969.

Hazel Marsh owns a ranch located in an area known as Bear-mouth, Montana, some twelve miles west of Drummond, Montana.

She has owned the raneh since 1961. At the time of this action she had leased the entire property to Malcolm W. and Margery H. Enman, who operated the property as a cattle raneh.

In the late 1960’s the State Highway Commission determined the necessity to condemn a portion of the ranch property for use in the construction of a new interstate highway. The taking consisted of the land needed for the highway, a gravel source, *200 rest areas, and some portions of the ranch which would become totally landlocked and thereby valueless to the ranch operation.

The take here consisted of some land owned by Mrs. Marsh between the Clarks Fork River and the Interstate roadway. The amount of total take was in question and never fully presented to the jury.

The case went to trial on the question of damages only, the necessity for the condemnation having been determined by the district court. The jury returned a verdict for the appellant in the amount of $52,000. The appellant presents three issues for our review:

1. Whether it was error to refuse to allow Hazel Marsh, the landowner, to testify as to her opinion of the value of the property taken.

2. Whether it was error to refuse to allow the lessee to testify as to his loss and damages.

3. Whether it was error to strike the testimony of Marsh’s expert witness as to alleged severance damages.

On appeal this Court rendered an opinion on May 6, 1974, remanding the case to the district court for a new trial. On petition for rehearing the opinion was withdrawn, the cause re-argued and this opinion follows:

Several grounds enumerated in the petitioner’s motion for rehearing and argued at rehearing will be covered in this opinion.

The first issue is directed at the trial court’s striking the testimony of Hazel Marsh, the landowner.

Mrs. Marsh testified that she had been the owner of the ranch ■since 1961 and also indicated that a considerable part of her life had been spent on the ranch. She was the foster child of the William Lannens, long time owners of the land, and had been xaised on the ranch. In addition she indicated by her testimony that during her marriage she had spent some time on the ranch.

Her testimony also revealed a familarity with the various types of land making up the ranch, its size and makeup as to deeded and leased land. She testified that there were 550 culti *201 vated aeres, about 6,000 acres of pasture land, plus some 1,100 acres of timberland. In addition she was familiar with the number of miles of stream or river frontage and the amount of acreage to be taken by the highway project.

In addition, she is a woman of considerable education. She is a college graduate with a Master of Arts degree in Library Science, worked for three years at Notre Dame University as a librarian and has done other work in that field.

With this background testimony before the trial court the appellant was asked “Are you familiar with the market value of the lands which you own 1 ’ ’, and she answered that she was, on the basis of “different offers that I have had for the property, and * * * ’ ’, at which time a motion to strike was made and granted. An effort was made to get “market value” in and the court denied its admission on the basis of the recent Supreme Court case of State Highway Commission v. Barnes, 151 Mont. 300, 305, 443 P.2d 16. In ruling on the objection, the judge stated:

“* * * The Montana Supreme Court, in a very recent decision, has stated that a landowner cannot place a value on his land unless they have qualifications pretty much the same or similar to an expert. The mere fact they own the property, and think they have a value for it, is not a basis alone for placing a valuation on the property, according to that Supreme Court decision.”

That was the law to guide the court, but Barnes is factually different than those before us here. In Barnes we noted:

“* * * It is to this testimony on depreciation that the error goes, due to a failure to lay any foundation that Mr. Barnes testified from ‘some peculiar means of forming an intelligent and correct judgment as to the value of the property’ or facts within his knowledge as to values he testified to. In addition he did not use accepted procedures in arriving at the value figure. His value testimony would have been acceptable *202 had he used as a basis for his testimony ‘market values’, ‘the animal unit method’ or had he shown how he arrived at his figures.”

Here the court cut off the giving of any figure on “market values” and prevented trial counsel’s further developing “the animal unit method” or any other she might have arrived at. Counsel for appellant did not develop his witness into these areas, however the fact remains, that up until the motion to strike, the witness had been developed to a point that indicated she had more than “some peculiar means of forming an intelligent and correct judgment as to the value of the property”. We find the court erred in its ruling necessitating a retrail of the case.

A recent Montana Law Review article, ‘ ‘ The Montana Law of Valuation in Eminent Domain” by John E. Sullivan, Vol. 34, No. 1, p. 90, notes that the problem of the landowner exception is whether it is still the law of Montana after the cases of State Highway comm’n v. Barnes, supra; State Highway Comm’n v. Wilcox, 155 Mont. 176, 181, 468 P.2d 749; Alexander v. State Highway Comm’n, 142 Mont. 93, 110, 381 P.2d 780; State v. Peterson, 134 Mont. 52, 63, 328 P.2d 617; Three Forks v. State Highway, 156 Mont. 392, 480 P.2d 826; State Highway Comm’n v. Bennett, 161 Mont. 510, 513 P.2d 5; State Highway Comm’n v. Keneally, 142 Mont. 256, 384 P.2d 770, and recommends that the matter is one for legislative action. Particular note is made of allowing landowners’ testimony and a recommendation is made that only experts be allowed to testify.

. However, by the very nature of this type of action, where contrary to other civil actions the burden of proof must be borne by the defendant landowner to prove just compensation in excess of that offered by the condemning state, we restate the rule below for this jurisdiction. This Court in Alexander

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Bluebook (online)
527 P.2d 573, 165 Mont. 198, 1974 Mont. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-highway-commission-v-marsh-mont-1974.