State Highway Comm'n v. Bare

377 P.2d 357, 141 Mont. 288, 1962 Mont. LEXIS 38
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1962
Docket10408
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 377 P.2d 357 (State Highway Comm'n v. Bare) 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 Comm'n v. Bare, 377 P.2d 357, 141 Mont. 288, 1962 Mont. LEXIS 38 (Mo. 1962).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered on a jury verdict in a condemnation action brought by the State, appellant here, to acquire Interstate Highway right-of-way. The defendants, respondents here, are the owners and operators of a 280 acre dairy farm in Park County.

Complaint seeking condemnation was filed. Necessity for the taking was found by the district court, and commissioners to appraise the property were appointed. The commissioners rendered their report, finding the value of the land and improvements taken to be $7,078 and the severance damages to the remainder at $33,105 for a total award of $40,183.

From the award the State appealed. Trial was had before a jury. The jury awarded $15,948.90 for the land and improvements taken and $26,297.50 for severance damages to the portion not taken for a total judgment of $42,246.40.

The Bare dairy farm consisted of 280 acres. It had been operated as a dairy farm for twenty-five years. It had somewhat over 100 acres of irrigated and subirrigated hay land and the balance was in dry land pasture. Bares had about 35 *290 head of cattle and were licensed to milk 20 head. They had about 135 customers for their milk and sold $40 to $50 worth of milk a day. They raised their own hay and pasture and bought feed grain.

The Interstate Highway right-of-way runs almost through the middle of the farm, dividing it into two main parts and segregating another smaller part. The right-of-way went through several improvements, a small house, a root cellar, two wells, and covered several springs. The meandering creek channel was moved and straightened. Any practical access from one part to the other was cut off. All witnesses agreed that so far as dairying was concerned, Bares were out of business. The taking consisted of 30.81 acres of the heart of the farm.

The landowners testified and a real estate broker testified as to value as will be later discussed.

Following the testimony of these witnesses, a Mr. Armstrong, who had served as a commissioner, was called to testify under circumstances related later.

The specifications of error, three in number, resolve themselves into two parts:

(1) “Was the witness Armstrong’s testimony competent under the circumstances and

(2) "Was there competent evidence sufficient to justify the verdict of the jury?

As to the witness Armstrong: His qualifications were brought out. He had been a farm-machinery salesman, clerk for farm auction sales and had a familiarity with land values. Then he was asked on direct:

“Q. Now Mr. Armstrong, were you appointed by the Court as a Commissioner to appraise the value of the property being condemned by the State of Montana from
Tam and Donald Bare? A. Yes.”

Then he testified with particularity as to details. At one point he said:

*291 ■■ “Q. Now Mr. Armstrong, are you familiar with the path that the U. S. Interstate No. 90 takes as it extends through the Bare brothers’ property? A. Yes, after I got on this three-man team of appraisers we went over the Bare place three times together. * * * ’ ’ At another point :
“Q. Well, in your knowledge of dairy cows and that, would it be possible for the Bare brothers to take the cattle from the dairy barn to the pasture on the north side of the proposed Interstate 90? A. No. May I quote you what was said in the hearing we had the—
“THE COURT: Mr. Armstrong, no. You’re testifying now as though you had—
“Mr. Sullivan: I’m going to object to all of this testimony, your Honor, on the grounds that there has been no sufficient foundation laid to call this man to testify as an appraiser.
“THE COURT: What I’m getting at is that you can’t testify to what is known as hearsay evidence, what somebody else said. It has got to be your own knowledge. The objection just interposed is overruled.”

Again and again the witness Armstrong referred to the three man commission appointed to appraise:

“Q. And that is your own personal appraisal? A. Yes.
“Mr. Sullivan: I would like to voir dire the witness if I may, your Honor ?
“THE COURT: Okay.
“BY MR. SULLIVAN: * * *
“Q. Was that appraisal — were you appraising this as a Commissioner? A. We were sworn in, the three of us, at the same time by Judge Allen. We went to work and we went out together, we walked over each tract of land separately and made our notes on our own, separately from each other, made * * *.
“Q. I want to know if you made an appraisal separate and apart from the time that you were working as a com *292 missioner in this hearing? A. (To the Court) He wants to know what now?
“Q. If you made another appraisal than an appraisal as a commissioner? A. We went out together as a group of three. We each took our own notes.
“Q. Did you make an appraisal separate and apart from that time ? A. We each made our own appraisal, and then at the end when we got all through we got together—
“THE COURT: That’s enough. This is your own appraisal? A. My own appraisal? Is that what you want to know?
“Q. Was it made in conjunction with the commission hearing held on this matter last November?
“MR. FITZGERALD: That’s objected to, your Honor, as completely immaterial.
“THE COURT: Sustained.
“Q. Were you working as a commissioner for the State of Montana when you made that appraisal? A. Yes, sir.
“MR. FITZGERALD: Same objection, your Honor, and on the additional ground it calls for a conclusion, and ask that the answer be stricken.
“THE COURT: The objection is sustained and the answer is stricken, and the jury are, as before, instructed to disregard any question, the implication of the question, and any answer that might have been made.
“MR. SULLIVAN: I am going to object to the introduction of any appraisal by this man, your Honor, on the grounds that he hasn’t made a separate and independent appraisal, and that this evidence is incompetent, and that it constitutes actually just evidence that went to make up in effect, a jury verdict.
“THE COURT: Overruled.
“MR. SULLIVAN: And I’m going to object to it upon the grounds and for the reasons that obviously I can’t *293

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
377 P.2d 357, 141 Mont. 288, 1962 Mont. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-highway-commn-v-bare-mont-1962.