State Road Commission v. Bowling

166 S.E.2d 119, 152 W. Va. 688, 1969 W. Va. LEXIS 218
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1969
Docket12759
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 166 S.E.2d 119 (State Road Commission v. Bowling) 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 Road Commission v. Bowling, 166 S.E.2d 119, 152 W. Va. 688, 1969 W. Va. LEXIS 218 (W. Va. 1969).

Opinion

Calhoun, Judge:

This case, on appeal from the Circuit Court of Mercer County, involves an eminent domain proceeding instituted in that court by The State Road Commission of West *690 Virginia against J. Otis Bowling and Idell Bowling, husband and wife, to acquire for public highway construction purposes a portion of a tract of real estate owned by J. Otis Bowling subject to the inchoate dower rights of his wife. From the action of the trial court in setting aside a jury verdict in the sum of $19,000 and in awarding the defendants a new trial, the state road commission has been awarded a writ of error.

The trial court set aside the jury verdict and awarded the defendants a new trial because of its opinion that it was error for the court to have refused to permit the defendants to introduce certain evidence which would have tended to prove that the land taken had a fair market value based upon or enhanced by its susceptibility for a subdivision development for residential purposes. The condemner contends that the trial court erred in this respect.

Counsel for the defendants contend that the trial court properly set aside the verdict and awarded a new trial for the reason assigned by it for doing so. In conformity with Rule XI of the rules of this Court, as construed in cases including Payne v. Kinder, 147 W. Va. 352, 127 S. E. 2d 726, counsel for the defendants, by counter-assignment or cross-assignment of error, urge that the trial court acted properly in setting aside the verdict and in awarding a new trial for two additional reasons: first, that the trial court committed reversible error in giving State Road Instruction No. 1, as amended; and second, in refusing to hold that the amount of the verdict is inadequate.

The land acquired for highway construction purposes in this case consisted of 135.6 acres with a dwelling and other improvements thereon which was a part of a farm containing 444.7 acres acquired by J. Otis Bowling in 1930. By an order entered on June 30,1966, the trial court granted permission to the condemner to enter upon and to appropriate the tract of 135.6 acres for public purposes. Commissioners duly appointed by the court went upon the premises and, by a report dated and filed on February 9, 1967, made an award of $24,750 to the defendants. Both sides excepted to the report of the commissioners and demanded a jury trial.

*691 The jury trial was held in the circuit court on July 5 and 6, 1967. On the first day of the trial, the jury, accompanied by counsel, the court reporter, J. Otis Bowling, the landowner, and Elwood Booth, an engineer for the state road commission, were transported by bus to the Bowling farm to permit the jury .to take a view of the premises. Before the jury was taken to the premises, the trial judge called to the attention of the jury the fact that the land taken had been changed in various respects, including the removal of the dwelling, certain outbuildings and shrubbery, since the original entry by the condemner. These changes were clarified in greater detail during the trial by the testimony and by introduction in evidence of various color photographs of the premises which were taken before the construction was commenced. On motion of the defendants, the jury verdict in the sum of $19,000 was set aside and a new trial was awarded by the trial court as previously stated in this opinion.

In the early portion of the testimony of defendant J. Otis Bowling, he was asked by his counsel to identify a map or plat, made at some unspecified time prior to 1950, by which a certain part of the land in question was “laid off in lots.” Counsel requested that this map or plat be “received as Defendants’ Exhibit One.” Thereupon the court stated: “It may be so identified.” The witness testified that thereafter, by a deed dated October 11, 1950, he sold and conveyed two lots to Chesley J. Higgins and his wife. The court refused to permit the deed of conveyance to be admitted in evidence but' permitted it to be filed and marked as an exhibit.

The deed conveyed two contiguous lots which were described together by metes and bounds as a single parcel of land. The record does not disclose what use, if any,, was thereafter made of the two lots by the purchasers. We are unable to find from the record that counsel for the defendants stated the reason for the introduction of the deed and the map or plat in evidence, or that counsel for the defendants were prepared to prove by the witness that the land had a peculiar or enhanced value for subdivision *692 and development for residential purposes. The record fails to disclose what the nature of the testimony of J. Otis Bowling would have been if he had been asked to give his views or opinion in relation to that subject.

■ K. B. Thomas, a witness for the defendants, was asked ■the following question and made the following rather •gratuitous, unresponsive and confusing answer: “Q. Did you attempt to segregate it into pasture, crop, or woodland? A. No. There is another method you can value it, then. He had fourteen lots facing on the highway. You gave them five hundred dollars apiece.” Counsel for the con-demnor thereupon stated: “I object to testimony of this sort, how much value per lot.” (Italics supplied.) The objection was sustained and the trial judge announced that he would explain later the reasons for his ruling. In subsequently stating the reasons for his ruling, the trial judge explained that the land in question had not lost its identity as a farm, that the map made prior to 1950 “would involve plans and hopes for the future, and this is said to be conjectural and speculative and not admissible * * As the basis for that ruling, the court referred to and relied upon 4 Nichols, Eminent Domain, (3rd ed.), Section 12.314, page 140; Strouds Creek and Muddlety Railroad Company v. Herold, 131 W. Va. 45, 45 S. E. 2d 513; and Monongahela West Penn Public Service Company v. Monongahela Development Company, 101 W. Va. 165, 132 S. E. 380. A more recent case to the same effect is The State Road Commission of West Virginia v. Ferguson, 148 W. Va. 742, 137 S. E. 2d 206. We are of the opinion that the decisions of this Court fisted immediately above fully sustain the ruling of the trial court.

The record fails to disclose that K. B. Thomas believed that the Bowling land had any peculiar or enhanced value for home construction purposes. Quite the contrary appears because, immediately before he made the statement quoted above, he was asked the following question and gave the following answer on direct examination: “Q. What, in your opinion, did you deem to be the highest and best use of the land? A. As Mr. Bowling was using it: for a homeplace; *693 some grazing; of course, some second and third-growth timber.” In a similar manner, Ben White, Sr., another witness for the defendants, was asked the following questions and gave the following answers: “Q. What did you deem to be the highest and best use of this property? A. I think cattle-raising or horse-raising either one. Q. And has that been the highest and best use that you have considered in connection with your appraisal of the property? A. I based mine on that, yes, sir.”

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.E.2d 119, 152 W. Va. 688, 1969 W. Va. LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-road-commission-v-bowling-wva-1969.