State v. Olsen

351 P.2d 186, 76 Nev. 176, 1960 Nev. LEXIS 98
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1960
Docket4172
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 351 P.2d 186 (State v. Olsen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Olsen, 351 P.2d 186, 76 Nev. 176, 1960 Nev. LEXIS 98 (Neb. 1960).

Opinion

*178 OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, J.:

This is an appeal from the judgment of the trial court assessing damages in favor of respondent Olsen resulting from the taking of a parcel of land owned by her, and in favor of respondent Hadley for the taking of an easement owned by him over a portion of the parcel taken from Mrs. Olsen. The easement referred to was used for access to a larger parcel which Hadley leased from Olsen. Thus the question of the value of the taken access became the question or issue of the reduction of the value of the Hadley lease. 1 Condemnation was sought of a parcel of land fronting on the south 128.35 feet on the north line of East Second Street some 300 feet west of Kietzke Lane, 2 and with a depth (subject to some variation) of 150 feet. The parcel thus sought to be condemned comprised .452 of an acre, and is a portion of a larger parcel owned by Olsen, adjacent to it on the north. Condemnation was sought, in addition to the .452 of an acre owned by Olsen, of the , Hadley easement above referred to. Such easement is over a parcel of land 15 feet wide, traversing part of the Olsen property from the northerly line of East Second Street, in a northerly direction, to the larger parcel leased by Olsen to Hadley, and furnishing access to such leased parcel. Such easement was granted to Hadley in connection with and by reason of the Olsen-Hadley lease. Such Hadley lease was *179 for a 10-year period at a monthly rental of $125. At the time of the taking of possession by appellant under an order of immediate occupancy in this proceeding, the unexpired term of said lease was four years, four and one-half months. The leased property included a large building, to which was attached a smaller frame building. The intended use of the leased property was the storage and sale of gasoline and oil, and more particularly as a truck service station.

The trial court found: “That the evidence presented at the trial sustains the market value of the property of Ruth Garfinkle Olsen taken is the sum of $43,384.50. That by reason of the taking of the front portion of all of the property owned by Ruth Garfinkle Olsen the court finds that the evidence sustains severance damage to the remaining parcel in the sum of $5,000.” The court further found that Hadley was the owner of a subsisting lease with a remaining term of four years, four find one-half months; that he had leased the premises for the specific purpose of using the same for a truck service station; that the easement granted to him for access had been totally destroyed by the condemnation proceedings, and that the original purpose of his lease of the premises had likewise been destroyed; that the market value of his lease for the remaining term was $14,400; that he had installed wiring for the purpose of his lease in the sum of $300, and a gas pump and tanks of the value of $1,200; that his leasehold had been entirely destroyed for the purpose for which it was originally intended. The judgment awarded him damages in the sum of $15,900 in accordance with the foregoing figures.

Appellant states: “The only issue pertinent to this appeal presented at the trial was the question of damages to the respondents resulting from the taking of the parcel owned by Mrs. Olsen and the easement appurtenant to the Hadley leasehold.” Respondents pinpoint the issue a little more finely as follows: “This being true, then the question of this appeal might be stated, was there substantial evidence in the record to support the judgment and damages, and was the judgment right in law?”

*180 The following table (round figures being used) will show the difference in the values placed on the respective parcels by the parties to this appeal, and by the court.

Per Per Per Aplt. Respts. Court

Value of entire Olsen property including that taken by state and that leased to Hadley, 2% A.__ $89,000 $93,000

Value of front footage taken_________________________________ 154 250 $250

Total value of the property taken including improvements_______________________ 31,000 72,000 43,400

Severance damage_____________ nil 10,000 5,000

Benefit to larger parcel not taken_________________________ .More than sufficient to offset damage nil nil

Damage to Hadley’s leasehold interest, including improvements and market value of easement taken__________________________________ 9,100 15,900 15,900

As to the front footage valuation, Mrs. Olsen testified to a recent sale of adjoining property for $70,000. Mr. Chambers, the state’s expert witness, confirmed and identified this sale as sale of a parcel immediately to the east of Mrs. Olsen’s parcel, at approximately $280 a front foot, but which had a depth of over 500 feet,- as against a depth varying from 150 feet to 180 feet on Mrs. Olsen’s property.

The only witnesses testifying as to values of the1 property taken were Mrs. Olsen on her own behalf and Mr. Lawrence G. Chambers, chief appraiser for the' staté highway department, on behalf of appellant. Mrs. Olsen had owned this property for ten years, owned other business properties in Reno and leased the same,: was *181 aware of market values of her own and surrounding properties and had compared recent sales of nearby lands. Mr. Chambers was a civil engineer and had made numerous investigations of values for the state highway department. Both were competent witnesses. At the trial the plaintiff questioned Mrs. Olsen’s competency to testify, but she was undoubtedly a competent witness. Vol. Ill Wigmore on Evidence, 3rd Ed., § 714; Spring Valley Waterworks v. Drinkhouse, 92 Cal. 528, 28 P. 681.

Prior to the making of the formal findings, the court filed a written opinion in which it considered the testimony of both Mrs. Olsen, on the one hand, and Mr. Chambers on the other, the qualifications of both witnesses, and the testimony given by them, respectively, with regard to the several items of value. It would appear then that, as might well have been expected, the evidence was in conflict and that the court had given this conflict its careful consideration, had weighed the testimony and had rejected in part both the higher figures to which Mrs. Olsen had testified and the lower figures to which Mr. Chambers had testified. It cannot be said that there is not substantial evidence to support these findings of value, and in the absence of reversible error on the part of the court, we shall not disturb the findings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
351 P.2d 186, 76 Nev. 176, 1960 Nev. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-olsen-nev-1960.