State v. Peterson

328 P.2d 617, 134 Mont. 52, 1958 Mont. LEXIS 10
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 28, 1958
Docket9630
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 328 P.2d 617 (State v. Peterson) 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 v. Peterson, 328 P.2d 617, 134 Mont. 52, 1958 Mont. LEXIS 10 (Mo. 1958).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES:

This is an appeal from a judgment for defendants rendered pursuant to a verdict. The lower court proceedings were in eminent domain, after an appeal pursuant to statute by the plaintiffs, from an award of commissioners appointed to assess damages to be paid the defendants as compensation by reason of appropriation of their property for highway purposes. The only question presented is as to the amount to be paid to the defendants by reason of the appropriation.

Upon trial, the jury rendered a verdict, assessing defendants’ damage at $7,500 by reason of severance of one piece of property and fixing the actual value of the property taken as follows: One portion containing 2.72 acres in the amount of $2,850, and one portion containing .769 acres in the amount of $750. Judgment was thereupon entered for the defendants in the amount of $11,100.

*56 The land appropriated consisted of two parcels. The southerly portion, embracing .769 acres referred to as the smaller triangle, is situated at the junction of highways Nos. 10 and 91. It is roughly triangular in shape, with the base facing south. It abuts on the old highway, but its frontage thereon is a granite rock face fifteen to twenty-five feet in height, from which the triangle rises on a rapid slope to its apex to the north.

The northerly portion, embracing 2.72 acres referred to as the larger triangle, consists of rocky land with a cover of scattered sagebrush, rising on a slope from east to west, having a depression or drainage area at its easterly end. This larger triangle was appropriated from a tract of land of 8.39 acres owned by defendants and consists of the westerly end of the tract.

The defendants remaining land is 5.67 acres in size, with fairly level terrain, having little gullys running through part of it. Upon this remaining parcel of land, the defendants have a gasoline station and restaurant business. There is a leveled area extending about 400 feet east of the buildings. This remaining tract has frontage on old highway No. 10. The larger triangle appropriated does not have frontage upon the old highway.

The aforementioned old highway No. 10 is a surfaced highway, bordering which the defendants have for years maintained a service station and restaurant. The highway is a two-lane highway bearing two-way traffic. A short distance to the west of defendants’ premises, a junction is made with highway No. 91 to points south, Highway No. 10 is an east-west main arterial highway.

The old highway No. 10 was not abandoned and remains just as before the construction of the highway. The likely result was, of course, that the traveling public would choose to travel the new surface and thus travel would be diverted from in front of the defendants’ premises to the back and somewhat above the premises. Also, only one-way travel would pass by on the new highway abutting the premises.

The appropriation by the plaintiff State of Montana was *57 made for the construction of the aforementioned new highway. The new highway encompassed two separate ways, to accommodate one-way traffic and involving approaches to a junction with highway No. 91 north-south. The defendants’ remaining land, upon which their business premises rested would have frontage along the new highway right-of-way on the north as well as along the old route, but the frontage on the new highway would be as to only one-way travel.

The only improvements owned by the defendants to be taken were six petroleum storage tanks and a fence which could be readily moved to available land of the defendants. Except for the storage tanks and fence, the defendants’ business premises were not molested.

It should be noted that the appropriation of the larger triangle involved the taking of the entire westerly end of defendants’ land and did not segregate the remaining land in the sense of dividing off the one remaining portion from the other. The most that can be said is that defendants’ land was diminished by 2.76 acres on the westerly end.

The appellants hereinafter referred to as plaintiffs have specified twenty-eight alleged errors. The specifications of error may be grouped as follows:

1. Errors in rejecting the testimony of expert witnesses to establish the value of the land condemned, and damages to the remaining property.

2. Admission of testimony by defendants’ witnesses, whom the appellant alleges affirmatively demonstrated their lack of competency and qualifications.

3. Error in granting certain instructions and refusing others.

4. Error in admitting defendants’ Exhibit C over objections.

5. Error in overruling plaintiffs’ objections to testimony concerning business nature or value, the nature of traffic upon the highway system, the rerouting of traffic, or the question of access by the defendants to the new highway.

Plaintiffs agree that the defendants should be fairly and wholly compensated. The contention of the plaintiffs is *58 that the damages awarded defendants are far in excess of full compensation for the property taken. In eminent domain proceedings, the jury findings will generally not be disturbed on appeal unless they are so obviously and palpably out of proportion to the injury done as to be in excess of just compensation provided for by section 14, article III, of the Montana Constitution. Yellowstone Park R. Co. v. Bridger Coal Co., 34 Mont. 545, 87 Pac. 963; Interstate Power Co. v. Anaconda Copper Min. Co., 52 Mont. 509, 159 Pac. 408.

A summary will be made of the testimony of some of the witnesses as they pertain to the foregoing grouping of specifications of error.

Plaintiffs’ witness Bari Parsons, right-of-way engineer for the State Highway Department, testified that no action has been taken to close the old highway; that such road will be left open in its present location; and that the defendants will have access to the new highway from their remaining property.

Plaintiffs’ witness John A. Poole, principal right-of-way agent for the Montana Highway Commission, testified that he has been right-of-way agent for the Highway Commission for a period of eight years; that during all such time part of his duties had been‘to negotiate for right-of-way, and in that regard to place valuations on properties sought for highway purposes. Poole testified that he had examined property for thé purposes of arriving at valuations in thousands of individual parcels all over the State of Montana. He testified that he was familiar with the value of the property in question, through his experience, as well as his investigation of property values in Silver Bow County. He also testified that defendants’ remaining land was the same type as the larger triangle and could be easily leveled, and placed a value on the smaller triangle of $40 an acre for a total of $30.76.

The court sustained defendants’ objections to Poole’s testimony on the value of the larger triangle. Plaintiffs offered to prove by the witness Poole that the value of the land sought to be taken does not exceed $40 per acre.

*59

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
328 P.2d 617, 134 Mont. 52, 1958 Mont. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-peterson-mont-1958.