State v. Williams

416 P.2d 350, 68 Wash. 2d 946, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 828
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1966
Docket38408
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 416 P.2d 350 (State v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. Williams, 416 P.2d 350, 68 Wash. 2d 946, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 828 (Wash. 1966).

Opinion

Hill, J.

This condemnation was previously before this court in State v. Williams, 64 Wn.2d 842, 394 P.2d 693 (1964). In that case we affirmed an order of the superior court setting aside an award of $45,000 for damages to the property owner and granting a new trial. The property owner appealed. We affirmed the trial court, holding that a new trial was necessary because the trial court had permitted the jury to consider an alleged decrease in the value of the property, resulting from possible changes in the regulations governing parking while loading and unloading, which changes would be a reasonable exercise of the police power and not a compensable item of damage.

. The property in question is a 4-story building, completely occupied by a cold storage business owned and operated by the property owners. The only access by truck is from Browne Street on which the building has a frontage of 169.9 feet. The state’s plans call for the improvement of Browne Street as part of Primary State Highway No. 3.

There were to be three changes in the portion of Browne Street adjacent to the building in question, all within the existing street: first, the existing driveway was to be widened; second, a buffer curb was to be installed where new curbing was to be put in; and third, the existing grade of Browne Street was to be changed in the following manner: Along the southerly half of the property frontage, the existing grade of Browne Street was to be raised slightly. Along the northerly half of the frontage, the existing grade of Browne Street was to be lowered from approximately 2% inches at the middle of the building to 2 feet at the northerly end of the property. The result would be a 7 per cent grade in the street along the north half of the building.

*948 Appraisers for the state and the property owners were agreed that any damage caused by the widening of the street or the construction of the buffer curb would not be considered as constituting compensable damage to the property. It was agreed that compensable damage would result from the change in grade, which would make access less convenient. The state’s appraiser testified that this would reduce the value of the property $950. The property owners’ appraiser testified that it would be reduced in value $22,500; and one of the property owners testified that the damage would be $45,000.

The jury’s verdict, as heretofore indicated, was $1,250. A motion for a new trial was denied, and from the judgment entered on the verdict, the property owners appeal, urging six assignments of error all dealing with claimed trial errors.

The property owners urge that the giving of instruction No. 13 was error. That instruction was:

You have been permitted under direction of the Court to view the property of respondents. This opportunity was afforded you in order that you might become acquainted with the physical situation, to observe the kind and character of the property in question and to observe the effect upon said property which will be brought about by the proposed construction. The knowledge which you thereby obtained may properly be used by you in weighing the evidence.

The Committee on Uniform Jury Instructions is recommending a very brief instruction on “view” in condemnation cases, i.e.,

You have been permitted under direction of the court to view the property involved in this action. This opportunity was afforded only that you might better understand the evidence. (WPI 150.12) 1

It is likewise the committee’s recommendation that where an explanatory or cautionary instruction is given before the jury views the property, it should be told:

What you will see at the scene is not evidence. The evidence as to the appearance and condition of the *949 property must come to you from the witness stand or the exhibits admitted in the trial. The sole purpose of this view is to help you understand the evidence as it is presented to you.

Two of our later condemnation cases (In re Seattle, 49 Wn.2d 247, 299 P.2d 843 (1956), and In re Schmitz, 44 Wn. 2d 429, 268 P.2d 436 (1954)) stressed that the sole purpose of a “view” is to give help in understanding the evidence.

There was a timely objection to the instruction given and a request for an instruction so limiting the purpose of the view.

While the instruction complained of is no model of the brevity or clarity for which the courts have been striving in recent years, we do not believe that it can be regarded as prejudicially erroneous; indeed, it was given in the first trial of this condemnation proceeding without objection from either side; and various phrases find support in our earlier cases with their more prolix instructions. 2 We are satisfied that the jurors must have understood that the knowledge they obtained by “the view” was only to be used in “weighing the evidence.” This phrase may readily be equated with “understanding the evidence,” which is the major theme of the later instructions.

We agree with the property owners that instruction No. 8 as to “just compensation” is incomplete because it gives the jury no accurate guide as to the time when the amount of compensation is to be fixed. It is clear that in this state the compensation is to be measured as of the date of the trial. Distler v. Grays Harbor & Puget Sound Ry., 76 Wash. 391, 136 Pac. 364 (1913); Grays Harbor & Puget Sound Ry. v. Kauppinen, 53 Wash. 238, 101 Pac. 835 (1909). See also Blankenship v. State, 160 Wash. 514, 295 Pac. 480 (1931).

The testimony as to damages was by the form of the questions in terms of the difference in value at the time of trial; hence, it is difficult to believe that the property *950 owners were prejudiced by the failure to properly instruct the jury.

Error was also assigned to a failure to give a proposed instruction on this phase of the case, i.e., as of what date is the compensation to be fixed. What we have just said is sufficient comment on that assignment of error.

The property owners complain of the use of the words “appreciable and substantial” in the following instruction:

In arriving at the amount of compensation to be paid the respondents you shall not take into consideration anything as an element of damages which is remote, or imaginary, or uncertain, or speculative, even though mentioned or testified to by witnesses; but the only elements which you shall take into consideration are those which are appreciable and substantial and which will actually affect the market value of the property and which are established by the evidence to a reasonable certainty. (Instruction 10.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
416 P.2d 350, 68 Wash. 2d 946, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-williams-wash-1966.