United States v. 1,955.00 Acres of Land in Geary and Riley Counties, Kansas (Tract No. 548)

447 F.2d 673, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 8294
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 31, 1971
Docket182-70
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 447 F.2d 673 (United States v. 1,955.00 Acres of Land in Geary and Riley Counties, Kansas (Tract No. 548)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. 1,955.00 Acres of Land in Geary and Riley Counties, Kansas (Tract No. 548), 447 F.2d 673, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 8294 (10th Cir. 1971).

Opinion

HOLLOWAY, Circuit Judge.

The Government condemned 400 acres of land in fee in Geary and Riley Counties, Kansas, for an expansion of Fort Riley. A Commission was appointed by the District Court under Rule 71A(h), F.R.Civ.P., and it made an award of $88,110 for the taking. The report was adopted by the Court and objections of the landowners on several grounds were overruled and judgment was entered based on the report. The landowners’ sole contention on appeal is that the Commission erred in refusing to make any allowance for considering 101 acres of the condemned tract for limestone quarrying purposes.

Generally the facts are these. It was agreed that the tract consisted of 214 acres of pasture and three acres of homesite. Improvements on the land consisted of a dwelling and seven other buildings or improvements whose number and size were agreed on. The parties were unable to agree on the highest and best use of the land at the date of taking in December, 1965. The Government maintained the highest and best use for the entire tract was as an improved grain and livestock farm. The landowners contended that the highest and best use was grain and livestock ex *674 cept for approximately 101 aeres whose highest and best use was for limestone rock production.

The Commission viewed the property and heard testimony which will be detailed below. The Commission Report summarized the evidence, including that of the landowners’ witness Walker who said there were 101.4 acres underlain by hard commercial limestone. The presence of the limestone was not disputed, but the witnesses disagreed on its marketability.

Taking into account the limestone factor, the landowners’ witnesses testified respectively that the property was worth $155,300 and $165,000. The Government witnesses gave no consideration to a value based on the limestone and testified the property was worth $69,500 and $71,000. The award, as stated, was $88,000. In connection with the limestone issue the Report made the following finding:

“There was considerable evidence as to the amount of rock that was under some of this land but since there had been no rock produced on said land and since the land had never been quarried at any place to determine whether there was a definite amount of rock, the commission finds that this cannot be considered in the amount of the award.”

The landowners’ objections argued that the rejection of the consideration of the limestone was error as a matter of law and clearly erroneous. The District Court reviewed the record and overruled all the objections and adopted the report. In discussing the limestone issue the District Court’s Memorandum stated:

“The trouble is that here the Commission determined that the presence of the rock, under all the circumstances, did not add to the market value of the property.
“The Commission was obviously not persuaded that the stone in place had a potential market value in the area at the time of taking and its conclusion was that the value of the tract was not enhanced by the presence of the stone.
“Though the Commission may have given a wrong or insufficient reason for not allowing any additional value for the rock in place, the fact remains that the Commission was obviously not persuaded by a preponderance of the evidence that a market existed for the commercial quarrying of the rock. * -x *»

The findings of the Commission are to be accepted by the Court unless clearly erroneous, Rule 53(e) (2) F.R.Civ.P.; United States v. Waymire, 202 F.2d 550 (10th Cir.), and those of the Court are binding on us likewise unless clearly erroneous. Rule 52(a) F.R.Civ.P. We, therefore, must consider whether the record affords substantial support to the findings or whether they are clearly erroneous under established standards. We turn, therefore, to a more detailed discussion of the findings and proof.

The presence of the limestone on the tract of approximately 101 acres was not disputed. The proof of the limestone and its marketability came primarily from Mr. Walker, a civil engineer who had been in the limestone and quarrying business since 1960. His testimony was that he took 33 core samples on the tract which established the presence of hard commercial limestone, and his supporting exhibits were admitted. There was no proof contradicting the testimony, the physical tests or the exhibits demonstrating his findings.

Mr. Walker owned and operated several crushing plants, including one within five miles of this tract. He took a lease on the landowners’ tract in 1961 for the purpose of mining limestone, agreeing to pay a royalty of five cents per ton for the landowners’ mineral which he estimated to total 2,376,960 tons. He had not commenced mining operations under the lease at the time of the hearing and was intending to move his crushers to the vicinity, when the taking intervened.

Mr. Walker and other witnesses for the landowners testified at length as to the market for limestone in the area. *675 The proof showed that the limestone met both Federal and State specifications for most construction purposes. This quality of hard limestone was shown to be most difficult to locate in this area of Kansas. Due to the presence of Fort Riley and highway, street, bridge and private construction there was a substantial market before and after the taking. The market was sufficient to convince Walker that he should invest most of his capital to move his crushers to the vicinity of the landowners’ tract. He would have been able to mine all the limestone there within approximately ten years.

The Government witnesses did not controvert the presence or extent of the limestone, or the general market existing. They did point to the presence of three other quarries in the vicinity. It was shown, however, that two of the quarries had closed down. The viewpoint of the Government witnesses was that present quarries met the general needs of the area. However, their testimony took no account of the future value of the limestone; of the fact that the landowners’ mineral met the high standards for Federal and State construction, which other sources in the vicinity did not do.

On this record we cannot agree with the Government that the limestone value could be ignored by the award. Its presence was undisputed, as was a general market, and the future market demands. The Commission was not obliged to accept the value figures as an inexorable indication of what the award should contemplate as the value of the limestone. However, we are persuaded that the Commission’s finding, which the Court accepted, was premised wrongly on the fact that there had been no quarrying at present, and on the erroneous view that this fact destroyed the landowners’ case for consideration of the mineral value. In United States v. Silver Queen Mining Company, 285 F.2d 506, 510 (10th Cir.), this Court stated:

“Although cash market value may not be proved with certainty the test of just compensation remains the same and the required proof need rise no higher than the circumstances permit.

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447 F.2d 673, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 8294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-195500-acres-of-land-in-geary-and-riley-counties-kansas-ca10-1971.