Usher & Gardner, Inc. v. Mayfield Independent Board of Education

461 S.W.2d 560
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 29, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 461 S.W.2d 560 (Usher & Gardner, Inc. v. Mayfield Independent Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Usher & Gardner, Inc. v. Mayfield Independent Board of Education, 461 S.W.2d 560 (Ky. 1971).

Opinion

REED, Judge.

When a school board needs privately owned land for school purposes and is unable to purchase it from the owner on a basis satisfactory to the board, KRS 162.-030 authorizes the acquisition of such land by eminent domain under any of several statutory methods of condemnation proceedings, among which is KRS 416.120. In this case, the condemnor is the Mayfield Independent Board of Education which seeks to acquire by condemnation a 42.3-acre parcel of land that is a part of a total tract of 103 acres owned by Usher and Gardner, Inc., the landowner. The trial judge ruled that the condemnor had the right to condemn the property sought to be acquired; a jury found that $170,000 was just compensation to the landowner for the land sought to be condemned.

The landowner appeals from each of the determinations made. First, the landowner insists that the condemnor did not satisfy legal prerequisites to the exercise of its power of eminent domain. Second, the landowner asserts that prejudicial errors occurring during the jury trial deprived it of a fair trial on the issue of the amount to be *562 allowed as just compensation for the land sought to be taken. We hold that the con-demnor has the right to exercise its power of eminent domain to acquire this land under the method provided by KRS 416.120. We also find that the trial court erred in determining the time of taking of the land for valuation purposes, and also erroneously excluded evidence of comparable sales offered as evidence by the landowner; neither of these errors can be characterized as harmless.

The landowner argues that KRS 162.030 requires that the acquisition by the con-demnor must be for school purposes; this, of course, is quite correct. The landowner further asserts, however, that since KRS 162.060 requires detailed plans and specifications approved by the state Superintendent of Public Instruction as a condition precedent to a .contract for construction of a new school building, and since the con-demnor admits that it has neither employed an architect nor submitted plans or specifications to the state official concerned for the new school building sought to be located on the land in question, then the condemnor has not satisfied a pre-requisite to the exercise of its power of eminent domain; that argument is quite incorrect.

The evidence clearly establishes that the Superintendent of Public Instruction and all other officials of the state Department of Education concerned in the matter fully approved the acquisition of this site for the location of a new high school in the City of Mayfield. KRS 162.-060 assures state control of the erection of new school buildings or additions to or alterations of existing school buildings. The regulations of the state Board of Education are primarily directed to the internal operations of the various local school systems of the state. KRS 162.030 requires only that the purpose of acquisition of land be for school purposes. The approval of the proposed site by the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the state Department of Education was clearly proved and was ample evidence to support the finding of the trial judge that the proposed acquisition was for school purposes.

The other objection of the landowner to exercise of eminent domain in this instance is that the condemnor did not negotiate about a private sale contract before institution of the condemnation action. KRS 162.030 authorizes the institution of the action when the board is “unable to make a contract satisfactory to it.” Although the language of the statute does not require negotiation, the landowner’s objection is actually founded on the failure of the board to enter into a bargaining or “horse trading” type of process. It is conceded that the board offered to purchase the land for $150,000: The landowner refused this offer and made a counter offer to sell for $300,-000. The board then instituted the condemnation action. The landowner says that a take-it-or-leave-it offer is not negotiation, but that is not the question. We said the same thing by way of obiter dictum in Paducah Ice Mfg; Co. v. City of Paducah, 289 Ky. 31, 157 S.W.2d 490 (1942); it was no more the real inquiry in that case than it is in this case. We described the dictum in the Paducah Ice case as an “indication” in Pike County Board of Education v. Ford, Ky., 279 S.W.2d 245 (1955). In the Ford case, the county court commissioners had appraised the land sought to be worth $12,000. A circuit court jury found that it was worth $15,350. The condemnor had offered to purchase the land for $5,000 before it commenced condemnation proceedings. We held that it could not be held as a matter of law that there had been no good faith effort to negotiate because the $5,000 offer had been made subject to further negotiation and was not a take-it-or-leave-it proposition.

The real inquiry in the cases just discussed and in this case is whether the con-demnor made a reasonable effort in good faith to acquire the land by private sale at a reasonable price. The statute implicitly requires an effort to. effect a contract of purchase satisfactory to the condemnor. A single take-it-or-leave-it offer of a mani *563 festly inadequate amount could well evidence a failure to make a reasonable effort to acquire the land by contract of private sale.

In the case before us, it was established that at the time the board contemplated acquisition of the 42.3-acre parcel, the landowner had assessed the total fair market value of the entire 103-acre tract of which the desired parcel was a part at $122,600 for purposes of state, county, and school taxation. The board offered $150,-000 for the 42.3-acre parcel. If that offer was manifestly inadequate, then the landowner’s assessment was manifestly absurd. Hence, we conclude that the condemnor made all the effort required by KRS 162-030 to acquire the land by contract “satisfactory to it.”

Under the method of procedure prescribed in KRS 416.120, the issue of just compensation is determined by a jury trial in circuit court. After the jury returns its verdict, the condemnor has sixty days within which to decide whether to pay the jury’s award and take the land or to abandon the condemnation in which event its liability is confined to the payment of costs of the proceeding.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
461 S.W.2d 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/usher-gardner-inc-v-mayfield-independent-board-of-education-kyctapphigh-1971.