Wagner v. STATE, DEPARTMENT OF ROADS

126 N.W.2d 853, 176 Neb. 589, 1964 Neb. LEXIS 216
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 13, 1964
Docket35529
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 126 N.W.2d 853 (Wagner v. STATE, DEPARTMENT OF ROADS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wagner v. STATE, DEPARTMENT OF ROADS, 126 N.W.2d 853, 176 Neb. 589, 1964 Neb. LEXIS 216 (Neb. 1964).

Opinion

Lynch, District Judge.

This is a condemnation action. The condemnees, J. W. Wagner and Elizabeth Wagner, shall herein be referred to as the plaintiffs, and the condemner, State of Nebraska, Department of Roads, as the defendant.

The action was brought on June 7, 1962, in the county court of Hitchcock County, Nebraska. On February 5, 1963, the case was tried on appeal in the district court, during which trial the jury was permitted to view the premises. The jury returned a general verdict for the plaintiffs in the sum of $3,200; and, pursuant to the court’s instructions, the jury also made a special finding fixing the value of the property taken at $1,700, and a second special finding setting the difference in the value of the remainder of plaintiff’s property before and .after the taking at $1,500.

On March 29, 1963, the defendant’s motion for a new *591 trial was sustained. The trial court gave no reason for this decision.

The plaintiffs are the owners of the southwest quarter of Section 8, Township 3 North, Range 31 West of the 6th P.M., in Hitchcock County, Nebraska, which is about one-half mile west of Culbertson, Nebraska. Before the taking the plaintiff’s farm included 101 acres of irrigated land and 52.57 acres of grassland or pasture. Improvements consisted of a 6-year-old, modern, ranch-type home with attached double garage, hog shed, cattle feed rack with concrete feeding floor, windmill, concrete tank, irrigation well, fencing, windbreak, landscaping, and a suitable driveway. The State took 3.88 acres along the south side of the land for highway purposes. Of the area taken there were about 3.44 acres of irrigated land and .44 acres of pasture. The plaintiffs’ driveway and means of access to their property was the same after the condemnation as before and no improvements were included in the property taken.

The plaintiffs bring the matter to this court contending there was no prejudicial error in the district court proceedings and that the trial court erred in sustaining the defendant’s motion for a new trial.

A review of the record reveals that the plaintiff, J. W. Wagner, and two of the plaintiff’s witnesses set the value of the 3.88 acres of land acquired at $1,411, and the plaintiffs’ other witness appraised this area at $1,-415.60. The two witnesses who testified for the defendant gave estimates of $1,071.75 and $1,150 as the value of the land taken. The jury found specially that the 3.88 acres of plaintiffs’ land actually taken for road purposes was worth $1,700.

Concerning the difference between the value of the remainder of plaintiffs’ property before and after the taking, the plaintiff’s witnesses gave figures ranging from $2,691.60 to $3,138.03, and the defendant’s two witnesses set their estimates at $320 and $347.50. The special *592 finding of the jury allowed $1,500 as damage to the remainder.

The record in this case also reveals that the plaintiff, J. W. Wagner, testified that in his opinion the taking damaged the remainder of his irrigated land $15 per acre and the land south of the house about $1,000. He gave no basis or reasons for his calculations or estimates. On cross-examination Mr. Wagner testified that the condemnation did not disturb the irrigation well; that there were no buildings or other improvements on the 3.88 acres acquired by the State; that a fence was removed but not taken; that some alfalfa and brome were taken but no trees or shrubbery; that the windbreak was not altered; that the driveway is in the same place as before; that public traffic goes along the same line, the same distance from the house; that he runs the same number of cattle; that the farm yields just as much; and that there has been no change in the operation of the farm since the land was acquired for road purposes.

The plaintiffs’ other witnesses gave no specific grounds for their appraisals of the damage to the remainder of the property, and they agreed generally that the farm operation and production were the same after the 3.88 acres were taken by the State as they had been before.

One of the defendant’s witnesses based his $347.50 estimate of the damage to the remainder on the cost of moving 143 rods of woven wire fence and about 2.1 rods of barbed wire, plus the cost of rebuilding an irrigation box and earthen ditch. The defendant’s other witness stated that in arriving at his opinion of the difference in the value of the remainder before and after the taking, he considered the fence which had to be moved and the fact that this alteration would put the property in about its previous condition so that it would command the same price on the open market.

The defendant contends that the special finding relative to the value of the land taken is not based on the testimony; that the special finding as to consequential *593 damages is clearly against the weight and reasonableness of the evidence; that the special findings are erroneous, therefore the general verdict cannot stand; that even though the jury viewed the premises the verdict is not supported by the evidence; and that clearly tenable grounds exist for the trial court’s order granting a new trial, hence that order should not be disturbed.

The plaintiffs maintain that the amount of damages in a condemnation action is to be determined by the jury, and its verdict will not ordinarily be interfered with if it is based on the testimony; and that when the evidence is conflicting the verdict of the jury should not be set aside unless it is clearly wrong. State v. Dillon, 175 Neb. 444, 122 N. W. 2d 223. We have no quarrel with those statements of the law; however, we believe that the principal question here is whether or not under the law and the circumstances of this case there was an abuse of judicial discretion when the trial court sustained the defendant’s motion for a new trial.

This court has held as follows: “The district court has the power and is required to consider and determine motions for a new trial by the exercise of its judicial discretion.” State v. Wixson, 175 Neb. 431, 122 N. W. 2d 72. “In the exercise of judicial discretion, there is an abuse of that power where the reasons and rulings of the court are clearly untenable and deprive a party of a substantial right clearly and fairly established and amount to a denial of justice.” Pettegrew v. Pettegrew, 128 Neb. 783, 260 N. W. 287. “An order of the trial court granting a new trial will not ordinarily be disturbed by this court, and not at all unless it clearly appears that no tenable ground existed therefor.” Nesmith v. Clarke, 135 Neb. 117, 280 N. W. 429.

In ruling upon the motion for new trial the court had for its consideration a verdict based on: (1) A special finding allowing $1,700 for 3.88 acres of land acquired, whereas the highest estimate given by any witness for this element of damage was $1,415.60; and (2) a special *594 finding allowing $1,500 as the difference between the value of the remainder before and after the taking, whereas for this element of damage the plaintiffs’ witnesses gave figures ranging from $2,691.60 to $3,138.03 and the defendant’s witnesses stated estimates of $320 and $347.50.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 N.W.2d 853, 176 Neb. 589, 1964 Neb. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-v-state-department-of-roads-neb-1964.