Chicago, Kansas & Western Railroad v. Mouriquand
Chicago, Kansas & Western Railroad v. Mouriquand
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Mrs. S. J. Mouriquand appealed to the district court of Chautauqua county from the award of commissioners condemning a right-of-way through lands owned by her. The condemnation commissioners awarded as damages the sum of $202.50. Three acres of land were taken for the right-of-way. The jury returned a verdict of $772.10. Judgment was entered upon the verdict. The railroad company excepted to the rulings and judgment of the court, and brings the case here.
Complaint is made because D. C. Chilcote was permitted to testify as to the value of the fruit trees when he was not acquainted with the particular trees taken or destroyed by the railroad. We think his evidence was competent. He testified that he was fifty years of age; that he lived two miles from the premises; that he had resided there six years; that he had been over the premises very frequently; that he had followed all his life farming and cattle-raising; that he had had experience in growing orchards of fruit trees; that he had put out in his life-time, three or four different orchards; that he knew at the time of the construction of the railroad through the premises that there was “quite a nice little orchard upon it,” and while he could not say that he knew the particular trees taken, he knew what fruit trees planted in such an orchard were reasonably worth at the time of the construction of the road. He had, therefore, such knowledge and experience as enabled him to form an opinion as to the value of the trees. “It is not necessary,” said Johnson, J., in case of Whitbeck v. N. Y. C. Rld. Co., 36 Barb. 644, “that he [the witness] should actually have seen or been familiarly acquainted with the trees in question. It was enough that he was acquainted with the fruit business in that neighborhood and the value of similar property there.” (See Lawson on Opinion Evidence, 19-)
Complaint is further made that the court erred in instructing the jury concerning the view of the premises which they
With the admonition that they were not to rest their verdict solely on what they learned at the view, it might have been better to have gone no further in the instruction referred to, as the object of permitting the jury to view the premises is to enable them to intelligently understand and apply the testimony which has been introduced before them. But when the court directed the jury to disregard any evidence, it must be construed with the following language: “In making up your verdict you should consider the evidence, and give it fair and impartial consideration, and you will also take into consideration your own view of the premises.” The jury were permitted by the whole instruction to decide between the conflicting evidence upon their own view of the premises.
Had the jury disregarded all the sworn evidence, and returned a verdict upon their own view of the premises, then it might be said that the evidence which the jurors acquired from making the view had been elevated to the character of exclusive or predominating evidence. This is not allowable. The evidence of the witnesses introduced in the court on the part of the land-owner, supports fully the verdict. If the verdict was not supported by substantial testimony given by witnesses sworn upon the trial, we would set it aside, but as the jury only took into consideration the result of their view
Complaint is also made that the special findings conflict with the general verdict. The 13th interrogatory submitted to the jury reads:
“Q,. What were the several elements and sources.of damages which make the aggregate of all of the damages sustained by plaintiff? Give each item separately, with the amount of such damages. A. Trees, $228.15. Pond, $100. Opening gates, $250. Land taken for right-of-way, $60. Damage to land north and south of road, $61.85.”
Adding these items, the total amount of damages according to the special findings, is $700, but the general verdict was $772.10. It appears, however, under the instruction of the court, that the jury allowed interest in their general verdict. Adding interest to the several itemized amounts in the special findings, and there is no conflict between these findings and the general verdict.
The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.