Title: Abercrombie v. State Highway Commission
Citation: 185 Kan. 47, 340 P.2d 377
Docket Number: 41,303
State: Kansas
Issuer: Kansas Supreme Court
Date: June 13, 1959

185 Kan. 47 (1959)
340 P.2d 377
C.W. ABERCROMBIE and GRACE W. ABERCROMBIE, Appellees,
v.
STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION OF THE STATE OF KANSAS, Appellant.
No. 41,303

Supreme Court of Kansas.
Opinion filed June 13, 1959.
Keith Martin, of Mission, argued the cause, and W.B. Kirkpatrick, of Topeka, was with him on the briefs for the appellant.
W.C. Jones, of Olathe, argued the cause and was on the briefs for the appellees.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
ROBB, J.:
On appeal to the district court in an eminent domain proceeding to condemn certain farmland in Johnson county for the construction of interstate highway No. 50, the amount of the verdict and judgment in favor of the landowners was less than the amount awarded by the court-appointed appraisers. Within the same term the trial court entered an order whereby the landowners were granted permission to file a motion for new trial out of time, the verdict and judgment were set aside and a new trial was granted on the landowners' motion and the court's own motion. The commission has here appealed from that order and the *48 principal question raised is  did the trial court err in granting the landowners a new trial on its own motion?
In a colloquy between the trial court and counsel at the time of the hearing of the landowners' motion, the court stated:
After reciting the appearances and the purposes of the landowners' motion for new trial, the court's order in pertinent part stated:
..............
The trial court's above remarks indicate that in its opinion the case was so far out of line that the court had to "step in" and "set aside" the verdict and judgment. Because of this dissatisfaction with the verdict the court, within the same term and on its own motion, ordered the new trial.
In Klopfenstein v. Traction Co., 109 Kan. 351, 198 Pac. 930, this court stated that "... by a wilderness of decisions covering half a century, the rule is settled in this state that ordinarily a trial court, when dissatisfied with a verdict, is in duty bound to set it aside." Numerous supporting cases were thereafter cited. The Klopfenstein case was followed in In re Nemaha County, 142 Kan. *49 907, 52 P.2d 630, where this court in a per curiam opinion in an eminent domain proceeding stated:
In Myers v. Wright, 167 Kan. 728, 208 P.2d 589, where a motion for new trial was filed too late but part of the motion was addressed to the court's judicial discretion, it was held the court below had authority to rule thereupon within the term of court in which a verdict is returned for the reason that when a trial court is not satisfied with a verdict, it not only has the authority but it has a duty to grant a new trial. In that instance the verdict for plaintiff was for $595.95. The trial court announced it was not satisfied with the verdict and would grant a new trial unless plaintiff would accept a tender of $216.39, which plaintiff declined, and a new trial was granted. In affirming the trial court, this court said:
Two additional cases where the same rule was pronounced are Glenn v. City of Topeka, 171 Kan. 25, 229 P.2d 737, and State Investment Co. v. Pacific Employers Ins. Co., 183 Kan. 229, 326 P.2d 303. In the latter opinion a statement from Federal Land Bank v. Richardson, 146 Kan. 803, 806, 73 P.2d 1005, was quoted as follows:
We cannot agree with appellant that the trial court based its order sustaining the motion for new trial on the fact of inefficiency or neglect of the attorney. (Cole v. Lloyd, 161 Kan. 150, 152, 166 P.2d 577.) Here, as in the Cole case, the trial court may have so indicated but considering the entire statement of the trial court, other reasons making it necessary that a new trial be granted become apparent. Neither are we able to see, as contended by appellant, *50 that the general rule applicable in eminent domain proceedings is contrary to our own Kansas rule. (See 29 C.J.S., Eminent Domain, § 307; 18 Am. Jur., Eminent Domain, § 366.)
The judgment is affirmed.