Section 13 of the 1957 act (Ga. L. 1957, p. 396; Code, Ann., § 36-613a), is not unconstitutional for any reason assigned. This section provides that, “Upon the award of *855 the special master being entered up as hereinbefore provided . . . the judge of the superior court shall enter up a proper order and judgment of the court condemning the described property, or the easement or other interest therein sought to be condemned, .in rem, and fee simple, to the use of the condemning body upon the payment into the registry, of the court of the amount provided for in the award of the special master.”
The plaintiff does not attack the prior sections of this act which provide for the appointment of a special master, who shall, after notice and hearing of evidence, make an award fixing the value of the property taken, which award, upon being paid into the registry of the court, shall condemn and vest title to the property or easement of the property sought to be condemned in the condemnor. His complaint as to section 13 is that the status quo as of the time the trial court enters its judgment, as therein provided, is not preserved while the case is on appeal, but that the condemnor is vested with fee-simple title and full use of and dominion over the property and can remove improvements, thereby preventing the jury on the trial of the case on appeal from adequately determining what is just and adequate compensation for the property taken.
“The method of ascertaining what is just and adequate compensation, is subject, within certain limits, to legislative discretion. To such proceedings in the exercise of the power of eminent domain the constitutional guaranty of trial by jury does not extend, there being in our Constitution no express provision so extending it.”
Oliver
v.
Union Point & W. P. R. Co.,
83
Ga.
257, 261 (2) (
The Constitution requires that just and adequate compensation first be paid before the property is taken. The method of determining what is just and adequate compensation is not fixed by the Constitution and, accordingly, is subject to legislative discretion. Deposit of the compensation assessed by the special master into the registry of the court, as provided by this statute, satisfies the constitutional requirement; and the legislature could have made this final. However, it allowed an appeal on the issue of value of the property taken and provided for the trial of that issue by a jury. We cannot say that the legislature abused its discretion in providing that, upon payment into the registry of the court of the amount awarded by the special master, the judge of the superior court shall enter judgment vesting fee-simple title in the condemnor and that the condemnor may thereupon proceed with the work.
O. K., Inc.
v.
State Highway Dept.,
213
Ga.
666 (
The value of the property at the time of the taking is the issue to be determined upon the trial of the case on appeal before a jury. The taking here was complete when the judge of the superior court, acting under section 13, supra, entered judgment condemning the property and vesting fee-simple title in the condemnor. Accordingly, on the trial of the case on appeal before a jury, the issue is not the value of the property at that time, but at the time the property was condemned and title vested in the condemnor under the judgment of the trial court. There is no merit in the plaintiff’s contention that the improvements should n,ot be removed from the property until the case is tried before a jury.
The trial judge, properly denied the injunctive relief asked and dismissed the petition.
Judgment affirmed.
