51 So. 30 | Ala. | 1909
— The main question involved is whether, in assessing damages which have accrued to the owner -of property attingent upon a public street by grading the street and constructing ■ a street railway thereon, special benefits which have accrued to the property thereby must be considered. The street was graded and a railway constructed under a license from the city of Birmingham, and the defendant in constructing the embankment conformed to the grade which had been fixed by the municipal authorities. The plaintiff’s claim was for consequential damages, and not for the taking of any part of his property. There was no averment of additional servitude imposed upon the street-. This question must be taken as settled in this court by the case of Town of Eutaw v. Botnick, 150 Ala. 429, 43 South. 739. It was there said: “The party whose land is taken should certainly be paid in full for the land actually taken, without regard to any benefits accruing to the remaining land; but when the party seeks to recover for the injury or damage to the remaining lands, . it is difficult to see how it can be said that any damage has been suffered by reason of the change of grade and making of the sidewalk, if the net result of that work has been that the land has been benefited, and not deteriorated, in value.” And further: “The simple question is whether or not, taking all things into consideration, the property has deteriorated in value as a result of the work done, or has it increased in value? Of course, if it has increased in value, the owner has not been damaged. In other words, the test is the difference between the market value before and after the work was done.”
In response to the question, “Has the rental value of the property been injured?” the witness Tomlin answered, “I do not know; I should say I think so.” On m'otion of the defendant this answed was excluded. We incline to the opinion that this ruling Avas error. We take the answer of the witness to mean at least this much: That, Avhile he could not state with the assurance of positive knowledge that the rental value of the property had been impaired, his opinion was that such was the case. Though the probative force of this opinion was affected by the consideration that the manner of its statement showed it not to be positively fixed or deeply rooted in the mind of'the witness, yet it was an
There was no error in sustaining the defendant’s objection to this question: “Now,,I will ask you to state how much?” The context shows that this question required the witness to say how much the plaintiff had been damaged. The amount of recoverable damages was a question upon which it was for the jury to express an independent conclusion from facts and circumstances in evidence. The difference between the value of the property before and after the injury presented so simple a computation as to seem scarcely different from a statement of the conclusion that the property had been damaged in a given amount and probably the wit
The witness Heineke in the course of his testimony said that “the property ivas vacant when I was there about a month ago.” On defendant’s motion this was excluded. The bill of exceptions in its other parts locates the time of the witness’ visit to the property at approximately 15 months after the injury complained of. By the most remote and inconclusive inference only could the fact that the property was then vacant be connected with the change of grade in the street, if, in.deed, such connection could be established under any circumstances. The court had the right to confine the testimony within legal bounds ex mero, and, besides, a timely motion will be presumed to save error; nothing to the contrary being affirmatively shown. Similar considerations dispose of that assignment which predicates error of the ruling of the trial court in excluding the answer of the same witness to -the effect that the house, as it stood at the time of the trial, could not be rented. There are other exceptions of like nature; but, after what has been said, they do not seem to us to require separate treatment. We have found no error in them. ,
Much of appellant’s argument is addressed to the proposition that the court erred in overruling plaintiff’s motion for a new trial. There was conflict in the evidence as to whether plaintiff’s property had suffered any damage — more serious conflict that appellant’s counsel seemed disposed to concede. Moreover the jury
Affirmed.