92 S.E. 323 | N.C. | 1917
This is an action to recover damages for the relocation and construction of a public highway from Winston to Statesville via Mocksville, under Public-Local Laws 1913, ch. 7, sec. 7, which provides: "The jurors shall, in considering the question of damages, take into consideration the benefits to the landowner, and shall render a verdict for such amount, if any, as the damages may exceed the benefits," etc.
There are several exceptions to the testimony and the charge, but they can be resolved practically into the question, "What benefits to the landowner can be considered as a counterclaim in making up the verdict?" The plaintiffs contend that they are entitled to compensation for the value of the land, taken, without any abatement by reason of benefits to the remainder of the tract, by the location of the road, and that such benefit is a counterclaim only against the damages, if any, sustained by the rest of the tract.
Such contention, however, is without any authority in this State to support it. *551
His Honor correctly charged that the jury should estimate the (501) value of the land taken and the damage, if any, to the rest of the plaintiff's tract by reason of the location of the road, and that from such sum there should be taken as a counterclaim any benefit which the plaintiff has sustained by reason of the addition to the value, if any, of his tract of land by reason of the special advantages thereto which is not general to the land of others in that section.
This is the rule laid down in Bauman v. Ross,
It was competent for the Legislature to provide for a different rule, as in Miller v. Asheville,
The above is quoted in R. R. v. Platt Land,
It seems that there are two or three States in which possibly owing to the verbiage of their statutes, the defendant is not entitled to deduct from the damages for the land taken any benefits accruing to the remaining land of the plaintiff, even though special to himself. Such construction would deprive the defendant ordinarily of any offset (502) *552 against the damages in favor of the plaintiff, and the provision in the statute allowing such counterclaim would be idle.
The rule adopted by his Honor is in accordance with the wording of the statute and our precedents in such cases, where there is no express provisions to the contrary, as in Miller v. Asheville, supra
No error.
Cited: Lanier v. Greenville,