83 S.E. 809 | N.C. | 1914
Proceedings to condemn land for railroad right of way, heard on transfer from clerk of Superior Court.
The evidence tended to show that the proposed right of way would lie over a tract of land owned by defendant in the town of Thomasville, N.C. suitable for building lots, the evidence of defendant being to the effect that the injury to the property arising from land actually required for the right of way, 2.13 acres, and the impaired value to the remainder of the tract would amount to from $10,000 to $19,000.
The evidence on the part of plaintiff was to the effect that the damages recoverable would not exceed $2,500, the estimate of plaintiff's witnesses being from $1,500 to $2,500.
The plaintiff excepted to a portion of his Honor's charge in which he permitted the jury to consider, as an element of damages to the portion of the property not actually taken, the "annoyance, noise, dirt, smoke, cinders, and like discomforts necessarily attendant on the operating of *516
a steam railway through the property," plaintiff insisting that these considerations on the question of damages was disapproved by a recent decision of this Court in R. R. v. Mfg. Co.,
There was verdict assessing damages at $6,400. Judgment, and plaintiff excepted and appealed.
It is the recognized rule in this State that in awarding compensation on condemnation of a railroad right of way, recovery may be had for the impaired value of the property by reason of the easement acquired; this, as a rule, to include the market value of the land actually taken or covered by the right of way and the "damages done to the remainder of the tract or portions of the land used by the owner as one tract, deducting from the estimate the pecuniary benefits or advantages which are special or peculiar to the tract in question, but not those which are shared by him in common with other owners of land of like kind in the same vicinity." R. R. v.McLean,
In ascertaining the market value as a basis of estimate, it is said in Lewis on Eminent Domain, sec. 706 (3 Ed.), formerly sec. 478: "In estimating the value of property taken for public use, it is the market value of property that is to be considered. The market value of (466) property is the price which it will bring when it is offered for sale by one who desires but is not obliged to sell it, and is bought by one who is under no necessity of having it. In estimating the value, all the capabilities of the property and all the uses to which it may be applied or for which it is adapted are to be considered, and not merely the condition it is in at the time and the use to which it is then applied by the owner." Speaking to this same question, in Pierce on Railroads, p. 217, the author says: "The particular use to which the land is applied at the time of the taking is not the test of its value, but its availability for any valuable or beneficial uses to which it would likely be put by men of ordinary prudence should be taken into account. It has been well said that the compensation `is to be estimated by reference to the uses for which the property is suitable, having regard to the existing business and wants of the community, or such as may reasonably be *517 expected in the immediate future.' But merely possible or imaginary uses, or the speculative schemes of its proprietor, are to be excluded."
The general principle embodied in these statements was approved in the well considered case of Brown v. Power Co., supra, and in the subsequent case of Land Co. v. Traction Co.,
In some of the cases involving claims for damages by the operation of railroad trains, it has been said that the damages to be allowed must arise from some "physical interference with the property or of some right appurtenant to the property."
This position was stated with approval and was one of the points decided in Austin v. Terminal Co.,
The rule for awarding damages in condemnation proceedings was not involved in the decision, and, on this question, Simmons, C. J., delivering the opinion, said: "In such a proceeding the effect of (467) smoke and noise in the operation of trains are properly to be considered in so far as they tend to impair the value of the property"; and referring to and distinguishing a former decision of the Georgia Court, he further said: "In our own case of Steiner v. R. R.,
It is true that this expression that we are discussing was sustained as a general proposition or not directly disapproved in Waste Co. v.R. R., ante, 340, and was used also in a cause decided at last term,R. R. v. Mfg. Co.,
The case of R. R. v. Mfg. Co.,
On the record we are of opinion that the present case has been correctly tried, and the judgment on the verdict is affirmed.
No error.
Cited: R. R. v. Mfg. Co.,
(469)