137 Ga. 120 | Ga. | 1911
The Central Georgia Power Company, a corporation chartered under the laws of Georgia, sought to condemn certain lands in Butts county, belonging to the defendant, E. W. Mays, under the Civil Code (1910), §§ '5206, et seq., for the purpose of erecting, maintaining, repairing, and patrolling “a single line pf towers, and wires strung upon the same, and from tower to tower, for the transmission of high and low voltage electric current, and also a telephone or telegraph line upon said towers, with all the necessary foundations, anchors, braces, cables, wires, appliances, and fixtures necessary to properly construct, support, protect, and operate the same upon, and over, and across” the land described in the notice, which was given by the Central Georgia Power Company to the defendant Mays. Assessors were duly appointed, and they selected a third. The assessors awarded for “the rights 'of way and other interests and easements sought to be condemned” the sum of $10, and as consequential damages to the property not taken they awarded the sum of $25, and for the consequential benefits nothing. From this award the defendant Mays took an appeal to the superior court of Butts county. On the trial of the case in the superior court, the jury found for Mays the sum of $215, and judgment was had upon said verdict accordingly. Whereupon the plaintiff in error made a motion for a new trial upon the various grounds set forth therein, which was overruled by the court, and plaintiff in error (the condemnor) excepted.
The second element for consideration is whether consequential damages will naturally and proximately arise to the remainder of the owner’s property from the taking of that part which is taken, and the devoting of it to the purposes for which it is condemned, and including its maintenance and operation. The measure of such consequential damages is the diminution in the market value of the remainder of the property proximately arising from the causes just mentioned. Eemote or merely speculative or possible damages are not allowed in considering the maintenance or operation of the lines of towers and wires of the company. The jury are to consider their maintenance and operation in the usual, and ordinary methods of so doing. They can not assume, in a condemnation proceeding, that there will be negligent construction or operation so as to cause damages in excess of that which would naturally and proximately arise from proper construction and operation. If the company be negligent in such matters, causing damages beyond those naturally arising from such construction and operation, this might give rise to a subsequent separate cause of action.
The principles herein announced, or several of them, were invoked by requests to charge. Some of these requests were not aptly worded, and in some instances the same principle was invoked in more than one request; so that, if given, there would have been a repetition of such principles in the charge; and in other instances they were covered by the general charge. We do not think, however, that the charge sufficiently covered the rulings here made, and we think that it was deficient in not giving distinctly the measure of consequential damages to the property not taken.
The rulings hereinbefore made cover the remaining assignments of error, and it is not necessary to deal with each of them separately. We will not anticipate that the statements of the defendant which were set out in the 7th ground of the motion for a new trial, and which the court rebuked, though he did not grant a mistrial, will be made or permitted on another trial.
Judgment reversed.