163 S.E. 22 | W. Va. | 1932
This is a condemnation proceeding. Several years ago Grover Allen became the owner of a tract of about fourteen acres near the Big Bend tunnel on the C. O. railroad. He was desirous of building a house within a few feet of his boundary line, and acquired from a neighbor about two-thirds of an acre adjoining, for use as a back yard. The house was built with stone walls and is estimated to have cost about $9,500. Two years ago he added 29 acres to his boundary, all of which is valuable only for farming purposes. In this proceeding the railroad company condemns practically all of his back yard (0.653 acre) for the purpose of constructing another tunnel some 140 feet below the surface. The jury alowed and the court confirmed $6,800, for the strip taken and for damages to the residue of Allen's property.
It is a settled rule that opinion evidence must be based on "a special practical acquaintance with the immediate line of inquiry." Wharton, Evidence, sec. 439; 22 C. J., subject Evidence, sec. 604; Rr. Co. v. Coal Co.,
An instruction given at the request of Allen informed the jury that it might consider "the marketable possibilities" of the residue of his land both before and after taking. As was said in the opinion in Monongahela, etc. v. Development Co.,
The instruction also told the jury that in assessing damages to the residue, it should take into consideration "the accessibility of the property to an adequate or inadequate *484 water supply for its enjoyment both before and after the taking." A line of the strip taken ran within 1.2 feet of the center of the basin of a constant spring which Allen used occasionally, and upon which he depended in droughts. The line left about two-thirds of the upper part of the basin on his land. The one-third of the basin is the only water affected by the taking. There was no evidence of the dimensions of the basin, or of the adequacy or inadequacy of the water supply by the two-thirds not taken, or of the feasibility of enlarging the basin on Allen's land. But the jury viewed the premises, and we cannot say that submission of the above question was necessarily error.
The railway company was not permitted to show the assessed valuation for taxation of Allen's property. The Code no longer makes such valuation evidence. It is common knowledge that assesors ordinarily do not assess property at its true and actual value. Consequently, rejection of the assessment was not error.
Allen objects to a consideration of errors, on the ground that they were not pointed out specifically to the trial court. That requirement is obviated by Code 1931,
The errors pointed out herein are grave and are calculated to have misled the jury. Therefore we reverse the judgment of the trial court and award the railway company a new trial.
Reversed.