The City of Atlanta brought condemnation proceedings against C. M. Williams and others to acquire certain land owned by Williams and needed for the operation of the Atlanta airport. After jury trial fixing compensation the condemnor took this appeal from the court’s judgment overruling condemnor’s motion for new trial. The property taken involved a duplex apartment house and a single-family residence, both of which were tenant occupied. A commercial building also was situated on the tract. Williams rented this building for $75 a month to a partnership consisting of Williams and another man, which operated a small neighborhood grocery store in the building. An unimproved portion of the premises was rented for $35 a month for use as a parking lot.
1. The right to compensation for destruction of or injury to the partnership business reposed not in Williams individually but in the partnership, which was not a party to these proceedings. See
Frost v. Shackleford,
2. The significance of the property to Williams in his individual capacity was that of ordinary rental property. “Before weight is given to peculiar value to the owner, it must appear, not that the property is peculiar, but that the relationship of the owner thereto is peculiar—its advantages to him more or less exclusive—-that is, that it is property having value peculiar to the owner only, and without possible like value to others who might acquire it.” 4 Nichols, Eminent Domain
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173, § 12.3141. As there was no evidence that fair market value would not give just and adequate compensation to the individual condemnee, the court erred in giving the jury instructions authorizing them to award damages based on the peculiar value of the land to the condemnee alone, as distinguished from its market value.
City of Gainesville v. Chambers,
Judgment reversed.
