The condemnor took these appeals from judgments of the superior court after jury trial fixing compensation for land taken for an urban renewal project. This court dismissed the appeals.
City of Gainesville v. Loggins,
Case No. 43038.
The trial court did not err in charging the jury: “If at the time the market value of the property sought to be condemned was to be estimated it was known or anticipated that certain improvements would be made in the locality where the property was situated and this fact served to enhance the market value of the property, the owner would be entitled to the actual market value as affected by reason of the fact that it was known or anticipated that such improvements would thus be made. This is true though the projected improvements were to be made by the condemning party, but the measure remains the true market value as of the date of taking. If you find from the evidence that the fact that anticipated construction or improvement of a major thoroughfare adjacent to or in the vicinity of the property taken had, at the time of taking, influenced the then market value of, the property taken, you should take such influence into consideration in determining the amount of your verdict.” These instructions were authorized by testimony of condemnor’s witness on cross examination, showing the anticipated extension of a street adjacent to the property, as well as by testimony for condemnee.
Hard v. Housing Authority,
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Case No. 43065.
The trial court erred in charging that if the jury found that fair market value would not be just and adequate compensation the jury should determine what would constitute just and adequate compensation and award that sum to condemnee. This was error, as it authorized the jury to award damages based on the peculiar value of the land to the condemnee alone, as distinguished from its market value. The property taken in this case involved a duplex apartment house and a single-family house situated on the same lot, both of which were tenant occupied. The evidence showed that the condemnee landlord had constructed both houses mainly with his own labor and with scrap and used building materials, and that the property was of the slum class, producing a proportionately high income in relation to the owner’s investment. These factors were not sufficient to show that the property had a pecuniary value peculiar to the owner exclusively. The condemnee contends that “every person who has an established business or even a residence in a location which cannot be duplicated within the immediate area suffers a loss which is particular and unique to him and not shared by members of the general public.” That sweeping concept of unique value to the owner was espoused in the whole-court case of
Housing Authority v. Troncalli,
Case No. 43039. The trial court erred in charging to the effect that if the jury found that fair market value would not equal just and adequate compensation to the condemnee and that the property taken had a unique and special value to the condemnee, then the jury might award damages for the special and unique value in addition to fair market value. The land taken was property used by condemnee as his residence. The evidence showed merely that the condemnee had extensively remodeled the dwelling house, mainly by his own labor, and that the dwelling was in a first-class state of maintenance and could not be duplicated in the same neighborhood. This was not sufficient to authorize the charge on unique value.
(a)
Case No. 43042.
In response to the condemnor’s motion for mistrial, the court instructed the jury to disregard testimony which had been improperly elicited by counsel. As condemnor failed to request further instructions or to renew the motion for mistrial thereafter, the enumeration of error based on the denial of the motion for mistrial is without merit.
Kendrick v. Kendrick,
(b) The court erred in admitting into evidence testimony regarding the condemnee’s expenses of moving into other living quarters from the dwelling house located on the property taken. The court erred, also, in instructions to the jury authorizing them
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to include in their verdict an amount to compensate the condemnee for moving expenses as an element of damages. The Supreme Court held in
Bowers v. Fulton County,
Judgment affirmed in Case No. 43038. Judgments reversed in Cases Nos. 43039, 43042, and 43065.
