This рroceeding in eminent domain was brought by respondent, city of Menlo Park, a municipal corporation, against the appellants, who are the owners of certain lands, sought by respondent for the construction of off-street parking plazas. These consolidated appeals are taken from a judgment after a verdict fixing the amount of appellants’ damages in condemnation proceedings and from an order granting respondent immediate possession, after denial of a writ of supersedeas by this court.
A detailed statement of the facts is necessary for a proper understanding of the issues raised on appeal.
Under the respondent’s land use and zoning ordinance, the six-block strip of Santa Cruz Avenue, the main business street of Menlo Park, which is bordered by Menlo Avenue on the north, University Drive on the west and El Camino Real on the east, is zoned for retail commercial uses without any requirement of parking facility in connection with such use. With the exception of a few vacant lots the entire six- *263 block strip is occupied and being used for such purposes. An alley runs the full length of the six-block area, at the rear of the commercial frontagе on the south side of Santa Cruz Avenue. The respondent’s land use and zoning ordinance of April 28, 1953, with the exception of two markets on parcels of property zoned commercial and parking, placed the area bounded by the alley on the north, Menlo Avenue on the south, University Drive on the west in an R-4-T Zone, which means multiple family residence with a transitional suffix. This zoning classification pеrmits multiple residence and parking uses and recognizes that the area’s uses are transitional and moving into commercial uses. Appellants’ parcels are within this transitional zone. In August 1954, several of the lots in the transitional area were rezoned to central commercial and public parking uses to permit the construction of Bettencourt’s Supermarket with adjoining customer pаrking. (Ord. Nos. 250, 259.) On February 23, 1955, the city council similarly rezoned several other lots in the transitional area to permit the construction of Draeger’s Supermarket and customer parking area (Ord. No. 258) and also adopted a resolution of intention, Number 1955-1, to acquire and construct parking plazas and to pay the cost thereof by assessment upon the lands benefited thereby and to form an assessment district for that purpose. The assessment district includes lots in the city’s central commercial zone which the city council determined would be benefited by the parking plazas. Under the resolution as adopted on April 12, 1955, no part of the costs of acquisition of land and construction of the parking plazas was' to be borne by the public generally. All lands required for the parking plazas were secured by the respondent before the institution of this condemnation proceeding on July 1, 1955, with the exception of 11 parcels of which five parcels were originally involved in this case. As to the five parcels here involved the jury rendered a verdict and the court made the awards as follows:
Parcel 18.............................$12,500.00
Parcel 11 ............................. 12,500.00
Parcel 9 .............................. 13,000.00
Parcel 6 .............................. 14,000.00
Parcel 14 ............................. 3,900.00
The owner of Parcel 6 did not appeal; the owners of Parcel 14 filed a notice of appeal and subsequently abandoned it. This appeal is taken by appellant Artino, the owner of *264 Parcel 18, and appellants, Garibaldi, the owners of Parcels 9 and 11, on these grounds:
(1) That the trial court committed prejudicial, reversible error by instructions which assumed that the market value of the appellants’ lands was actually affected by the city’s zoning ordinance, as this matter was a basic fact in issue which should have been left to the determination of the jury.
(2) That the parking plazas for which respondent seeks to take appellants’ lands is not a public use within the meaning of Code of Civil Procedure, section 1238.1, and article I, section 14 of the State Constitution.
(3) That the trial court committed prejudicial error by directing the jury to disregard all evidence of severance damages as to Parcel 9.
These contentions will be discussed in the order presented.
1. Whether the trial court committed prejudicial error by instructing the jury that the market value of appellants’ land was adversely affected by the zoning ordinance.
Appellants contend that the following instruction is erroneous as it assumes the basic fact in issue, namely, whether the zoning ordinance adversely affected the market value of appellants’ land:
“The enactment of a zoning ordinance which is adopted by a city in good faith and which actually does affect the market value of real property is competent evidence in behalf of the city in a subsequent suit for condemnation of the property for public use. The city is not estopped from proving the actual market value of the property merely because its enforcement of police regulations may have affected the value of the property.
“The Land Use and Zoning Ordinance of the City of Menlo Park has been introduced in evidence as it is competent evidence to be considered in a suit for condemnation of property located within the district which is affected thereby, for the purpose of detеrmining the actual market value thereof. The ordinance is competent evidence for or against the city which enacted it, when the municipality is a party to the condemnation proceedings. Zoning ordinances are uniformly sustained as valid exercise of the police powers of a municipality. ’ ’
As stated in
Long Beach City H. S. Dist.
v.
Stewart,
The appellants also contend that the giving of the first instruction complained above, assumed a fundamental fact in issue. However, whеn seen in the light of the rule of availability set forth above, this is not so. Appellants further contend that the jury must have relied on the instruction because the final result reached by the jury is closer to the value estimated by respondent’s appraisers than the values estimated by appellants’ appraisers. However, here the jury had the opportunity to hear and evaluate the testimony оf experts on both sides. It should be noted that the appellants here made no motion under Code of Civil Procedure, section 1871, to have the trial court appoint experts on its own motion to assist it in resolving the conflict. All that appears here is that the lower court rested its determination of an issue of fact on conflicting evidence from which reasonable minds might draw different cоnclusions. Under such circumstances we are bound by the decision of the trier of facts.
(Southern Calif. Gas Co.
v.
Goss,
*266
In
People
v.
Dunn,
2. Whether the parking plazas for which respondent seeks to take appellants’ lands is a public use within the meaning of Codе of Civil Procedure, section 1238.1, and article I, section 14 of the state Constitution.
As a municipal corporation has no inherent power of eminent domain and can exercise it only when expressly authorized by law,
(City & County of San Francisco
v.
Ross,
Code of Civil Procedure, section 1238.1, provides: “Subject to the prоvisions of this title, the right of eminent domain may be exercised on behalf of the following public uses:
“1. Off-street parking. Off-street motor vehicle parking places, including property necessary or convenient for ingress thereto or egress therefrom, established by any city or city and county for public use.”
Code of Civil Procedure, section 1241, provides: “Before
*267 property can be taken it must appear: 1. That the use to which it is to be applied is а use authorized by law; 2. That the taking is necessary to such use; provided, when the board of directors of an irrigation district, of a public utility district, or of a water district or the legislative body of a county, city and county, or an incorporated city or town, or the governing board of a school district, shall, by resolution or ordinance, adopted by vote of two-thirds of all its members, have found and determined thаt the public interest and necessity require the acquisition, construction or completion, by such county, city and county, or incorporated city or town, or school district, or irrigation, public utility, or water district, of any proposed public utility, or any public improvement, and that the property described in such resolution or ordinance is necessary therefor, such resolution or ordinance shall be conclusive evidence; (a) of the public necessity of such proposed public utility or public improvement; (b) that such property is necessary therefor, and (c) that such proposed public utility or public improvement is planned or located in the manner which will be most compatible with the greatest public good, and the least private injury; provided, that such resolution or ordinance shall not be such conclusive evidence in the case of the taking by any county, city and county, or incorporated city or town, or school district, or irrigation, public utility, or water district, of property located outside of the territorial limits thereof.”
Resolution Number 1130 (k) adopted by the city council of Menlo Park on June 14, 1955, after describing among other parcels, thе real property which is the subject of this action, declared that:
“The public interest and necessity require ... a public off-street motor vehicle parking place and plaza upon, over and across those certain lands. . . .
“That the use of all of said lands for said public off-street motor vehicle parking place and plaza is a public use authorized by law.”
We are in agreement with appellants’ contention that neither the Legislature’s designation nor the city’s resolution that the parking plazas are a public use can make that which is in fact a private use become a public use. As stated in
University of Southern Calif,
v.
Robbins,
Appellants rely on
City & County of San Francisco
v.
Ross, supra,
and
Barker
v.
Kansas City,
Appellants further contend that because the two areas of the transitional zone which have been zoned commercial and have provided their own private parking, Draeger’s and Bettencourt’s Supermarkets, are excluded from the assessment district and because no part of the costs of the plazas *269 is to be paid out of general funds or bonds, the city had admitted that parking is entirely for the private benefit of Santa Cruz Avenue frontage.
This contention is aptly disposed of by the following statement made in City of Whittier v. Dixon, supra, at pages 667 and 668: 11 The levy of a special assessment is justified if the improvement is a public one and the property to be assessed will receive a special benefit. (Citations.) Merchants frequently acquire and operate private parking places to attract customers and vacate buildings when no parking space for customers is available. Parking places that tend to stabilize a business section, by making it readily accessible to trade, benefit the property in the vicinity.”
“ ‘Public use’ within the meaning of section 14 [art. I of the California Constitution] is defined as a use which concerns the whole community or promotes the general interest in its relation to any legitimate object of government.”
(Bauer
v.
County of Ventura,
3. Whether the trial court erred in instructing the jury to disregard all evidence as tо severance damages with reference to Parcel 9, and in its finding that Parcel 9 was not a part of a larger parcel.
Parcel 9, which is owned by appellants David and Emilia Garibaldi, is contiguous to Lots 11 and 12, also owned by the Garibaldi family. It is appellants’ contention that pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure, section 1248, subdivision 2, they should be paid for the destruction of the unitary value of the two lots not taken (Lots 11 and 12), based upon the reasonable probability of the combined use of all three lots in the near future for commercial purposes. Appellants’ expert witness testified that these three lots were the only piece of land of that size left on Menlo Avenue under one ownership and not commercially improved. At the time of this action each of the thrеe lots had a separate dwelling on it. In January 1955, about five months before the institution of this proceeding the house on Lot 11 was moved there from another location and a driveway constructed. There was no evidence introduced which showed any intention to use these three lots in any maimer other than as individual rental properties as they were being used. Under Code of Civil Procedure, section 1248, the owner is not entitled to severance damages for injury to separate and independent
*270
parcels. To recover severance damages there must be unity of title
(San Benito County
v.
Copper Mt. Min. Co.,
Appellants rely on
People
v.
Thompson,
The case is distinguishable on that point, as here the three lots were used separately. In a somewhat similar situation involving the condemnation of one of three separate farms which were contiguous and under one ownership it was held that the issue of severance damages was not a proper issue for the jury.
(Sharp
v.
United States,
Appellants contend that there is substantial evidence in the record which would support a finding that the taking of Parcel 9 would cause a diminution of the value of Lots 11 and 12. However, on appeal we are bound to indulge
*271
in every intendment which supports the judgment of the lower court.
(Hind
v.
Oriental Products Co., Inc.,
It is our view that the record before us amply supports the verdict and judgment of the trial court and that no prejudicial error exists.
Judgment affirmed.
Dooling, J., and Draper, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied July 24, 1957. Carter, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
