36 Ga. App. 492 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1927
Mrs. Annie C. Wood brought an action against the City of Winder to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by her by reason of a change in the grade of the street adjacent to her residence. The city, after changing the grade of this street, paved it; the grade was raised in fact in connection with the paving project. The city’s answer to the suit was a general denial. The jury found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $800, and the defendant has excepted to the overruling of its motion for a new trial.
The first special ground of the motion for a new trial complains that the court erred in admitting the following testimony of Dr. Boss, a witness for the plaintiff: “I refused it [referring to the property in question] at $1,500 reduction;” this testimony having been duly objected to upon the ground that it was irrelevant and immaterial in the solution of the question at issue. Testimony that a person refused to purchase property at a given price would ordinarily have no probative value on the question of the worth of the property; but in the present case the witness himself was testifying as to what, in his judgment, was the reduction of the market value of the property as a result of the change in the grade of the street, and it is clear from the record that the part of his testimony above quoted was intended to express his present opinion as to the amount of such reduction, and that it was so understood by the jury. The witness had been interrogated as to what it would cost to raise the surface of the plaintiff’s lot by filling in. The witness testified that several years previously he sold the property to Mrs. Wood at the price of $4,000, the fair market value of the property at that time. His testimony as objected to appears in the following connection in the brief of evidence : “I am not familiar with what it would take to elevate that house, to put in the grading to bring it up to the level as it was before the repair about the porch. My estimate in refusing to buy — well, I refused it at $1,500 reduction. She offered for $1,-500 less afterward. That offer of Mrs. Wood’s was made in 1923, about two years ago.” Almost immediately thereafter the witness further testified: “I would want more than $1,500 difference between the value of the property now and in 1923, with the pave
The second ground of the amendment to the motion for a new trial assigns as error the admission of the following testimony of Edgar Jackson, a witness for the plaintiff: “It would take an enormous amount of dirt to fill in the whole lot level with the sidewalk. The reasonable market value of hauling the dirt in there and filling in a lot 50 by 130 feet to a level of the street in front of the house, that would be four feet, and would cost $1,500 or $2,000.” The objection urged to this testimony was that it was irrelevant and immaterial because the other evidence showed that no part of the plaintiff’s lot except the front yard had ever been as high as the sidewalk, and because it was incompetent to show the cost of raising the level of the entire lot to the new level of the street when the rear of the lot had not so conformed to the grade of the street before it was changed. There is no merit in this ground of the motion for new trial. In City Council of Augusta v. Schrameck, 96 Ga. 426 (23 S. E. 400, 51 Am. St. R. 146), the Supreme Court held: “The measure of damages to abutting property, caused by raising the grade of a street, is the difference between the market value of the property before and after the improvement; and upon the trial of an action to recover such damages, it is competent to give in evidence the necessity of filling in the lot-and raising the buildings thereon, with the probable cost of such work, not as furnishing a reason for allowance of such cost as an independent item of special damage, but as a circumstance throwing light upon the general question of the diminution of market value.” To the same effect see Mayor &c. of Macon v. Daley, 2 Ga. App. 355 (4) (58 S. E. 540), and cit. The testimony showed with reasonable certainty the degree of the incline of the plaintiff’s lot. from the front to its opposite boundary, and
A further reason why we think the court did not err in refusing to sustain the ground of the motion for a new trial now under consideration is that similar testimony was admitted during the trial without any objection thereto. Daughtry v. Savannah &c. R. Co., 1 Ga. App. 393 (3) (58 S. E. 230); Cochran v. Meeks, 25 Ga. App. 61 (2) (102 S. E. 550); Hurt v. Atlanta, 100 Ga. 274 (4) (28 S. E. 65).
In two other special grounds of the motion for a new trial the city contends that the court committed error in refusing to give to the jury certain charges, duly requested in writing, one of which was as follows: “If you find from the evidence that there was a change made in the street in front of the plaintiff’s property described in her petition, by the defendant or under its authority, and that such change made in the grade of the street was incident to and necessary in the paving of the street in front of the plaintiff’s property, and that the plaintiff’s property was, by reason of said paving being done, benefited or caused to enhance in value in an amount greater than the amount of damage resulting to it by reason of such change in the grade of the street being made, the plaintiff would not be entitled to recover any damages against the defendant by reason of the change of the grade of said street.”
Since the two requests to charge raised substantially the same questions, it is necessary to deal specifically only with that ground of the motion which complains of the court’s refusal to give the charge above quoted.
The contention of counsel for the plaintiff is that the requested charges were not authorized either by the pleadings or the evidence, and that even if this is not true, the propositions stated therein were fully and fairly presented in the charge given. We can not
“A specific charge which is legal and adjusted to a distinct matter in issue, involving the right of the plaintiff to recover, and which may materially aid the jury, should be given as requested, although in principle and in more general and abstract terms it may be covered by other instructions given by the court. Metropolitan Street R. Co. v. Johnson, 90 Ga. 500 (5) (16 S. E. 49).” Elberton R. Co. v. Thornton, 32 Ga. App. 259 (4) (122 S. E. 795).
We think the request to charge embodied a correct principle of law. If the change in the grade of the street was a necessary incident to the paving of the street, and if both together constituted one entire project, then the city was not limited in its right of offset merely to appreciation in the value of the property resulting from the change in the grade of the street, but was entitled to credit as well for any enhancement in the value due to the laying of the pavement. This conclusion seems to follow from the decisions of the Supreme Court in Nelson v. Atlanta, 138 Ga. 252 (3) (75 S. E. 245), and in Muecke v. Macon, 34 Ga. App. 744 (131 S. E. 124). It is our opinion that the able trial judge committed error in refusing to. charge the jury as requested, and that for this reason he should have granted a new trial.
Judgment reversed.