The Commonwealth of Kentucky, Department of Highways (hereinafter referred to as Department), appeals from a judgment of the Fayette Circuit Court awarding $40,-511 to appellees incident to this condemnation proceeding.
Three bases for reversal are urged: (1) error in permitting witnesses for the landowners to base their damage estimates on the premise that access to the highway was being taken; (2) error in permitting landowner’s witnesses to introduce and testify from exhibits which did not accurately show the condition of the land at time of taking; and (3) the verdict for resultant damages is so excessive as to appear at first blush to have resulted from passion and prejudice.
*777 The original tract from which the right of way is taken contained 35.7 acres located east of Lexington at the intersection of Lexington Circle Road and U. S. Highway 60 (Winchester Road). The taking is for the enlargement of an existing interchange;, the quantity of land taken is 1.27 acres. The portion taken is located in the northwestern corner of the original boundary. Before the taking the tract abutted the Winchester Road, somewhat along an arc, for a distance of 1685 feet; at the time of the taking only one entrance to the Winchester Road was used to serve the farm; the remainder of the frontage was fenced.
The taken tract of 1.27 acres fronted on the Winchester Road a distance of 1109 feet.' It is shown that 952 feet of that 1109 feet of frontage will be denied access to the abutting highway after the taking. The remaining 733 feet of the original frontage of 1685 feet along Winchester Road is not disturbed. The former entranceway serving the original tract was within the limited access portion, but the Department constructed a new entrance of the same width, at a point east of the controlled access frontage. In order for the Department to relocate the entrance it acquired two temporary easements, aggregating 0.24 acres; the Department retained these easements for two years. In the taking the Department also acquired the appellees’ interest in a possible reverter in a portion of the right of way on old Winchester Road.
The trial of this case occurred before our decisions in Com. Dept. of Highways v. Carlisle, Ky.,
At the time of the taking the entire tract was zoned and being used for agricultural purposes. However, there is no question that the tract has ready adaptability for commercial or residential purposes (although development as either would affect availability for the other). It is situated in an area already extensively developed commercially and residentially. - {
Throughout the trial counsel for the Department interposed objections to all evidence of appellees’ witnesses wherein the witnesses ascribed damages to the remaining land by reason of loss of access to Winchester Road. These objections were consistently overruled. Appellees concede the principle that as long as a property owner has reasonable access to his property after the closing of an existing road by construction of a limited access highway, he has suffered no compensable damages. Dept. of Highways v. Jackson, Ky.,
Appellees contend that a different principle must apply when a portion of an existing highway is converted from an ordinary highway to a limited access facility. We are unable to accept that contention. We can perceive no basis for application of., another rule in this type case. The rationale of the admitted rule of the Jackson ' case, supra, is that the enhancement in value of land attributable to the mere convenience of the routes of travel which it enjoys is something that does not inure to the landowner as property. The same rule is applicable in the case at bar.
In Com. Dept. of Highways v. Carlisle, Ky.,
*778 In Carlisle the parties tried the casé oil the theory that the right of access was com-pensable and was being “condemned.” Some significance was accorded the wording contained in the Carlisle condemnation complaint. Substantially the same language is found in the present complaint. However, upon further consideration, we are persuaded that the significance ascribed .to the pleadings in Carlisle was not justified; neither was it necessary to the decision in that case. The proper basis for the rxesult in Carlisle was that since no issue had ','been raised as to the compensability of the .access rights, the Commonwealth was not in a position to claim error in that respect. To the extent that Carlisle attributes controlling significance to the pleadings as appeared in the case, it is overruled.
It will be noted that in Carlisle the case was tried “on the assumption that the landowners had unqualified rights of access to U. S. 41 along the entire frontage of their lot.” But the same thing may not be said here. It is true that the valuation witnesses offered by the Department testified that no damage resulted to the remainder of the land by reason of the taking, but that of it.self hardly resolves the question as to how. the case was tried. However, as the valuation witnesses for appellees testified, counsel for the Department made objection to so much of their evidence as attributed resultant damage to the loss of access. In each instance the objection was overruled. In the motion and grounds for new trial the Department specifically called attention of the trial court to its assertion of the error in admission of evidence that damages resulted by reason of loss of access.
In Carlisle we quoted with approval the tenet that the benefit an abutting owner may derive from the location of a highway and the direction of traffic thereon is not a matter of right; neither does such benefit come within the category of access rights. DeRossette v. Jefferson County,
In this case the Department did not undertake to condemn access rights, and no property right of access was taken. The Department may not be required to pay for something it is not taking. Therefore, it was prejudicial error to permit ap-pellees’ valuation witnesses to predicate damages on loss of access to the Winchester Road.
The appellees assert that no appraiser could express a realistic “after” value without reference to “loss of access.” The simple answer is that there is no loss of access, because the status of the access after the taking is exactly what it was before the taking. Witnesses undertaking to express opinions as to “before” and “after” market values shall assume that the matter of access is not a factor affecting market value before or after the taking.
Our decision in Com. Dept. of Highways v. Vincent, Ky.,
We do not reach the question of whether the award was excessive. Upon a new trial, the question of damages will be submitted as prescribed in Com. Dept. of Highways v. Sherrod, Ky.,
The judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
