Robert H. Dunaway appeals the verdict and judgment awarding $289,000 for 100 acres taken by Columbia County, Georgia, from a 1,000-acre tract. No consequential damages were awarded. The special master’s award had been $350,000 for the 100 acres taken and consequential damages to the remainder of $7,500; appellant contends there was evidence of comparable sales for $4,500 per acre and $6,000 per acre. Held,'.
1. Appellant contends the trial court erred in permitting three condemnor’s witnesses to testify that the value of the 100 acres taken was the difference between the value of the whole 1,000-acre tract before the taking and the value of the remainder after the taking; in other words, as the condemnor contended, to determine the value of the part taken, “you determine the value of the whole, then you determine the value of the part taken, and then you determine if there was any damage to the remainder.”
2. Appellee contends the condemnee waived objections to this testimony. The record shows that appellant withdrew his objection to the first witness’ testimony to let the witness answer the question, but he moved to strike the second witness’ testimony to the same effect and was overruled; he moved to strike the third witness’ testimony to the same effect although the trial court did not rule on the motion. In
Mable v. State,
*841 In Mable, the motion to strike was made as to the same witness’ testimony which was earlier not objected to. In this case, the motion to strike was made as to a different witness. But we see no material difference in Mable and this case, for the error was of constitutional proportions.
In this case, as held in Division 3, infra, evidence that the value of the property taken is determined by calculating the difference between the value of the whole and the value of the remainder after the taking, is illegal error of constitutional dimension, since it results in a taking without just and adequate compensation for the
property taken.
Appellant moved to strike this evidence; the fact that he had withdrawn his objection when it was first offered did not change its character as illegal evidence. It was error of “constitutional dimension” and could be objected to at any time before the case was given to the jury.
Mable,
3. Appellee contends the principle and the evidence objected to — that the value of property taken is determined by calculating the value of the entire tract before the taking and its value after the taking — was upheld in
Dept. of Transp. v. Gunnels,
Appellee/condemnor is incorrect in saying the Supreme Court in
Gunnels
upheld the charge that the value of the part taken is determined by calculating the value of the whole before the taking, less its value (i.e., the remainder’s value) after the taking. The condemnor complained in
Gunnels
that a jury charge to this effect allowed a double recovery on consequential damages to the remainder. When the case was before us, we were bound by
Elliott v. Fulton County,
The concept propounded by the condemnor’s witnesses is related to the calculation of consequential damages. It is not a proper standard for calculation of the value of the property taken. In
Bland v. Bulloch County,
The dissent in
Bland
contended the charge did not calculate the value of the part taken by determining the value of the condemnee’s property before and after the taking; the dissent contended the charge resembled that in
Rucker v. Dept. of Transp.,
*843
A valuation which determines the value of a tract taken by determining the value of the remainder of the condemnee’s contiguous property after the taking may lead to a double recovery on consequential damages or, as may have happened in this case, to a finding
that the diminution in value to the remainder is the value of the part taken (Dept. of Transp. v. Gunnels,
supra,
The condemnor’s experts testified that the value of the 100 acres taken was the difference between the value of 1,000 acres and the remainder’s value after the 100 acres were taken. This testimony established the value of the part taken by assessing “the diminution in the market value of the remainder.” (Emphasis deleted.) Id. This valuation is nothing more than repeal of the law of just and adequate compensation for property taken, so that the condemnor of a small strip of land attached to a larger strip would pay only consequential damages, i.e., the diminution in value of the remainder.
The trial court erred in failing to strike the testimony of the expert witnesses in this vein wherever appellant objected to it. This valuation of “the property taken” is illegal, and appellant did not waive his objections to this illegal and unconstitutional evidence by allowing one expert to state his answer to the question. This evidence was prejudicial because it deprived the condemnee of just and adequate compensation for the value of the property taken at the time of the taking. As the jury’s award was consistent with the valuation given by these witnesses and inconsistent with other evidence in the case, it cannot be said that the error was harmless. The trial court erred in denying appellant’s motion for new trial.
4. Appellant contends the trial court erred in overruling his objections to testimony of the condemnor’s witnesses about the benefit to the remainder of the condemnee’s property from an unrelated future sewer project. This evidence was incompetent to prove the value of the part taken at the time of taking, or the consequential damages to the remainder at the time of the taking, because it attempts to show that the value of the remainder would increase in the future for reasons not directly related to the taking of the 100 acres. In view of the remand for new trial in Division 1, however, we need not determine whether this error was created by appellant’s introduction of *844 such evidence himself, or whether this or any other error in the case was harmful to this verdict.
Judgment reversed.
On Motion for Reconsideration.
Condemnor insists its witnesses appraised “fair market value of the property taken.” Condemnor thus insists that we approve an illegal, nonprobative method of appraisal.
Condemnor’s witness Reese did not value the 100 acres taken as a separate economic unit because “I’m supposed to estimate the value of the property actually taken as a part of the whole.” He said: “Under the Georgia law we . . . consider the value of the property before the [taking] and the value of the property remainder immediately after the [taking].” He valued condemnee’s 1,000 acres at $2,145,000: 725 acres back land at $2,000 per acre; 280 acres frontage land at $2,500 per acre. He valued the land taken at $250,000, or $2,500 per acre.
Condemnor’s witness Krause valued the 100 acres at $275,000. He “allocated 250 acres of the Columbia Road frontage at $2,750 per acre [and] allocated $2,000 per acre for the [750 acres] rear property . . . for a [total of] $2,191,500. . . .You need to value the property as a whole, and then . . . value the remainder after the [taking].”
The valuations here are worse than those disapproved in
Dept. of Transp. v. Gunnels,
A valuation of land taken according to the value of land not taken would be patently ridiculous if the “land not taken” were owned by someone other than the condemnee. It is no less absurd when “land not taken” is owned by the condemnee. A reduction in value of a condemnee’s adjacent land after the taking has nothing to do with the value of the “property taken” at the time of taking. It particularly has nothing to do with actual “fair market” value of the land taken, for this 100 acres would not be sold by the seller or bought by a buyer on a fair market according to value of the seller’s “whole lot” before the sale less the value of his remaining land after the sale.
Some cases, notably
Elliott v. Fulton County,
Gunnels and Bland should have put an end to the campaign to get approval of this method to siphon off fair market value of land taken. Henceforth it shall not be used to prove value or fair market value of property taken. The harm of this illegal, nonprobative, unconstitutional method of valuation will be such as to demand reversal despite other evidence in the case.
The prejudicial error caused by this evidence could not be, and was not, repaired by the trial court’s charge.
Motion for reconsideration denied.
