46 So. 773 | Ala. | 1908
This action was brought by the ap-pellee against the appellant, and claimed that the defendant, in constructing a railroad along the streets of the town of Dothan, so lowered the grade of said streets as to greatly impair the ingress to and egress from plaintiff’s property. It is first insisted by the appellant that inasmuch as it is not shown that appellee (plaintiff) owned the fee in the street, and, consequently, no land of his was “taken,” he could not recover for the mere injury to his property; and he cites the general authorities on the subject of the right of a landowner to excavate upon his own land, provided he does not undermine the land of the adjacent proprietor, etc. Section 235 of our present Constitution (of 1901) provides that “municipal and other corporations and individuals, invested with the power of taking property for public use, shall make just compensation * * * property taken, injured or destroyed,” etc. Appellant insists that, notwithstanding this clause was also in the Constitution of 1875, yet there is an intimation in the case of City Council of Montgomery v. Maddox, 89 Ala. 188, 7 South. 433, that the adjoining landowner is not entitled to compensation for injury to his property unless he owns the fee in the street. In that case the court merely alludes to the distinction made in other jurisdictions, as to “compensation for the taking of streets
The sixth, seventh, and eighth pleas of the defendant, which were stricken by the court, raise the question as' to the measure of damages. The appellee claims that, though it may be true that these pleas were improperly stricken, and that the proper practice would have been to raise the point by demurrer, rather than a motion to strike, yet it was error without injury, because the defendant could have had the benefit of the same defense under the general issue; but, as the same question is raised by various objections to testimony and by charges asked and refuséd, it becomes necessary to decide this point. This court has recently had this matter under consideration, and after a careful examination of the authorities has recognized the distinction between compensation for thé actual taking of land and damages to property not taken, and has held that, in assessing damages to property not taken, the measure “is the differ
The questions to the witness Newton, on cross-examination, as to what he had paid for the land shortly before and as to what it was placed on the market for, were proper for the purpose of testing the accuracy of his knowledge, the reasonableness of his estimate, and the credibility of his testimony. — Town of Eutaw v. Botnick, supra, and cases cited. Consequently the court erred in sustaining objections to those questions.
The judgment of the court is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.