Plaintiff in error brought condemnation proceedings against the defendant in error to condemn for highway purposes 3.48 acres of a total tract of 6.28 acres. The time of taking was stipulated as August 20, 1962. The entire tract was zoned R 2 Residential. The jury, on the appeal from the special master’s award, returned a verdict in the amount of $25,000. The case is now before this court on the assignments of error on the overruling of plaintiff in error’s motion for new trial. Only the special grounds are insisted upon.
Ground 3 of the amendment to the motion for new trial complained of the admission of the testimony of one of the witnesses for the condemnee that he had inquired into the consideration of a sale оf certain property on Peachtree Dunwoody to the
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St. James Methodist Church, and that the consideration was $79,000 net, or $9,875 per acre. This evidence was objected to on the ground that it was too remote both in time and in cirсumstance to fit the criteria for a comparable sale. This same witness had testified that in his opinion the property was more valuable for church purposes than any other purpose, and that although it was zoned R2, which wаs residential, church use was a permissible use and that he had been assured there would be no objection to church use of the property and that there was reasonable probability of securing the necessary permit. There was ample evidence describing in detail the location and nature of the St. James Methodist Church property and the property sought to be condemned. The St. James Methodist Church property was sold on December 20, 1957, аnd is located approximately two miles from the property condemned. In
Flemister v. Central Ga. Power Co.,
As was stated in Stolze v. Manitowoc Terminal Co.,
Nothing to the contrary was ruled in
Aycock v. Fulton County,
In
Vann v. State Hwy. Dept.,
Ground 2 excepts to the following charge of the court on the ground that it was erroneous and not sound as an abstract principle of law because it authorized and directed the jury to find that the difference in the market value of land immediately before the taking and the value of said tract immediately after the taking was the value of the land actually taken, when, in fact, the difference in the value of thе land immediately prior to the taking and the value of the land immediately after the taking represents the value of the land actually taken plus any consequential damages to the remaining property not taken. The charge complained of is: “Now, the compensation which the defendants are entitled to for the land actually taken by Fulton County is the value of the land taken. To determine this value, you should first determine from the evidence, if the evidenсe discloses it, what the market value was of the whole tract owned by the defendants before the land was taken from them. Then you would determine from the evidence, if the evidence discloses it, what the market value was of the dеfendants’ tract after the land had been taken from it for highway purposes, that is, the value of that portion of the tract remaining to the defendants after the land was taken. Now, the difference, if any, between the value of the trаct as a whole before the land was taken from it, and the value of the tract remaining after the land was taken, would represent the value of the land actually taken.”
In our opinion, this charge was error requiring the grant of a nеw trial.
Georgia Power Co. v. Pharr,
Even though the suggested charge in the Bñdges case is obvi *780 ously obiter dictum, we are, under the circumstances, confronted with the necessity of construing that charge. It will be noted that the charge directs the jury “first” to determine the difference in the “market value” of the whole lot just before the taking and the “market value” of the whole lot immediately after the taking; and in immediate connection therewith directs the jury’s attention to the second element of damages, that is, the consequential damages, if any. In the first portion of this charge, that is, as to the value of the property taken; the court limited the finding to the difference just before and just after the taking, which apparently was intended to exclude by necessity consequential damages resulting from the improvements to be made sometime after the taking. The fact that the two elements of damages are charged not only in juxtaposition, but as the first and, second elements of the damages to be assessed, lends substance to this construction; however, this does not necеssarily mean that the suggested charge is correct as an abstract principle of law.
Consequential damages may accrue to the property not taken arising out of the severance therefrom of the proрerty taken, without regard to later consequential damages or benefits because of the improvements to be subsequently placed upon the severed portion, and these consequential damages occurring at the time of severance may be lessened or entirely dissipated by the consequential benefits of the proposed improvement. The charge in the Bridges case and the case at bar ignores these factors and permits а jury to consider the consequential damages occurring by the severance only as a part of the damage for the property taken. While the Pharr case was one involving an easement as distinguished from the taking of the feе, this does not eliminate or change the construction of the charge insofar as it permits the recovery of consequential damage as a part of the damage for the property taken. We conclude,' therefore, that the charge complained of in the present case was error requiring the grant of a new trial.
Headnotes 3 and 4 require no elaboration.
Judgment reversed.
