This is a total taking condemnation case involving an office condominium. The property was owned by Dr. Sidney A. Funk, who leased it to a professional corporation which he owned and through which he conducted his medical practice. Decisions from an earlier series of appeals in this case are reported as MARTA v. Funk,
While the condemnors have argued that the trial court did not instruct the jury to limit their award to the fair market value of the property, this is simply incorrect. The jury was instructed to award to each condemnee their portion of just and adequate compensation for the property, while just and adequate compensation was defined as fair market value.
The absence of any evidence or claim of “unique” value to either of the condemnees does not alter the applicable rule. The concept of “uniqueness” and the concept expressed in White v. Fulton County, supra, are related only in that they define separate sets of circumstances under which condemnees may receive more than fair market value as just and adequate compensation. The goal in each instance is to compensate the condemnee for what he has lost as opposed to measuring the taking by what the condemnor has gained. In the instance of a “unique” property the additional compensation is predicated on value of the property, in excess of fair market value, which is peculiar to the owner. This is a separate concept from that accepted in White v. Fulton County, supra, which is an acknowledgment that where ownership of property is fragmented, the sum of the values of the separate estates may exceed the value of the unencumbered whole. The trial court erred in instructing the jury so as to limit the sum of the awards to the two condemnees to the fair market value of the property.
Judgment reversed.
