84 W. Va. 489 | W. Va. | 1919
The verdict and judgment in this condemnation proceeding by a railway company to take, for its purposes, a portion of each of two small lots on one of which there was a horse and a mule barn and on the other á department store building, both in use at the time, are for $14,000.00, and the applicant complains of them.
The dimensions of the barn lot were, substantially, forty by eighty feet, and, of the other lot forty by fifty-four feet. The railroad right of way line cut into both lots to a depth of about thirty feet and ran through the building on each. Each of the structures was a two-story frame building, the former about fifty-four by thirty-seven feet and the latter about thirty-six by fifty feet. On account of the unfavorable topography of the ground, the building sites had to be prepared at considerable expense, by the blasting out and hauling away of rocks and the construction of retaining walls. The barn seems to ¡have been built in 1911, and the store house in 1914. Up to a date
The commissioners appointed in the usual way ascertained the compensation and damages respecting the lot on which the bam was at $4,800.00 and the lot on which the store building was at $5,500.00, making a total of $10,300.00. The railroad company paid this amount into court and obtained an order authorizing it to take possession of the property. The owners excepted to the report of the commission and demanded a trial by jury, solely on the question of the amount of compensation and damages, they having acquiesced in the court’s decision affirming the right of the applicant to take the property for its railroad purposes, on payment of proper compensation and damages.
All of the numerous assignments of error, except two, are based upon rulings admitting evidence over objections of the plaintiff in error. One of the others denies the propriety of an instruction because it is based upon evidence alleged to be inadmissible, and the overruling of a motion to set aside the verdict, for insufficiency of the evidence and as being contrary to the clear and decided preponderance of the evidence, is the subject matter of the last one.
In the beginning of the trial, the court refused to permit the owners of the property to prove the net income and profits of the horse and mule business conducted in the barn on one of the lots, for the year immediately preceding the month of August, 1917, the date of the .institution of this proceeding; but later, such evidence was admitted over an ob j ection interp osed by the applicant. In the argument submitted here in support of the court’s final ruling upon the question, it is frankly admitted that such profits cannot be
All of the evidence tending to prove that the new barn is not as conveniently or advantageously located as the old one was improperly admitted. As in the case of profits, it pertains not to the value of the property taken or damage to the residue, but to the business of one of the defendants. For injury or detriment to that, the law does not require the condemnor to compensate. B. & N. Railroad Co. v. Great Scott C. & C. Co., 75 W. Va. 423; Shenadoah Valley R. Co. v. Shepherd, 26 W. Va. 672. Such damages are said to be common to the owners of other like business enterprises of the community. The true reason may be that presumptively the world affords the trader just as good opportuni
Evidence of the cost of construction of a new barn on another site was improperly admitted also. The applicant pays the value of the old barn and, out of that compensation or . otherwise, the defendant should provide himself with a new one, if he needs or desires it. As the applicant takes a good portion of each building and the lots are too small to afford room for them on what remains of each lot, they are in legal contemplation wholly taken. In other words, they are to be treated, upon the inquiry as to compensation, as if they were wholly taken. Ohio River R. Co. v. Gibbens, 35 W. Va. 57; Pumpelly v. Green Bay C., 13 Wall. (U. S.) 180; Eaton v. Railroad Co., 51 N. H. 504. They are parts of the property taken and are, therefore, to be paid for. The condemnor is not required' in addition to such payment, to provide new buildings. The case is entirely different from one in which a building can be moved over on to the un-taken residue of a tract of land and its uses continued. In the latter case, cost of removal might be evidence bearing on the question of damages to the residue, but we do not have this question. The evidence of the cost of erection of the new barn is too uncertain as an element of proof of the value of the old one. It was put up on different ground, and the cost of preparation of the new: site may have been considerably more or less than that incident to the construction of the old one, which included expensive excavation and retaining walls. If identity or close similarity of conditions in all respects would make this evidence admissi
Between the two lots in question, there was another small one owned by Conley alone, and a part of lwhich| was taken. Kincaid alone owned another lot adjoining all three of those involved in the proceeding, and on it he resided in a house worth probably $3,000.00, but no part of that lot was taken. Defendants' were allowed, over objections, to prove damages to his residence lot, resulting from the construction of the railroad in front of it. No direct effort is made in the brief for defendant in error to sustain this ruling, but it is treated as part of the evidence relating to an assessment for taxation, in an effort to apportion the assessment between the residence lot and the store lot, they having been assessed together. This effort at apportionment, however, did not necessarily involve proof of damage to the residence lot which was not involved in the proceeding. Admission of such proof was a palpable error. On this subject, the rule is strict. Lewis Em. Dom. 697, citing numerous cases sustaining the text.
Evidence of an inquiry made by an agent and attorney of the condemnor as to whether one of the defendants would accept' a certain amount of money by way of compensation and damages, if he were sole owner of the property, was admitted over objection. As there was no proof of any authority in the agent and attorney to bind his principal by an agreement as to the compensation and damages, this evidence was improperly admitted. One dealing with an agent must know the extent of his authority. Uniontown Grocery Co. v. Dawson, 68 W. Va. 332. The inquiry, if made, was no evidence of the value of the property and rights sought. It was an effort to ascertain the attitude of the defendants, and did not import purpose or willingness to pay the amount suggested. Besides, there is no proof of intent on the part of the principal to make the agent a witness either for or against it in the condemnation proceeding. It was bad for want of proof of authority in the agent and also for lack of tendency to prove value.
Ordinarily, it would be highly improper to permit the
As the right of the railroad company to take the land had been previously adjudicated and acquiesced in by the defendants, it was too late for them to set up the defense of lack of necessity for condemnation of these lots on the ground of existence of another way occasioning less damage. Introduction of evidence at this stage of the case to prove such a, way could subserve no usefull or legitimate purpose. It pertains neither to the value of the land taken nor damages: to the residue. It might become a fallacious basis of an inference of wantoness on the part of the railway company, in seeking unnecessarily to take improved or actually used property, when vacant property Would answer its purposes equally well. If effective at all, such an inference could result only in prejudice against the railway company in the trial. The witness did say the ground on the other side of the road was very steep and rocky, but he had previously stated the condemnor could have gone that way and obtained cheaper property. The court should have sustained the motion to strike that evidence out.
A witness was improperly allowed to give Ms oponion as to the value of the property, “taking into consideration * * * * the possibility or impossibility of securing other • locations.” It was competent for the defendants to prove the location, the adaption of the property to any use of which it was susceptible, and the use to which it had been
The argument submitted in support of the admission of the tax assessment of the Kincaid residence lot and the store-building lot, treated as a single piece of property, at the sum ■of $17,280.00, fallaciously assumes that the assessor put the same values on the two pieces of property as the witnesses ¡accorded to them, $5,000.00 on the residence lot and $12,-'-280.00 on the other. The unreliability off assessments as in-dices to the market values of property is shown by the fact that the assessment of these two pieces of property for the preceeding year was only $2,000.00. Assessments are so fearfully and wonderfully made that it would be unsafe to hazard a guess as to the method adopted in any particular case. The statute, Code, ch. 29, sec. 115, makes them admissible on questions of value, but, ordinarily, the assessment ■offered should be limited to the particular property involved in the proceeding, for, when two or more pieces are combined, there is no certain means of knowledge affording ¡ground for a just and fair apportionment, unless the land is •all of the same quality and appears to have been valued by the acre or the lot. The cour.t should have excluded the assessment and refused the instruction based upon it.
As the evidence on. the new trial will be different in material respects, from what it was on this trial, it is deemed mnnecessary and might be improper, to enter upon any in■«quiry as to whether, as it stands now, it is sufficient to • sustain the verdict.
For the erors noted, the judgment will be reversed, the werdict set aside and the case remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.