1. The condemnor appeals from a verdict of $11,930 awarded for the taking of an easement, in 10.51 acres of land in Butts County for power lines. Nine lines one and a half inches in diameter and carrying a half million volts
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are involved and there was a great deal of testimony relating to consequential damages to the remaining 160 acres of land. Value estimates of the condemnor hovered around $3,000; those of the condemnee ranged between $24,000 and a figure over double that amount. The verdict was within the range of the evidence and supported by inferences from it.
State Hwy. Dept. v. Thompson,
2. During voir dire examination, counsel for the condemnor moved for a mistrial, continuance or jury panel disqualification on the ground that opposing counsel informed the court in the presence of the jury that he had taken the case on a contingent fee basis. The objection stated "that means [if] he doesn’t recover anything, and the jury is bound to know it, he doesn’t get a fee.” The motions were overruled, the court instructing the jurors: "In a case such as the one being tried the Jury will be called upon to make some award in some amount for the property owner. And you would not let the fact that the attorney representing the property owner has a contingent fee have any bearing on whatever the verdict you would reach. Your oath as a juror, your obligation as a juror, would require you to make up your mind and make your verdict based on the evidence adduced. . . You will not let the fact an attorney had a financial interest in the outcome of the case have any bearing on whatever verdict you might reach. As I say, your verdict should be confined to what the evidence is.”
Cases reversing verdicts because a remark addressed to the judge might have been overheard by the jury are few and far between. None in point has been cited to us. In
Thompson v. O’Connor,
3. Although not transcribed, it appears that during the concluding argument counsel for the condemnee referred to the Georgia Power Company as "a big financial institution” and to "the mammoth Georgia Power Company.” Language which, by emphasizing the financial disparity of the parties, tends to prejudice jury deliberations has been held reversible. See
John J. Woodside Storage Co. v. Reese,
4. We agree that an affidavit of counsel executed after the case had been tried is not properly in the record, and we do not consider it. The last enumeration of error refers to overruling of an objection to a part of the closing argument as follows: "It’s highly improper for counsel to ask the jurors to inject themselves and project themselves in place of party litigant.” The court sustained the objection, instructed the jury to disregard that line of argument, and cautioned counsel to be more careful in his choice of words. Again, it does not appear that the cautionary instructions were insufficient.
Judgment affirmed.
