45 Ga. App. 774 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1932
Southern Natural Gas Corporation instituted proceedings to condemn a right of way through lands of H. G. Hastings Company Inc. for a “pipe line or pipe lines” for the transportation and distribution of natural gas, the right of way to extend through the farm of the Hastings Company in Clayton county and to be 401 rods in length and 30 feet in width. The notice of the gas company’s intention to condemn stipulated that the condemnor “is to bury said pipes below plow depth on all of the lands on which
The trial judge in outlining the case to the jury made the following statement: “From that award of the appraisers Southern Natural Gas Corporation has brought this appeal which is now on trial before you.” It is averred that the defendant, the condemnee, also appealed from the award and that the failure of the court to mention this fact had the effect of impressing the jury that the condemnor alone was dissatisfied with the award, all three of the appraisers having testified, “and the jury having deduced from their testimony their ideas on the issue.” There is no merit in this ground. The appeal of either party resulted in a de novo investigation, and it was the function and duty of the jury to pass upon the issues independently of the award made by the assessors, and they were expressly instructed to this effect in another portion of the court’s charge. It follows that the defendant could not have been prejudiced by the court’s failure to inform the jury that the defendant had also entered an appeal. See, in this connection, Central Georgia Power Co. v. Cornwell, 139 Ga. 1 (3) (76 S. E. 387, Ann. Cas. 1914A, 880); Atlanta, Birmingham & Atlantic R. Co. v. Smith, 132 Ga. 725 (64 S. E. 1073).
It is averred that the court erred “in charging the jury upon the question of consequential benefits,” there being no evidence, “as movant contends, which would support a finding of any consequential benefits” to offset the consequential damages. A ground of a motion for a new trial must be complete within itself, and this ground is defective as failing to show what the court did charge upon the subject. The assignment of error is directed only to an
It is alleged that the court erred “in failing to charge the jury . . that the consequential benefits assessed shall in no case exceed the consequential damages assessed.” It appears that the right of way occupies less than five acres of'the land, and the highest value to be placed by any witness upon the land taken was $200 per acre, so that if the jury allowed the highest valuation for the land, this item could not have exceeded the sum of $1,000. The verdict, however, was in the sum of $2,750, and it thus appears that the jury actually allowed a substantial sum as consequential damages ; and this is true even if the verdict included a sum as the value of crops destroyed, the proven value of which was less than $1,750. It is therefore clear from the record that the defendant was not harmed by the court’s failure to instruct the jury that the consequential benefits shall in no case exceed the consequential damages.
Defendant assigns error upon the following charge to the jury: “If the defendant company, H. G. Hastings Co. Inc., desired to establish an irrigation system, it could lay its pipes under or over the plaintiff’s gas-pipe lines if such laying of pipes under or over the gas-pipe lines would not interfere with the transmission of gas. If you believe such to be the case, you could not consider any irrigation system as having any effect on the value of the land.” The only criticisms made of this charge were: (1) that it was a conclusion by the court and amounted to an expression of an opinion on the part of the court “that said gas line would not interfere with any proposed irrigation system,” and (2) that the excerpt was also a “specific instruction to the jury to disregard the irrigation project as an item of damages if the irrigation pipes could be laid over or under the gas-pipes, and was an erroneous direct instruction by the court that the gas line could in no other way interfere with an irrigation system, although there are numerous other ways in which said proposed easement would interfere with an irrigation system.”
In a case of this kind the consequential damages must be determined upon the theory that the public utility will be maintained and operated in a proper and lawful manner. It can not rightly be assumed “that there will be negligent construction or operation so as to cause damages in excess of that which would naturally and proximately arise from proper construction and operation. If the company be negligent in such matters, causing damages beyond those naturally arising from such construction and operation, this might give rise to a subsequent cause of action.” Central Georgia Power Co. v. Mays, 137 Ga. 120, 124 (72 S. E. 900). Accordingly, we hold that the excerpt from the charge of the court as last referred to was not subject to exception upon either-ground taken.
Furthermore, the second exception, though we have considered it upon its merits, appears to be fatally defective for the reason that it assigns the charge as error only because “there are numerous other ways in which said proposed easement would interfere with an irrigation system,” without referring to the evidence or showing therefrom that the easement would otherwise interfere with the rights of the owner. The statement that the easement would inter
There are additional facts to illustrate the lack of merit in this ground, as will be shown in the following discussion of the next ground assigning error upon another excerpt from the charge of the court.
It is contended that the court erred in charging the jury that “H. G. Hastings Co. Inc. would have the right to cultivate and use this land as if that gas line had never been laid.” It is insisted that this charge amounted to an expression of opinion that the easement would in no way interfere with the cultivation of the land, and was contrary to law for the reason that the rights of the owner must be subordinated to the uses proposed by the condemnor as defined in the condemnation proceedings, which in this case included various uses besides the laying of a gas-pipe, namely, the construction of a telephone line or lines and other pipe lines, the repairing and maintenance of the same, and patrolling the right of way, together with the right of ingress and egress, all of which would interfere with the cultivation, use and enjoyment of this land by the defendant condemnee.
The notice of the intention to condemn the right of way as served upon the owner recited that the gas-pipes were to be buried “below plow depth on all the land,” and the evidence showed without dispute that they were laid accordingly. There is nothing to indicate that the plaintiff gas company had any right or authority as a telephone or telegraph company, and, so far as appears, its claim of the power of eminent domain must be confined to the business of “constructing and operating pipe-lines for the transportation and/or distribution of natural or artificial gas.” Ga. L. 1929, p. 219, § 1. Cf. Georgia Granite R. Co. v. Venable, 129 Ga. 341 (2, 3) (58 S. E. 864). The construction and operation of telephone or telegraph lines would seem to be entirely foreign to the use for which the plaintiff is authorized to condemn the property of others, and under the record as here presented the reference to telephone and telegraph lines as contained in the notice of the intended condemnation must be treated as surplusage.
The defendant’s farm consisted of a body or tract of some 1,500 acres. The right of way covered a strip 30 feet wide and 401
But this portion of the charge must be viewed iir the light of other instructions upon the same subject. From an examination of the entire charge it appears that the jury were instructed that the defendant “could make any use of the premises condemned which did not interfere with the gas company’s use of its pipe line,” and that the condemnation of the property “did not take from the owner a fee title, but only certain rights to use and go upon it as specified 'in [the] petition or notice in this case. H. G. Hastings Company Inc. would have the right to cultivate and use this land as if that gas line had never been laid, and on the other hand the gas company would have the right to use the land for the purpose of ingress and egress in making any repairs, or in maintaining its gas line.”
Considered as a whole, the charge was not an instruction that the owner would have the right to use the land for any purpose that would interfere with the use for which it was condemned by the gas company. The measure of damages in such a case is the
The general grounds of the motion for a new trial are not insisted upon, and, none of the special grounds showing reversible error, the judgment refusing a new trial must be affirmed.
Jlodgment affirm,ed.