89 Kan. 70 | Kan. | 1913
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The railroad took one and twenty-three hundredths acres of plaintiff’s sixty-two acres of farming land in Johnson county, and the county commissioners, acting as appraisers, fixed the value of the land taken at $93.75 and damage to the land not taken at $40. The plaintiff appealed. The jury found the value of the land taken to be $92.25, the damage to the
Complaint is made that one of plaintiff’s witnesses, who admitted that he was not acquainted with market value of the land in the immediate neighborhood, was permitted to testify. He stated, however, that he had handled land in almost all directions from Kansas City within twenty-five miles, and that the land in question was eleven or twelve miles out; that he was acquainted with the market value of land within a range of fifteen or twenty miles southwest from Kansas City and that he thought he knew the value of it; that the land before the road was built was worth from $125 to $140 an acre. He described the land in question, which he had seen and examined. Numerous other witnesses, about whose competency there is no question, placed it variously at $100, $95, $75, $80, $110 and $115. The witness complained of placed the value, after building the road, at from $78 to $80 per acre, and numerous competent witnesses placed it variously at $95, $87, $75, $90, $70 and $95 an acre. There was abundant competent testimony, therefore, to support the verdict, and we think the evidence complained of was not materially prejudicial, its weight being for the jury.
The defendant sought to prove the rental value of the land and complains because it was not permitted to do so. Such evidence is competent when it is the best'that can be had, and its reception would not have been error. (Kelchner v. Kansas City, 86 Kan. 762, 121 Pac. 915.) But in view of the knowledge shown by the witnesses of the value of the land itself the exclusion of its rental value was not materially prejudicial.
It was sought, also, to show the effect of various improvements aside from those caused by the road upon the land in question, to which objections. were sustained. It is argued that some of these improvements were made by those associated in a manner with
The judgment is affirmed.