41 A.2d 93 | Conn. | 1945
On November 26, 1941, the state condemned a strip of land belonging to the plaintiff in Mansfield and appraised his damages at $100. He appealed and had judgment for $2400. The appeal was heard by a state referee whose report as corrected discloses the following facts: The property taken was part of a sixty-acre farm owned by the plaintiff. It consisted of a strip of land bounded on the west for eleven hundred and thirty-six feet by the highway and had an average depth of between forty and fifty feet. It contained forty-eight hundredths of an acre. About five acres of the farm, bounding on the highway, were underlaid with a good quality of hard whitestone gravel suitable in its natural state for road building and other construction work. The plaintiff had used this tract as a gravel pit for some time. This was the normal and probable use to which the land should be put. The gravel was worth 25 cents per cubic yard. The premises were viewed. The value of the whole farm was diminished to the extent of $2400; the value of the land taken was $2400; and the plaintiff was entitled to damages in that sum.
The finding that the state appraised the land without regard to its gravel content has been eliminated from the foregoing statement as requested by the defendant. The evidence indicates that the appraisers testifying for the state did not regard the presence of gravel as substantially affecting the value of the land taken. This deletion from the finding does not materially affect the result. The evidence also shows that the use of the gravel in the construction of the road, another finding objected to by the defendant, was relevant and was considered only as bearing on the quality of the gravel.
The defendant sought to have a number of facts added to the report. These referred for the most part *525
to sales claimed by it to be comparable. These additions went merely to the weight of the evidence and if added would not change the result. State v. Giant's Neck Land Improvement Co.,
The rulings on evidence are not separately stated, as is desirable; see Practice Book, 359, Form 645; State v. Giant's Neck Land Improvement Co., supra, 356; Rogoff v. So. N.E. Contractors Supply Co., Inc.,
The remaining rulings fall into two groups. The objections in the first group were to evidence as to the value of the particular portion of land taken and to the inclusion in the questions of the fact that the portion taken contained valuable gravel deposits. The rule relied on by the defendant is stated in 1 Nichols, Law of Eminent Domain (2d Ed.), 226 as follows: "When a tract of land taken by eminent domain contains ore, stone, coal, sand, gravel, peat, loam, oil or gas or other valuable deposits, which constitute part *526
of the realty, or is covered with growing crops, or with trees capable of being converted into lumber, the existence of these features can be taken into consideration in determining the compensation so far as they affect the market value of the land; but the market value of the land remains the test, and there can be no recovery for any of the foregoing elements, valued separately as merchandise as items additional to the value of the land." Orgel in Valuation under Eminent Domain discusses the reason for this rule in 164. He says in effect that to add the market value of the gravel or stone in place to the value of the land is oversimplification and too speculative in view of the numerous elements involved. To mention only two of them, there is the question of market and of cost of getting the material out. Searle v. Lackawanna
Bloomsburg R. Co.,
The second group of questions concerned the admitted use of the gravel in the bank, both within and without the highway limits, on the highway. The questions were admitted solely for the purpose of reflecting the market value of the land, and again from the colloquies between counsel and the referee it is clear that the information obtained was used for no other purpose. The principal objection stated in the remonstrance was in substance that the referee was concerned rather with the value of the particular piece taken than with the difference in value of the whole tract before and after taking. Stock v. Cox,
There is nothing in the record which indicates that the result was reached by means not recognized in law or that evidence was considered by the referee for any improper purpose. It follows that the conclusion reached by him and sustained by the trial court must stand.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.