The condemnor complains of an instruction to the jury: “Mrs. Schroeder contends that the property in question had been fully, or substantially fully, rented for some time prior to the time it became general knowledge in the neighborhood that it would be taken some time in the immediate future for urban renewal purposes. For this reason the rental units became vacant and she was unable to rent them because of the possible imminent taking of the property for urban renewal purposes. If you find this to be true, you may take into consideration the rent such property was producing or had recently produced at the time of taking and give it such weight as you find it to bear in arriving at just and adequate compensation for the owner.” The objection was that “although that portion of the charge was abstractly correct,” the wording would confuse the jury into thinking they could consider the loss of profits occurring prior to November 1964, when the petition was filed. The evidence shows that the property was a valuable one from the standpoint of return on investment and that it had stayed
Just and adequate compensation means putting the deprived landowner as nearly as possible back in the same monetary position he was in before the seizure occurred. The government may not depress the value of land, whether by signs causing the public to think the land has already been taken, or by public announcements indicating imminent seizure, so as to deprive the owner of the use to which the property is being put, and then contend that the depressed value is in fact the true value of the property on the date the. technicalities of the “taking” have been performed. In Winepol v. State Roads Comm. of Md.,
The remaining criticism of portions of the charge will not be considered as it does not appear that objection was made to these excerpts in the trial court. Code Ann. § 70-207 (a).
In reply to a question as to the value of the property taken, Mrs. Schroeder replied: “Well, I just think I should get between $30,000 and $40,000, thirty to get the proper • income that I was getting each month, to invest it.” The answer was obviously unresponsive to the question and showed that the condemnee was basing the amount of recovery by her on a factor not in evidence and' having no relation to the value of the property—that is, on her future plans for investment of the money to be received. She further stated that the amount she wanted depended on how much she would have to. pay for other property to get the amount of income she had been getting, $280 per month, but that she had had no experience in trying to buy real estate. This estimate, accordingly, must be ignored in considering the range of the evidence as to value. Hoard v. Wiley,
Judgment affirmed. Nichols, P. J., concurs.
