THE ILLINOIS POWER AND LIGHT CORPORATION, Appellant, vs. ELIZA BARNETT et al. Appellees.
No. 19371.
Supreme Court of Illinois
February 21, 1930
Rehearing denied April 3, 1930.
338 Ill. 499
WILBUR A. TRARES, for appellees.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of Madison county in a condemnation proceeding instituted by appellant, the Illinois Power and Light Corporation, against appellees, Eliza Barnett and others and Jesse A. Grainey and others, to establish an electric transmission line. The original petition did not include damages to land not taken outside of a 66-foot strip, and appellees filed a cross-petition claiming damages to all lands not taken. Evidence was offered as to the value of the various pieces of land and at the close of the evidence the jury viewed the premises. On the Grainey land the verdict was for $5.75 for land taken for towers, $204.50 for the 66-foot strip and $1100 damages to the balance of the land. On the Barnett land the verdict was for $3.90 for land taken for towers, $129.50 for the 66-foot strip and $750 damages to land not taken. Judgment was entered upon the verdict and this appeal was prosecuted.
Appellant makes no complaint as to the amounts allowed for tower sites or for damages to the 66-foot strip, but it insists that all other lands not taken were not damaged within the meaning of the constitution and that the damages allowed to lands not taken were excessive.
The land was in two tracts, one of 160 acres belonging to the Graineys, and the other east of it, consisting of 229 acres, belonging to Eliza Barnett. The purpose of the condemnation was to secure the fee to .05 of an acre on the Grainey tract, on which were to be erected five steel
The law governing damage to land not taken has been announced by this court on several occasions in cases involving almost identical facts. The burden was upon the owners of the property to prove damage to the land not taken as alleged in their cross-petition, and such damage is the depreciation in the market value of the land. The 66-foot strip was land not taken. To entitle the owners to damage to land not taken they were required to prove that there was some direct physical disturbance of a right, either public or private, which they enjoyed in connection with the property, causing them special damage in excess of that sustained by the public generally. The damage must be direct and proximate and not merely such as is possible or may be conceived by the imagination or such as affects merely the feelings of the property owner. Inconvenience, obstruction or interference in farming the land not taken and shrinkage in area of the farm are elements of damage to land not taken. Testimony as to the amount of damage has no value as evidence where it is not based on proper elements of damage. The jury had no right to take into consideration any damage which is merely speculative or which is remotely contingent. Unsightliness of towers, possibility that at some time a wire or other attachment may fall and cause damage, possible injury from fire or lightning, injury to crops from falling towers or by teams or tractors colliding with towers, or stock or machinery being caught in the towers, are not proper elements of damage. Illinois Power and Light Corp. v. Talbott, 321 Ill. 538; Same v. Cooper, 322 id. 11; Same v. Parks, 322 id. 313; Same v. Peterson, 322 id. 342; Same v. Lummis, 323 id. 625; Illinois Power Co. v. Wieland, 324 id. 411.
East of the Grainey land is the Barnett land, consisting of the east half of the southeast quarter of section 31 and the southwest quarter of section 32, less highways and railroads, leaving about 229 acres. The Hazel road is on the west side of the land. The railroad crosses the northwest corner of the land, leaving a triangular piece of about eight acres in the northwest corner. The Hillsboro road enters the land just north of the southwest corner and extends in a northeasterly direction through the land. Near the east side of the east half of the southeast quarter of section 31 a public highway known as the Fruit road branches off of the Hillsboro road and extends in a southeasterly direction across the south part of the southwest quarter of section 32. These public roads and the railroad divide the farm into four parts. There are eight acres in the northwest corner north of the railroad in section 31, 55 acres in sections 31
These various tracts into which these farms are divided are all irregular in shape. This condition existed before the petition was filed. The building of this line does not change the area or shape of any of these tracts, except that it takes a strip 66 feet wide south of and adjacent to the railroad and reduces the area of the two tracts between the railroad and the Hillsboro road to this extent. The eight acres on the Barnett land and the 80 acres on the Grainey land, both of which tracts are north of the railroad, and all of the land on both farms south of the Hillsboro road, were not changed in shape or in acreage, therefore there could be no additional obstructions in farming them. The only damage applicable to these two tracts was the reduced area of the farms considered as a whole, which damage would, of necessity, be slight. The only other land outside of the 66-foot strip which could have been damaged to any apparent extent was the 60 acres on the Grainey farm and the 55 acres on the Barnett farm between the railroad and the Hillsboro road. Neither of these tracts was changed in shape except that the 66-foot strip was cut off. Appellees will have the same access from these two tracts to the lands north of the railroad which they had before the petition was filed. There is a slight reduction in the total area of these two tracts, and there may be some few additional obstructions to farming them, but not such as to justify the amount of the verdict as to land not taken outside of the 66-foot strip. The most of the obstructions to farming are on the 66-foot strip for which compensation was awarded, of which no complaint is made.
There were three elements of damage to be considered by the jury. The first was the fair cash market value of the fee to the land on which the towers were to be located. The second was the depreciation in the fair cash market value of the 66-foot strip. Both of these elements were set up in the original petition and the burden was upon appellant to prove them. The third element was the depreciation, if any, of the fair cash market value of all or part of the remainder of the farms outside of the 66-foot strip. This element was set up in the cross-petition of appellees and the burden was upon them to establish this deprecia-
Some of the witnesses for appellees, over the objections of appellant, without first stating the elements of damage
Complaint is made of the refusal of the court to give two instructions on behalf of appellant and of the giving of all instructions on behalf of appellees. The first instruction refused on behalf of appellant was covered by the twelfth instruction given on its behalf. There was no error in the refusal of the other instructions offered by appellant. The instructions given on behalf of appellees announce correct rules of law, but on account of the errors in the evidence introduced by appellees in the respects above stated they were calculated to mislead the jury.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Per CURIAM: The foregoing opinion reported by Mr. Commissioner Partlow is hereby adopted as the opinion of the court, and judgment is entered in accordance therewith.
Reversed and remanded.
