With our permission, defendants appeal from the trial court’s rulings on plaintiff’s application to determine law points during, its' appeal from a condemnation award.
At the time of condemnation plaintiff’s radio station operation consisted of a transmittal area just outside the north city limits of Iowa City which was connected by a coaxial cable with its studio and business office in downtown Iowa City, a distance of several miles. ' •
Defendants condemned 8.45 acres of the transmittal area but there was no other taking of plaintiff’s property. The existing two towers and radial wires were left intact. The condemnation did not impair plaintiff’s operation of its existing 1000-watt radio station.
Plaintiff’s petition alleges it had procured an engineering survey to ascertain necessary changes to convert to a 5000-watt operation and had been negotiating with the Federal Communications Commission to increase its wattage and hours of operation.
The survey indicated a 5000-watt operation would necessitate three towers, 300 feet of radial wires extending therefrom and *1253 that the 25-acre tract would be large enough to absorb the change. Plaintiff alleged the 16%-acre tract remaining after condemnation was too small for its planned 5000-watt operation and it was thereby precluded from continuing its efforts to enlarge its operation.
The trial court on plaintiff’s application to adjudicate law points (R. C. P. 105) ruled plaintiff could introduce evidence of (1) its future plans as bearing on the use and adaptability of the condemned property, (2) the before and after value of the entire radio station property and (3) the gross income of the 1000-watt operation and the projected gross income of a 5000-watt operation. Defendants assert the trial court erred in each of these rulings.
I. Defendants concede plaintiff may show the value of the transmittal area for any use to which it may reasonably be adapted. This now well established rule was first discussed in detail in Ranck v. City of Cedar Rapids,
“In this estimation the owner is entitled to have the jury informed of all the capabilities of the property, as to the business or use, if any, to which it has been devoted, and of any and every use to which it may reasonably be adapted or applied. And this rule includes the adaptation and value of the property for any legitimate purpose or business, even though it has never-been so used, and the owner has no present intention to devote it to such use.”
This quote is followed by a long list of citations and examples of evidence held to be admissible under the rule.
Some of our later decisions of like effect are Hamer v. Iowa State Highway Comm.,
*1254 Defendants argue this rule does not permit evidence of plaintiff’s plans or subjective intent to use the property for a particular purpose in the future. Our holding in Mohr v. Iowa State Highway Comm., supra, is to the contrary.
In that case we hold evidence of condemnee’s plans to grade the west part of his property, build a filling station, a garage and use it as a used carlot admissible for the purpose of showing its capabilities.
At page 721, 255 Iowa, page 147, 124 N.W.2d, we say:
“Although there is authority to the contrary, we have held, in-line with a good many outside decisions, that evidence of a plan for the proposed improvement of the affected property is admissible for the purpose of showing its capabilities. Iowa Development Co. v. Iowa State Highway Comm., supra,
We agree with the trial court’s ruling and adjudication on the first proposition.
II. We do not agree with the trial court’s ruling plaintiff could introduce evidence of the before and after value of all its property devoted to the operation of its radio station.
Plaintiff does not allege any change resulted in the operation of its 1000-watt radio station. Plaintiff makes no claim its downtown leasehold interest was disturbed in anyway. Its use remained unchanged after condemnation.
We have frequently considered the question whether damages for a taking by condemnation should be assessed to all farmland in the vicinity owned by the condemnee or to the various tracts or parcels separately. If there is evidence from which the jury could reasonably find the entire acreage, though not contiguous, was used as one farm, so that the loss and incon
*1255
venience would affect its entire use and operation, then the question becomes one of fact. Ham v. The Wisconsin, Iowa & Nebraska Ry. Co.,
In Cutler v. State,
We need not, nor do we, decide whether the general rule applicable to farm parcels applies to plaintiff’s use of its 25-acre tract and downtown leasehold interest. We are convinced in the absence of any claim of loss or inconvenience to the entire operation the before and after value of the leasehold should not be considered.
In Fleming v. The Chicago, D. & M. R. Co.,
Crist v. Iowa State Highway Comm.,
At pages 619, 621, 255 Iowa, pages 426, 427, 428, 123 N.W.2d, we say:
“No damages to tracts B and P, or either of them, were considered or allowed. All that was done was to permit the use of S in connection with B and P to be shown, as affecting the reasonable market value of S. The jury was told that no damages to B and P should be allowed. * * * the value of condemned property is fixed as it existed at the time of the taking. Kaperonis v. Iowa State Highway Comm.,
Our ruling is strongly supported by City of Oakland v. Pacific Coast Lumber & Mill Co.,
III. We have consistently held remote, contingent and speculative matters are not to be considered as evidence of value of condemned property. Randell v. Iowa State Highway Comm.,
In Lewis on Eminent Domain, Third Ed-, section 727, page 1273, the author states:
*1257 “Nor can the profits of a business be shown for the purpose of proving the value of the property. The profits of a business do not tend to prove the value of the property upon which it is conducted. The profits of a business depend upon its extent and character and the manner in which it is conducted. One man will get rich while another will become bankrupt in conducting the same business upon the same property. It, is proper, however, to show how the taking will interfere with the use of the property, either for the purpose to which it is actually devoted or for any purpose to which it is adapted.”
In Wilson v. Iowa State Highway Comm., supra, we hold evidence of monthly net income derived from a filling station and gross income of a cafe being operated on part of the property condemned should have been rejected by the trial court.
We hold evidence of gross income from plaintiff’s radio station on the basis of its 1000-watt operation is not admissible. Whether plaintiff would have been able to obtain a permit to enlarge its operation to a 5000-watt station was speculative and uncertain. Evidence of gross income of such prospective operation is likewise inadmissible under our established rules.
Costs of this appeal are ordered taxed equally against the parties. — Affirmed in part; reversed in part.
