184 Ky. 54 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1919
(Opikioh op the Court by
Affirming.
This is a condemnation proceeding, the commissioners in the county court having fixed the defendant’s damages for 4.88 acres of land taken at $3,000.00, to which
Plaintiff seeks a reversal of that judgment upon three-grounds: (1) the admission of incompetent evidence; (2) because a personal judgment, alleged to be unwarranted, was given against it for the sum awarded as-damages, and (3) because the verdict is excessive.
1. The evidence admitted, alleged to be incompetent, is-to the effect that by the construction of the railroad on the-right of way condemned the waters of Beaver creek will be in times of high water forced out of their channel on to a part of defendant’s lands adjacent to but outside of the strip condemned. However, the court refused to admit evidence of damages that might thereafter result from high water and only permitted the witness to testify as to such damages as had resulted before the trial,, and as the witness said there had been no high water and no such damage had occurred up to that time, it is manifest appellant was not prejudiced by the court’s ruling even if erroneous, and we need not decide whether evidence of this character was competent.
2. It is unquestionably true that a corporation-vested with power of eminent domain having undertaken to condemn land for its necessary use under sections 835-840,in-clusive, Ky. Stats., may, after judgment and before possession is acquired, elect to take or not the land in question (Sandy Valley & E. R. Co.v. Bentley, 161 Ky. 55),and therefore an absolute personal judgment against it for the amount assessed as damages is ordinarily improper; but this right of election, however it may be in other' jurisdictions, when once exercised, is under the pro vis
Appellant having exercised its right of election and taken possession of the land, in which appellees have acquiesced, doubtless because of the deposit in the court and the bond for the appeal, and the deposit having been made by appellant under sec. 839 of the statutes, “subject to the order of the court,” it can not thereafter make another and different election with reference to taking the land, nor can it object to the court ordering the payment upon final judgment of that deposit to the landowners. Neither can it object to the personal judgment against it for the excess of the damages finally awarded over the deposit, because that was the very question the proceedings, after the question of possession had been disposed of by the action and acquiescence of the parties, submitted for adjudication. Neither party is objecting to that part of the judgment directing the master to con
3. The remaining question is whether or not the verdict is excessive. The land condemned is a strip 100 feet wide, except at one end, where it is 150 feet in width, through the center of a bottom of very fertile and valuable land, which contains about 48 acres. The two parcels into which the bottom is thus cut, are pointed at each end and one parcel is only from 48 to 60 feet in width for a distance of some 500 or 600 yards. The witnesses for the company fixed the value of the land actually taken at about $300.00 per acre and the damages to the rest of the tract at $1,500.00, or a total of $3,000.00; the witnesses for appellees, about the same in number, placed the value of the land at $600.00 to $800.00 an acre, and the whole damage at $6,000.00 to $8,000.00. All agree substantially that the whole bottom of 48 acres is about the best body of land in that vicinity and that such land, because of its scarcity in that section, is not on the market frequently enough to enable them to state its market value with any degree of accuracy and hence the values are fixed by all the witnesses almost if not exclusively from a knowledge of its fertility and adaptability to farming purposes, which, under the circumstances, was the best available standard rendering such evidence competent. (Sandy Valley & E. R. Co. v. Bentley, supra.)
Upon this evidence the verdict of the jury, if they accepted that offered by appellees rather than appellant, as they might have clone, can not be held excessive or flagrantly against the evidence as it is less than the amount fixed by these witnesses. But counsel argue we ought to know as matter of common knowledge that the $5,700.00 allowed by the jury for less than five acres of land, or more than $1,100.00 an acre, is grossly excessive. To begin with, the $5,700.00 is not alone for the five acres taken, but that sum includes the damage done to the
Moreover two juries, after viewing the premises and hearing the evidence, have fixed the total damages at practically the same amount, and if as they may have ■done consistently, they believed the land was worth as much as $600.00 an acre, the percentage of depreciation of the remaining 43 acres was placed at only $1,700.00 or ten per centum of its original value, and certainly this can not be said to be excessive or unreasonable as a matter of common knowledge, since even appellant's witnesses fixed this item of damage at $1,500.00.
Wherefore the judgment is affirmed.