155 N.W. 648 | N.D. | 1915
Plaintiff appeals from a judgment and an order denying its motion for a new trial in a condemnation proceeding where
As already stated the tract of land involved in this action adjoins the platted portion of the town site of Fairview, and the particular strip sought to be acquired by the condemnation proceedings occupies that portion of said tract immediately adjacent to the town site. The record shows that some of defendants’ witnesses testified that the strip of land sought to be condemned, and other portions of the remaining tract immediately adjacent thereto, was suitable for subdivision into town lots or suburban tracts for residence purposes. Appellant’s counsel contends that this element of value was speculative; that this testimony was therefore improper, and should have been excluded.
The so-called town-lot theory was,first injected into this lawsuit, not
Thereupon, on redirect examination, the following questions were asked by plaintiff’s counsel:
Q. Assuming that the particular property concerned is fitted for use as town lots, do you consider it would be damaged?
A. No, sir,, it would not.
Q. There is an old ditch all the way for a half mile along the south end of this farm ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. That is there yet ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And if this land is fitted for subdivision into lots that ditch will be there ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. If the land is subdivided into lots Lebeck won’t have any- use for irrigating, will he ?
A. No, sir.
This is the first testimony offered on this subject. No attempt was made by plaintiff’s counsel to have this testimony stricken out. After-wards upon the presentation of defendants’ case, testimony was also offered, upon the question of value. It will be seen that plaintiff’s counsel, in examination of the witness Richardson, asked his opinion as to value and resultant damages upon the assumption that the particular property involved was fit for subdivision as town property. It seems self-evident that, as plaintiff offered expert evidence upon this assumed
While this element of damage was injected into the lawsuit by the plaintiff, still the trial court in its instructions limited the jury’s consideration thereof in such manner as to eliminate the danger of the jury indulging in any. speculation as to what effect future contingencies might have upon the damages sustained by defendants. In its instructions the court said: “You are further instructed that while it is proper for witnesses, in making their estimate of damages to be allowed the defendants, to take into consideration any use to which you believe from the evidence the property in question may be profitably appropriated, yet you are not bound to base your verdict upon the supposition that it would be appropriated to a use other than that to which it is now devoted. In other words if, from the evidence, it appears that said property in question on June 28, 1913, might profitably have been appropriated or adapted to other uses than agricultural or farming, then the witnesses might take that fact into consideration in making their estimate of the damages sustained; but you as jurors are not bound to base your verdict upon that supposition that it would be appropriated to a use other than that to which it was then devoted.
“I instruct you, gentlemen of the jury, that you cannot allow defendants any damages on the theory that the town of Fairview may spread out to Lebeck’s land, and the land thereby become valuable for use as town lots, because such damages are too remote and speculative.”
Appellant, also, predicates error upon the first instruction quoted. It is contended that this instruction is contrary to the latter instruction, and hence erroneous. We are unable to see how, under the evidence, in this case, appellant could be prejudiced by this instruction.
The undisputed evidence in the case showed that the tract in question adjoined the platted portion of the town site of Fairview, then a town with a population of a few hundred people; that the plaintiff railway company had completed its plans to make Fairview a division point on this new line, and had, prior to the taking of the strip involved
The defendants in this case were entitled to receive for the taking of the strip of land for the use intended by the plaintiff a sufficient sum to compensate them (1) for the actual value of the 7.42-acre strip taken; (2) for the damages (the difference between the cash market value, before and after the taking of the strip, and the construction of the ditch thereon), if any, which would accrue to the portion of the larger tract not sought to be condemned by reason of its severance from the strip taken, and the construction of the ditch thereon. Comp. Laws 1913, § 8223. It is true, compensation should be awarded in view of conditions existing and apparent at the time of the assessment of damages (Comp. Laws 1913, § 8224); and remote, speculative, uncertain, and imaginary damages should not be allowed. This does not, however, mean that courts and juries must shut their eyes and refuse to see matters which are then apparent, from which reasonable men would reasonably infer that the property taken in the near future naturally would be applied to some other use for which it is adapted. Such facts, while to some extent prospective, nevertheless enter into and frequently largely determine its market values at the time the property is taken.
Since damages must be assessed once for all for all damages present or prospective caused by the taking and the proper construction and operation of the work, the adaptation of the land for a certain purpose may be considered even though the land is not used for that purpose at the time of the taking. 14 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 1061. And in determining such adaptability regard should be had “to the existing business or wants of the community, or such as may be reasonably expected in the near future.” Little Rock & Ft. S. R. Co. v. McGehee, 41 Ark. 202; See also 15 Cyc. 715; Petersburg School Dist. v. Peterson, 14 N. D. 344, 350, 103 N. W. 756.
“He whose land is taken for a railroad is to be equally protected. He is to receive all that equity and justice require, when the nature and extent of the property and rights to be affected are considered. The
“The damages awarded by the commissioners must be regarded as a full compensation for all the injury which the landowner may sustain, then or at any future time, from any cause which the commissioners were bound, or had a right to consider; so that it can never after-wards be made a question whether, in fact, the commissioners have or have not considered any particular cause of damage legitimate for their consideration. It must be taken that they have done their duty in considering all such causes, and that the party who has acquiesced in their decision, without appeal, is satisfied that they have done so. Or in case of a submission to a jury, it must be understood that they have been governed by the same principles.” Lewis; Em. Dom. 3d ed. § 819, p. 1446; Dearborn v. Boston, C. & M. R. Co. 24 N. H. 179, 186.
“If a tract of which the whole or a part is taken for a public use possesses a special value to the owner which can be measured by money, he is entitled to have that value considered in the estimate of compensation and damages. Compensation is not to be estimated simply with reference to the value of the land to the owner in the condition in which he has maintained it but with reference to what its present value is in view of the uses to which it is reasonably capable of being put.
“It would be difficult to enumerate the various elements of damages proper to be considered when part of a tract is taken. The shape and size of the parcel or parcels which remain, the difficulty of access and of communication between the different parts, inconvenience and disfigurement caused by the taking, any interference with the drainage of the land, or with the flow of surface water, or with the water supply, are recognized by all authorities as proper items to be taken into account in assessing the damages.- . . . Every element arising from the construction and operation of the work or improvement which, in an appreciable degree, is capable of ascertainment in dollars and cents, that enters into the diminution or increase of the value of the particular property, is properly to be taken into consideration in determining whether there has been damage and the extent of it. Remote, imaginary, uncertain, and speculative damages should be disregarded. . . . The condition of the property before and after the taking may always be shown. Damages must be assessed once for all for all damages
The instructions above quoted limited the jury in its consideration of the use of the property to the evidence in the case, and eliminated from its consideration any speculation as to prospective values by reason of the possibility of the growth of the town of Eairview. When these instructions are considered as a whole, together with the evidence in the case, plaintiff has no cause for complaint.
Appellant’s counsel next contends that in proving damages an improper method was pursued. The record discloses that the witnesses, in their testimony as to resultant damages, were not confined to a statement of the.value of the property before and after the taking of the strip of land, but were permitted to give their opinions as to the damage sustained by reason of such taking. There is a square conflict in the authorities as to the admissibility of such opinions. In Jones, Commentaries on Evidence, § 388, it is said: “But there is a class of cases in which there is a decided conflict of authority as to the admissibility of opinions as to the amount of damages in condemnation proceedings. Tlie courts of many of the states, perhaps a majority, hold that in such cases witnesses cannot state the amount of damages sustained thereby, on the ground that the amount of damages is the very subject referred to the jury. These courts confine the witnesses to a statement of the value of the property before and after its condemnation. But in many states and with much reason it is held that opinions as to the damage sustained in such cases should be received in evidence. These decisions are based upon the reasoning that, inasmuch as the amount of damages in such proceedings depends entirely upon opinions as to the value before and after the condemnation, and as these opinions are competent, it can make no material difference whether the witness gives his opinion as to the amount of damages at once or whether he is allowed simply to state to the jury his opinion as to values from which the opinion as to damages must necessarily follow by the process of subtraction. The tendency of the later decisions seems to be in favor of this rule.”
While this court apparently has never ruled on the precise question, we believe that the rule universally adopted in the trial courts of this state is the one which confines the witness to a statement of the value of the remainder of the property before and after the taking of a part
In plaintiff’s case in chief, a witness Mavity testified that he operated a moving picture show in Eairview. He was thereupon asked the following question: “Q. Has Mr. Lebeck ever authorized you to run an ad for him upon your curtain wherein he stated and authorized you to-state upon the curtain that he would sell an acre lot in this southwest-quarter of 32 for as small a sum of money as any lot was being sold in Fairview?” An objection to this question was sustained, and error is. assigned upon such ruling. This question called for an answer which would give the contents of the advertisement on the curtain, and hence the competency of the evidence was at least doubtful. If answered in the affirmative what would it have proved ? There was no evidence offered to show the smallest sum lots in Fairview were being sold for (if such testimony would have been competent.) No offer of proof was; made showing what evidence would have been given if the witness had been permitted to testify. The trial court’s ruling was not erroneous. Halley v. Folsom, 1 N. D. 325, 48 N. W. 219; 3 C. J. § 736; See also Owen v. Portage Teleph. Co. 126 Wis. 412, 105 N. W. 924, 19 Am. Neg. Rep. 612.
Plaintiff next contends that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict. The sole specification of insufficiency is as follows: “The-plaintiff specifies wherein the evidence is insufficient to support or justify the verdict as follows:
*175 “The court instructed the jury that they could not allow damages on the theory that the town of Fairview, "Montana, might spread out and Lebeck’s land became a part of .it, and be used as town lots. That they could not consider the question of whether or not a crossing had been provided across the ditch and right of way of the plaintiff, and that they could not allow any damages for the severing of the strip to be used as right of way for the ditch, and these instructions became a part of the law of the case. That the defendants’ witnesses based their testimony as to the value of the land and damages, according to their own statements, almost wholly upon the town-lot proposition, the severing of the land, and the lack of crossing’s, and hence the verdict for $2,363 is not justified or supported by the evidence, is excessive, and clearly the result of passion and prejudice, and is against the instruction of the court and the law of the case.
“It further appears from the evidence of the witnesses for the defendants that their estimate of damages varies from $1,000 to $2,000, and hence it is apparent that the opinion of these witnesses cannot be reconciled on any other theory than that they were 'speculating on future possibilities.”
This specification attacks the competency of the witnesses, and the weight to be given to their opinions rather than the sufficiency of the testimony actually given. The Avitnesses were residents of that vicinity, familiar with the land in question. They all stated that they were familiar with its value. “The weight to be given to their testimony was for the jury, to be measured by the intelligence of the witnesses, and their ability to pass upon such values. St. Louis, K. & N. W. R. Co. v. St. Louis Union Stock Yards Co. 120 Mo. 541, 25 S. W. 399. In Lewis, Em. Dom. § 437, it is said: ‘This is a question the determination of which is left mostly to the discretion of the trial judge. . . . It is not necessary that the Avitnesses should have been engaged in the real-estate business. Intelligent men who have resided a long time in the place, and who are acquainted with the land in question, and say they know its value, are competent, although they are merchants or farmers, and have never bought or sold land in the place. . . . The value of such opinions depends upon the intelligence of the witness, and the knowledge and experience which he possesses in such matters, and is in all cases a question for the jury.’ ” Union Elevator
There was a square conflict as to values, both the actual value of the strip taken and the resultant damages to the larger tract. The verdict, while considerably in excess of the values fixed by plaintiff’s witnesses, is considerably less than those fixed by defendants’ witnesses. It therefore appears that the jurors used their own judgment in determining the compensation to be allowed. This was their province. The verdict has support’ in the evidence, and is binding on this court.
The judgment and order appealed from must be affirmed. It is so ordered.