The Wichita Falls, Ranger & Fort Worth Railroad Company instituted this suit against T. H. Perry and others to condemn a right of way across certain land owned by the defendants, situated in Erath county, about four miles from the town of Dublin.
The case was tried before a jury, to whom was submitted special issues. The amount of land actually taken for right of way purposes was 3.43 acres, and the jury allowed the defendants therefor the sum of $171, which was the full amount claimed by the defendants. The jury also allowed $179 as damages to the remainder of the land not so taken, and from a judgment entered in accordance with that verdict the defendants have appealed.
The trial court sustained exceptions to several sums of money which were claimed by the defendants by way of special damages to the land not taken for right of way purposes ; one claim being for $1,000, by reason of alleged destruction of what was claimed by the defendants as a suitable building site, another being for $250 for removing that part of defendants’ fence which crossed the right of way, and another one for $500 for the failure of the railroad company to fence its right of way. There was no error in that ruling. The allegation of facts constituting the two first items of special damages were permitted to remain in the petition. We know of no ruling that would allow the recovery of special damages by reason of any of those facts. Articles 6518, 6520, and 6521, V. S. Tex. Civ. Statutes, read as follows:
Article 6518. “Said commissioners shall hear evidence as to the value of the property sought to be condemned, and as to the damages which will be sustained by the owner thereof by reason of suck condemnation, and as to the benefits that will result to the remainder of such property belonging to such owner, if any, by *278 the construction and operation of such railroad, and shall according to this rule assess the actual damage that will accrue to such owner by said condemnation.”
Article 6520. ‘‘When only a portion of a person’s real estate is condemned, the commissioners shall estimate the injuries sustained and the benefits received thereby by the ownei as to the remaining portion of such real estate; whether such remaining portion is increased or diminished in value by such condemnation, and the extent of such increase or diminution, and shall assess the damages accordingly.”
Article 6521. “In estimating either the injuries or the benefits, as provided in the preceding article, those injuries dr benefits which the owner of such real estate sustains or receives in common with the community generally, and which are not peculiar to him and connected with his ownership, use and enjoyment of the particular parcel of land, shall be altogether excluded from such estimate.”
“In estimating the value of said premises with and without the railroad being on said land, you will base your estimate on the fair market value of the same, find in this connection you should consider if the petitioners, the said railroad company, favor such benefits, if any, as the defendants, T. H. Perry et al., may have derived from the location of said railroad on their land, immediately after said right of way was constructed and established across their land.”
That instruction was substantially in accord with the provision of articles 6518 and 6520. Error has been assigned to the failure of the court also to further instruct the jury that in estimating either injuries or benefits those injuries or benefits which the defendants have sustained or received in common with the community generally, and which are not peculiar to the defendants and connected with their ownership, use, and enjoyment of the land, should be excluded from such estimate, in accordance with article 6521. No estimate was introduced to show that property in, that community, generally speaking, would be benefited by the building of the railroad, and in the absence of such proof it does not appear that the failure of the court to- give in his charge to the jury the provisions of article 6521 resulted in any probable harm- to the defendants; hence the assignment now under discussion is overruled.
What we have already said is a sufficient answef to the further complaint of the court’s charge to the jury that in assessing damages they would not take into consideration the failure of the railroad company to fence its right of way.
“Taking into consideration the way and manner in which the railroad company located and constructed its right of way and roadbed across this land, I will'ask you whether or not in so locating its right of way and roadbed the railroad company destroyed any place on said land suitable for a building site?”
*279 To the action of the court in sustaining objections to that question, the appellants have assigned error, and in the hills of exception to the ruling it is asserted that but for such objection the witnesses would have testified that the railroad had been constructed across a knoll which had trees thereon, which was also near the public road, and which was the only suitable building site on the land; that the building site had been destroyed, and by reason thereof the market value of the land not taken for right of way purposes had been greatly depreciated. The evidence shows that the location and description of the knoll was proven without objection; that trees were cut therefrom by the railroad ¿ompany; that it was located near the public road; and that an acre and a fraction over was cut off by the right of way from the rest of the tract. With all those facts in evidence, we perceive no reason why the jury could not form their own estimate as to whether or not the knoll was a suitable building site, or the most suitable building site, and whether or not the act of the railroad company in building its right of way across it and cutting off a portion of it depreciated the market value of the remaining portion of the land not taken for right of way purposes. Besides, each and all of the witnesses to whom the question was propounded testified explicitly that the market value of the land not taken for right of way purposes was depreciated by the building of the road, and each witness gave his estimate of the amount of such depreciation, and one of the witnesses testified that, but for the building of the road across the knoll, in his opinion, the land not taken for right of way purposes was not depreciated in value at all. Under all those circumstances we overrule the assignment now under discussion.
By another assignment it is insisted that the overwhelming preponderance of the evidence was sufficient to warrant a larger amount of damages, and that therefore the judgment was erroneous. After a careful consideration of the evidence we overrule this assignment.
For the reasons stated, the judgment is affirmed.
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