51 Ark. 324 | Ark. | 1888
This is an appeal from a judgment awarding damages assessed by a jury as compensation to a. land-owner in a statutory proceeding instituted by the railway for condemnation of a right of way. The road had been constructed diagonally across the cultivated lands of Combs’ farm. The-questions raised by the company’s appeal relate mainly to the-measure of damages.
The court’s charge definitely confined the jury to the consideration of the difference in value of the tract through which the right of way was condemned before and after.the construction of the road, in accordance with the ruling in Railway v. Anderson, 39 Ark., 167. As elements which might be considered as disadvantages impairing the value of-the remaining property, the charge recites, ‘‘the frightening of teams, but not of loose stock;” and the danger of injuries to stock, or in lieu thereof the cost of fencing made necessary by the construction of the road. This part of the-charge was limited by a direction to the jury to consider nothing as an element of damage except as it- was peculiar to the defendant’s land.
On cross-examination, witnesses who had given opinions, as to the amount of the depreciation of the value of the-farm, stated that the frightening of teams in farm use and the danger to stock on the farm, entered into their calculation ; and that part of the charge to which attention is directed, is based upon that testimony.
The inconvenience in such cases is not such as is common to the community in general, but is in the nature of an interruption of the business to which the land is appropriated.
Opinions as to the amount of indemnity one should receive for an injury are not admissible, except in cases where the amount is capable of being reached by computation. Railway v. Hames, 47 Ark., 497. The class of cases under consideration comes within the exception. Opinions are confessedly admissible to prove the value of the land before and after the construction of the railway; but the extent of the injury is the difference between these values, and that difference is the result reached by the answer to the single question, what damage has the land sustained? It is only a question whether the witness or the jury shall perform the mental process of substraction, and that can be of no judicial importance so long as the witness is required to show, in advance, such knowledge of the facts as to satisfy the judge that his opinion maybe of value, and may be made to disclose the facts upon which it is based. Kirby v. Ry., 44 Ark., 103 ; Lewis on Eminent Domain, sec. 436, and cases cited.
Other objections to the judgment are urged, but they fall' within rules well settled by this court, or are clearly not prejudicial and need not be discussed.
Affirm.