134 Iowa 563 | Iowa | 1907
Lead Opinion
On April 6, 1905, the plaintiff was, .and for some years had been, the owner of a lot bordering Upon the west shore of the Cedar river, in the city of Cedar Rapids. About this date the city instituted proceedings to condemn the entire lot for public use as a street and landing for a new bridge to be thrown across the river at that point. The sheriff’s jury having assessed the plaintiff’s damages at $Y,500, he appealed from said award to the district court, where a verdict was returned in his favor for $11,000. A motion for new trial was overruled, and judgment rendered in plaintiff’s favor for costs and attorney’s fees. The defendant appeals.
As the city seeks to appropriate the entire lot, it is conceded that the one question to be determined by these proceedings is the fair market value of the property so taken, and exceptions argued by counsel go to the correctness of the rulings of the trial court upon the admission of testimony and of certain instructions given to the jury.
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
The cases we have thus far cited may not all he of controlling authority in this State but they serve well to illustrate the marked tendency of the courts to liberality in the admission of proof of any and all facts having any legitimate tendency to aid the jury in arriving at the value of the property appropriated under power of eminent domain. The fact that the owner is denied the ordinary right to refuse to sell his property, except at his own price and on his own terms, affords no reason for awarding him more than a just compensation; but it does afford good reason why he should be given every opportunity to disclose to the jury the real character of the property — its location; its surroundings; its use; its improvements, if any, and their age, condition, and quality; its adaptability to any special use or purpose; its productiveness and rental value; and, in short, everything which affects its salability and value as between buyers and sellers generally. Though acting under legal compulsion, the owner stands in some degree in the attitude^ of a seller of property, the price of which is to be fixed and settled by the jury, and, so far as he can do so within the bounds of truth and fairness, he is entitled to display all the attractive and desirable features of such property which may tend to enhance its value in the market, and thus secure the highest obtainable compensation therefor.
The party condemning has, of course, the correlative right to rebut the showing thus made by disputing its truth and by proof of other facts which affect the value of the property unfavorably. It is true that market value and intrinsic value are not necessary equivalents, but proof of the latter is often competent evidence for consideration in determining the former. Railroad Co. v. Braham, 79 Pa.
How much latitude is to be allowed in bringing out testimony of collateral facts in support of estimates of value by witnesses “ is a matter which must he left very largely to the discretion of the presiding judge. We would not undertake to fix the limits of a discretion so'necessary to be exercised.” Railroad Co. v. Woodruff, 49 Ark. 381 (5 S. W. 792, 4 Am. St. Rep. 51). In our judgment the great weight of authority sustains the ruling of the trial court in admitting the evidence here objected to by the appellant and the ruling to which exception is taken involves no error. Nor is there anything in this conclusion which is out of harmony with Everett v. Railroad Co., 59 Iowa, 243, on whicfy the appellant relies. In that case the property owner sought to show by a witness how many town lots could be platted upon the land in question, and, if so laid off, “ what the lots would probably sell for in the market,” and answer to this interrogatory was excluded. What lots would probably sell for if the land were platted was merely a speculative matter into which the court would not stop to inquire. Had the owner there shown that his land was of such character and location as to afford favorable opportunity for platting a town site or for being divided into smaller lots on which to erect suburban residences, and that such fact gave to his property as it stood a greater value than it would command for purely agricultural use, then, under the rule here approved, the evidence would certainly have been admissible; but no such case was made. Alexian v. Oshkosh, 95 Wis. 221 (70 N. W. 162); Warden v. Philadelphia, 167 Pa. 523 (31 Atl. 928); R. & T. Co. v. Kerth, 130 Ind. 314 (30 N. E. 298); Railroad Co. v. Beeson, 36 Neb. 361 (54 N. W. 557); Railroad Co. v. Longworth, 30 Ohio St. 108.
II. It is claimed upon part of the appellant that ap
We think it elementary that a person is entitled to the fair value of his property for any use to which it is adapted. . . . It is, we think, equally true that any fact is proper to be considered which legitimately bears upon the market value of the property. In this case evidence was introduced tending to prove that the fact of a business having been established and carried on upon the premises for so long a time materially increased the market value of this property. If*572 this was a fact, it was competent to prove it; and, if proved, we cannot see why it was not proper to be taken into consideration in estimating the value. . . . The owner has the right to its value for the use for which it would bring the most in the market. The property was expressly built for a plow factory, and was especially fitted for such a use, and it is not unreasonable to suppose that a purchaser would give more for it than he would if the business had been suspended for some time, or had never been established there. Take, for example, a hotel built expressly as a public house, and not capable of advantageous use for anything else. Might it not be worth more — that is, bring more in the market — by reason of the fact that it had for years been run as a hotel ? . . . If so, why is it not a proper element to take into account in determining its value ? To do so is not, as counsel seem to argue, to pay the owner for his loss of business or future profits, but simply to give him the marketable value of his property for the use for which it is best adapted and for which it- would bring the most.
This doctrine is in entire harmony with our own decisions. It is also sound in principle, and fully justifies the rulings of the trial court to which the exceptions here considered were taken.
The judgment of the district court is therefore affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the dissent.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).— Plaintiffs entire lot was taken, and here is permitted to show the enhanced value to other property near his lot in virtue of the location of the bridge to enhance the value of the lot taken for the very improvement which it is said would add to the value of other property in that vicinity. I do not think this testimony was admissible. Many cases might be cited in support of this view, but I need not take the time to set them out. It is the value at the time of taking, and not the value after the improvement is made, which should be considered. Surely the city should not be held to pay an increased value by reason of the supposed advancement in values to other property because of the location of the bridge. There were other rulings which I think were erroneous.