94 So. 2d 612 | Miss. | 1957
This cause originated in a Special Court of Eminent Domain, where the jury returned a verdict for $250. Code of 1942, Sections 2749-2762. The defendant Rasberry appealed to the circuit court under Code Section 2766, where a trial de novo before another jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for Rasberry in the same amount, $250.
Appellant first contends that the verdict is contrary to the law and evidence, arid is so small as to evince bias and prejudice by the jury. The land is a seventy acre tract in the northwest part of Calhonn County. The right of way condemned by the County for the public highway enters this tract at its southeast corner and leaves it near its northwest corner, traversing a distance of 1,368.8 feet. The right of way is 170 feet wide for a distance of 104.8 feet at the southeast end, and 150 feet wide for the remaining distance of 1,264 feet. The area included in the right of way and taken by eminent domain contains 4.77 acres. The right of way cuts diagonally through these 70 acres, from southeast to northwest, and divides the remaining- 65.23 acres into two tracts almost equal in size.
The land does not touch upon any public road. To reach it one must walk about one-quarter mile from a public road across property of others. Appellant lives in Calhoun City. He testified that he had used the land some years for pasture and rented it out some for farm land, but the last time any of it was cultivated was in 1948. He then put it back in pasture and used it for that purpose through 1951. Since then he has not used it for pasture. The property is mostly hills and gullies,
The land had no improvements on it. To the east of the right of way was a spring of fresh water. Appellant argued that a culvert proposed to be placed under the highway would drain the spring water off of his land and onto that of the owner to the south. Witnesses for both parties agreed that the principal value of the land was for raising timber. The County offered three competent witnesses who testified concerning the market value of appellant’s land before and after the taking. One stated that the market value before taking was $1,750, and after taking $1,600, being damages of $150. Two others estimated the before taking market value at $2,300, and after taking, $2,100, being damages of $200. They valued the land at approximately $25 to $32 per acre, although one of the County’s witnesses stated that the farmland, the small acreage west of the right of way, should be valued at $50 an acre and the remainder at $30. He averaged the per acre value at $40.
On the other hand, appellant estimated the before taking market value at $3,500, and the after value $2,500, being damages of $1,000. His other three witnesses on damages placed the respective figures at $3,500-$2,750, or damges of $750; $3,000 to $3,500, less an after-talcing market value of $2,000, or maximum damages of $1,500; and $3,000-$l,500, or damages of $1,500.
Nor was there error in the trial court permitting the jury to view and inspect the land. Appellant complains because after the award in the Special Court of Eminent Domain, the County proceeded to clear most of the right of way and cut the trees off of it, under Code Section 2763. Therefore, he says, when the circuit court jury viewed the land it could not determine its state before the right of way was cleared. However, appellant’s witness Edmondson was asked how the timber on the right of way compared with the timber not on it,
Appellant also complains about the circuit court sustaining objections to testimony offered by appellant through three of his witnesses concerning the alleged necessity of fencing each side of the right of way, its cost, and its hearing upon the after-taking market value of the remaining land. Evidence concerning damages for specific injuries to the remaining land is competent if, hut not unless, they would affect the market value of the remaining land. State Highway Com. v. Treas, 197 Miss. 670, 675, 20 So. 2d 475 (1945). However, it is undisputed that the principal -use of appellant’s land is for growing timber, and cost of a fence would not he an element relevant to market value in an eminent domain proceeding for timber land. Appellant admitted that he had not used the land for pasture since 1951. He fenced it in 1926, thirty years before the trial. He admitted it was “rundown” and in “bad” condition. Under these circumstances, we do not think this offered evidence was sufficiently connected with the market value of the remaining land to warrant its admissibility. The trial court was correct in sustaining objections to it. It was in the nature of an attempt to develop a separate item of damages not sufficiently related, under the in
The first instruction granted appellee of which appellant complains advised the jury that the purpose of the view was to enable it to have a more intelligent understanding of the land and of the location of the proposed road, but it did not tell the jury to ignore the testimony; on the contrary, at two points the jury was advised to consider all of the other evidence or testimony along with its observations. And the evidence apart from the view of the land is sufficient to sustain the verdict. Moreover, appellant and appellee were each given other instructions which told the jury that it must decide the case from all of the evidence and according to the evidence adduced on the trial.
The jury was also instructed for the County ‘ ‘ that in arriving at your verdict you shall not consider any elements of inconvenience or other elements which are speculative and remote.” This was approved in State Highway Comm. v. Treas, supra. See also 1 Alexander, Mississippi Jury Instructions (1952), Secs. 2172 and 2164. The instruction correctly stated that elements of inconvenience which should not be considered are those which are speculative and remote.
Affirmed.