174 Ill. 547 | Ill. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the court:
First—The first ground, urged by tjie appellant in favor of reversing the judgment below, is that the damages awarded by the jury are excessive, and not warranted by the preponderance of the evidence.
There is great conflict in the testimony of the witnesses as to the value of the property condemned. Such conflict always exists in cases of this character. The witnesses for the appellant estimate the value of the lots at from §5.00 per front foot for the unfilled lots to §12.00 per foot for the filled lots. The highest valuation put upon the lots by the testimony for the appellant is something less than §4000.00. The witnesses for the appellees estimate the value of the lots all the way from §25.00 to §50.00 per front foot, and the total value of all the lots at from about §9600.00 to about §18,000.00. Some of the witnesses for the appellees in making their valuations allow a certain amount per foot for the cost of filling the lots. The jury went upon the premises and viewed the same. So far as we are able to discover, the witnesses for the appellees are entitled to as much credit as the witnesses for the appellant, and their means of becoming acquainted with the value of property were equal to those possessed by the witnesses of the appellant.
The property soug'ht to be condemned appears to be located in the center of the city and in the vicinity of extensive industries. Its location is six or seven blocks north-east of Main street in Peoria. Water street, upon which the lots front, is the street nearest the river and substantially parallel with its general course, though at varying distances from the shore. The union passenger depot is six blocks below Main street, and Main street starts from the river at right angles to Water street. Passenger and freight depots are located along Water street from three to eight blocks below Main street; and distilleries, malt houses and other manufactories "and warehouses line the river bank for two miles or more down the river from Main street. At a distance of about three blocks from Main street is the plant of what is called the Peoria Grape Sugar Company, above which are two ice houses. The lots slope from Water street towards the river, and require,filling to be made available for permanent use. Further up the river are several rows of ice houses built upon filled ground. It thus appears, that the lots in question, lying as they do between the railroad tracks and Water street on one side and the river on the other side, are adapted for warehouses, ice houses, manufactories and docks, having facilities for the receipt and shipment of freight by land and water. Two of the lots, to-wit, lots 29 and 30, have been filled to some extent, and had been leased by the brewing company to a tenant who erected an ice house thereon, which was burned down before the filing of the present petition. On a portion of one of the other lots filling appears to have been done, and a small pump house appears to have been built thereon, and operated in connection with the brewery.
Of course, the uses, to which property of this character is adapted, would be an important consideration in fixing its value. Its location, also, in the center of the city, and in the midst of industries already in full operation, would be an important factor in the estimate of its value. After a careful examination of the evidence, we are not satisfied that the verdict of the jury awarded an amount which was excessive. The question of the value of the property was a question for the jury to determine. The jury saw the witnesses and observed their manner of testifying. The credibility of the witnesses, their intelligence and their means of knowledge were matters for the determination of the jury. There is no standard value for real estate. The value of real estate is a matter of estimate or opinion; its value is a conclusion arrived at, as a general thing, by comparing the value of the property in question with sales of like property, made under circumstances calculated to produce competition among purchasers. In determining the full value of real estate, its advantages and disadvantages, and its adaptation and use, present and prospective, may be considered.
In addition to this, the evidence in this case was supplemented by a personal view and examination of the premises by the jury. When such an examination was made, the Illinois river was at an unusually high stage, and a part of the property was under water. Under these circumstances the property must have been seen by the jury in its worst condition. Where there is a personal view by the jury of the premises sought to be condemned, the conclusions drawn by the jury from their view are in the nature of evidence. What the jury learn from their examination of the premises may be considered by them in passing upon the testimony of the witnesses; and, where the evidence is conflicting, they may resort to the results of their examination in determining the weight to be given to the conflicting estimates of the various witnesses, so that their verdict, if supported by the testimony, will not be disturbed, merely because it is contrary to what appears to be the preponderance of the evidence. Where the jury make a personal inspection of the property sought to be condemned, the court is not justified in reversing the judgment based upon such verdict, unless the damages awarded are so grossly excessive, as to show that the verdict was the result of passion, or of undue influence, or of improper means. It is the settled doctrine of this court, that the damage awarded by a jury in a condemnation proceeding will not be disturbed where the evidence is conflicting, and the jury viewed the premises. Inasmuch as it cannot be known how much weight the jury gave to their own conclusions as derived from a personal inspection of the premises, and how much weight they gave to the testimony of the witnesses, it cannot be said that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence. (Illinois and Wisconsin Railroad Co. v. Von Horn, 18 Ill. 257; Calumet River Railway Co. v. Moore, 124 id. 329; Chicago and Evanston Railroad Co. v. Jacobs, 110 id. 414; Kiernan v. Chicago, Santa Fe and California Railway Co. 123 id. 188; Chicago, Paducah and Memphis Railroad Co. v. Mitchell, 159 id. 406; Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago Railway Co. v. Lyons, 159 id. 576; Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Co. v. City of Naperville, 166 id. 87).
Second—The errors assigned by the appellant relate to the giving of certain instructions by the court below on behalf of the appellees. These instructions are set forth in the statement preceding this opinion, and will not be here repeated in full. Objection is made to the second instruction given for appellees. The objection thus made is two-fold.
In the first place, the instruction is said to be bad upon the alleged ground, that it leaves out of consideration any qualification to the effect that the uses and purposes mentioned therein must be those, which enter into and affect the market value of the property. Where land is condemned, its value may be estimated, not only with reference to the uses to which it is actually applied, but also those to which it is adapted; but this rule is subject to the qualification, that the latter uses must be those which enter into and affect its market value. (Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Co. v. City of Chicago, 149 Ill. 457). This instruction does not contravene the requirements of the rule thus laid down. The instruction makes direct reference to the subject of the adaptation and uses of the property, and then closes with the words, “so far as the same may have affected the market value on 14th Sept. 1896,” the latter date being the date of filing the petition for condemnation. The words “the same,” as here used, refer back to the words “adaptation and uses.” Thus the instruction brings the subject of the adaptation and uses of the property, as disclosed by the evidence, into direct connection with the question of market value. The jury were directed to consider only those uses of the property, which entered into and affected its market value.
In the second place, the second instruction is objected to upon the alleged ground, that it contains no qualifying words limiting the element of value, embodied in “adaptation and uses,” to present demands, or such as may reasonably be expected in the immediate future. In Boom Co. v. Patterson, 98 U. S. 403, the Supreme Court of the United States said: “The compensation to the owner is to be established by reference to the uses for which the property is suitable, having regard to the existing business or wants of the community,- or such as may be reasonably expected in the immediate future.” To the same effect is Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Co. v. City of Chicago, supra. In Calumet River Railway Co. v. Moore, supra, we said (p. 334): “The compensation is to be estimated with reference to the uses for which the property is suitable in its then condition, having regard to its location, situation and quality and to the business wants in that locality, or such as might reasonably be expected in the near future.” If such a defect, as is thus charged against the second instruction, exists therein, it is cured by the instruction numbered 6, which was given for the appellees, and which conforms to the rule laid down in the authorities last above quoted. Counsel for the appellant say, that the sixth instruction does not cure the defect alleged to exist in the second, but the principle which they invoke, that an erroneous instruction is not cured by an instruction which is correct, does not here apply, for the reason that the two instructions are not inconsistent with each other. The sixth merely explains and qualifies the second without laying down any rule which is contradictory to it. The giving of a correct instruction upon a point in a case will not obviate an error in an instruction on the other side where they are' entirely variant, because then there is nothing to inform the jury which instruction to follow, but they are left at liberty to follow either, unenlightened as to which one is the law. (Illinois Linen Co. v. Hough, 91 Ill. 63). Such variance or inconsistency does not here exist. The jury are presumed, in making up their verdict, to consider the instructions as a whole, and thus to notice the qualification which one makes of another. (Toledo, Wabash and Western Railway Co. v. Ingraham, 77 Ill. 309; Cunningham v. Stein, 109 id. 375).
It was said, however, in Calumet River Railway Co. v. Moore, supra, that, if certain lots were available for dock purposes for which there was no immediate demand, their value, when improved by the building of docks and the profits that might be derived therefrom, or the use of the lots at some future time when business or the wants of the community might make profitable the making of docks or slips on the property, would be merely conjectural and remote, forming no proper element in estimating the damages to be paid, but that, if the fact that the lots were located with a frontage on the river, at a place where they could, at some future time, when demanded, be made available as dock property, enhanced their then market value in their then condition of improvement, or want of improvement, that fact would be competent and proper to be shown and to be considered by the jury in estimating the damages; that it could make no difference that there might be no present demand for docks upon the property; and that if, in consequence of their supposed adaptation to such use, they had an increased market value above what they otherwise would have, such value would form a proper basis of recovery.
Objection is also made to the, third instruction given for the appellees. This third instruction is the same as an instruction commented upon in the case of Sanitary District v. Loughran, 160 Ill. 362. We there held, that such objections as are now urged were not sufficient to authorize us to regard the giving of the instruction as error. The reasons for this holding are given in that case, and need not be here repeated.
Objection is also made to the ninth, first and fourth instructions given for appellees. It is not claimed, that the legal principles announced by these instructions are not correct. The title of a person, owning land bounded by a stream of water, extends to the middle or center thread of the stream. (Middleton v. Pritchard, 3 Scam. 510; Braxon v. Bressler, 64 Ill. 488; Griffin v. Johnson, 161 id. 377.) It is said, that the instructions, although making an abstract statement of the law which is correct, had the effect of inducing the jury to believe, that the appellant was obliged to pay for what it had no right to take, and did not take. The instruction is said to mean, that, by this condemnation proceeding, the appellees, as owners of the property, are compelled to part with their right to the ice forming on the river in front of their lots respectively, and with their right to cut, remove and sell the same to others together with the right to harvest it. We do not regard the instruction as having any such meaning. Counsel quote section 13 of article 2 of the constitution of 1870, which provides, that the fee of land, taken for railroad tracks without the consent of the owners thereof, shall remain in such owners, subject to the use for which it is taken. The argument is, that the appellant acquired only the right to use such portions of the property as are necessary for railroad uses, and that the owner retains the fee of the land and all riparian and other rights, not inconsistent with the railroad company’s use of such portions of the land, as it actually appropriates. Undoubtedly, the property right, which a railroad company acquires by condemnation, does not extend beyond the exigencies of the road. The railroad company is entitled to use the earth, gravel and stone within the location of the property condemned by it for all railroad purposes, but is not entitled to sell any of such material. To allow it to sell would be to permit an abuse of its privilege to take land by compulsory process, inasmuch as a railroad company only takes land for public use, and not to sell again either wholly or in part. Counsel for appellant then refer to a number of cases, which involve the question whether a railroad company has the right to appropriate material along its right of way, obtained by condemnation, for purposes other than construction or reasonable repairs under all the circumstances. These cases are to the effect, that a railroad company cannot sell or otherwise dispose of the material along its right of way, where its rights are limited to an easement. (Aldrich v. Drury, 8 R. I. 554; Chapin v. Sullivan Railroad Co. 39 N. H. 564; Blake v. Rich, 34 id. 282; Lyon v. Gormley, 53 Pa. St. 261; Lance’s Appeal, 55 id. 16; Preston v. Dubuque and, Pacific Railway Co. 11 Iowa, 15; New Jersey Zinc and Iron Co. v. Morris Canal and Banking Co. 36 Am. & Eng. R. R. Cases, 515; Rumsey v. New York and New England Railroad Co. 39 id. 34). We have no doubt as to the correctness of the doctrine laid down in the cases thus referred to. As was said by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in Lance’s Appeal, supra: “No one can pretend that a railroad company can build private houses and mills, and erect machinery, not necessarily connected with the use of their franchise, within the limits of their right of way. If it could, stores, taverns, shops, groceries and dwellings might be made to line the sides of the road outside of the track—a thing not to be thought of under the terms of the acquisition of the right of way.”
But the cases referred to by counsel have no relation to the matters here under consideration. The ninth, first and fourth instructions, given for the appellees, do not inform the jury that the appellant company, as the result of the present condemnation proceeding, will have the right to establish ice houses, and cut all the ice, which may form in the river to the middle thread of the stream. On the contrary, the instruction informs the jury, that the appellees, as owners of the property, have the exclusive right to the ice, formed in the river in front of their lots, to the middle thread of the stream, and that they may themselves cut or remove the same, or sell the same to others with the exclusive right to harvest it. But, in its petition for condemnation, the appellant company states, that it is necessary for it to acquire for railroad purposes the whole of the lots in controversy, in order to place thereon switches and side-tracks for the operation of its business. The appellant will thus be authorized to occupy and utilize for its own purposes all of the lots in question between its present right of way along Water street and the line of navigation in the Illinois river. It may fill the lots to this line, and cover their whole extent with tracks, and use them in its business the same as though it owned the land in fee. It will not be pretended that, after the lots have been condemned by the railroad company, the former owners will be able to erect ice houses or place any improvements upon the unoccupied portions of the lots. The fact, that the ice forming in front of the lots belongs to the owners, and that they have the right to harvest and sell it, was an element in the value of the property and, therefore, proper to be considered by the jury in arriving at a verdict. The taking of the property for the purposes'named in the petition will unquestionably deprive the owners of the possibility of making any use of the ice privileges connected with the lots. If the appellant establishes at this point railroad yards for switching and storage purposes, it will be necessary for it to fill in these lots towards the channel of the river beyond the present low water mark. This will prevent the use of the property by appellees for the purpose of harvesting ice. Under such circumstances the lots will continue to have no value for the purposes of ice houses. The testimony shows, that ice houses must be located upon the river bank, or very near thereto, in order to be economically operated. The privilege of erecting ice houses and cutting ice from the river gave a value to the lots, and, when appellant takes the lots, it takes them so far as they are valuable for such purposes; and appellees are entitled to be compensated for the loss of such value. The instructions here objected to present this matter to the jury in the light thus indicated; and we are not able to say that they are erroneous. Undoubtedly, by the condemnation appellant will take only an easement in the property, and not the fee of the property. The bare legal right will exist in the appellees as before, but the exercise of that right will probably be an impossibility.
The eighth instruction given for the appellees is objected to upon the alleged ground, that, by the use of the words, “and give such fact the weight which, in your judgment, it is entitled to receive,” the jury are allowed to determine from their own judgment, and not from the evidence or from their inspection of the premises, the extent to which the possibility of enlargement and extension of the lots by the filling of the same will affect their market value, The instruction is not subject to the criticism thus made upon it. At the beginning of the instruction, the jury are required to find from the evidence, that the lots in question, are susceptible of enlargement, etc. The requirement to find from the evidence, as thus made at the beginning of the instruction, applies and extends to all the subsequent clauses of the instruction. We have held in a number of cases, that it is not necessary to tell the jury in each sentence of an instruction, that they must believe from the evidence. If the first part of an instruction contains a clause, requiring them to make a finding" from the evidence, a jury of intelligent men will not be misled by the omission of such a clause in the remaining portion of the instruction. (Miller v. Balthasser, 78 Ill. 302; Gizler v. Witzel, 82 id. 322; Balden v. Woodmansee, 81 id. 25).
The judgment of the circuit court of Peoria county is affirmed.
T , . , Judgment affirmed.