This сase is controlled by the principles discussed in Burnett v. Central Nebraska Public Power and Irrigation District, 8 Cir.,
The property taken by the condemnation consisted of a store-building, a residence, a one-room rental structurе, and various outbuildings, together with the real estate on which they were situated, in the village of Lemoyne, Nebraska. The lowest value
The jury returned a general verdict in favor of appellants for $7,150, but, in response to special interrogatories requested by appellants, it placed a value on the store property of $1,765, which was $875 lower than the testimony of any expert witness; fixed the value of the one-room rental structure at $170, which was $40 lower than the testimony of any expert witness; and allowed consequеntial damages to the store fixtures in the sum of $350, and to the stock of merchandise in the sum of $360, which amounts were $738.34 and $1,140 lower, respectively, than the uncontradicted testimony of one of the appellants as to these items.
Appellants’ argument for reversal can perhaps most easily be summarized by the following quotation from their brief: “The fact that in two instances the verdict is for an amount less than the testimony of witnesses for both the appellants and the appellee, and that in two other instances the jury disregarded undisputed testimony, would seem to establish conclusively that the verdict was the result of partiality, passion, prejudice, or mistake on the part of the jury.”
As we have indicated in the Burnett case, supra, a jury is never required, in an ordinary condemnation рroceeding, to accept as conclusive the estimates of value made by expert witnesses on either side. There ordinarily is in such cases some general testimony as to the location, character, use, etc., of the property, and other pertinent facts usually also are developed on direсt or cross examination of the witnesses. All of this the jury is entitled to consider, together with any reasonable inferences which may be made therefrom, and it may properly exercise its own deliberate judgment on the amount of the damages, from the evidence as a whole, in the light of its common knowledge and ordinary experience, giving to the estimates of the expert witnesses only such'weight as it conscientiously feels they are entitled to' receive under all the circumstances. Where an inspection of the property constitutes evidence, as it does under the law of Nebraska, the facts revealed thereby may properly be made a factor in the jury’s determination.
In an attack upon the verdict on appeal, we will not undertake tо test its pecuniary sufficiency, as such, but only to check the general processes on which the result rests, to see that they do not indicate such controlling arbitrariness or capriciousness on the part of the jury, аs would make the trial and its result, in effect, a violation of due process. Compare United States Can Co. v. Ryan, 8 Cir.,
Here, on the question of direct damages, there was evidence showing the age, character of construction, and general condition of thе improvements involved, the. cost of the property to appellants and the comparative situation existing at the time of its purchase, as well as general community conditions in the village of Lemoyne. The competency of this evidence is in no way challenged, and the jury had a right to consider it, not as being merely subordinate to the opinions of the expert witnesses for either side, but in the light of its own common knowledge and ordinаry experience, to weigh all of such evidence, and, aided by its inspection of the property, to еxercise its own conscientious judgment as to the value of the property. The same is true as to the consequential damages to the store fixtures and stock of merchandise, in relation to the uncontradicted but inhеrently weak testimony of one of the appellants.
In this situation, we clearly would not be justified in declaring arbitrаry and
Affirmed.
