These three proceeding's in mandamus, involving similar factual situations and similar legal principles, have been briefed and argued together and will be considered in a single opinion. In the mandamus proceedings the relators allege that their real estate has been damaged by the state road commission in connection with a project for the widening and improvement of a specified state highway in Raleigh County, which project was completed about March, 1962; and the relators therefore pray that the respondents be required by mandamus to institute eminent domain proceedings for the purpose of having a judicial determination of damages alleged to have been suffered by the relators.
The respondents by answer deny substantially all the allegations of damage and also insist that, if damages have resulted to real estate belonging to the relators, they are not of such a nature as to impose liability on the state road commission in an eminent domain proceeding.
Article III, Section 9 of the Constitution of this state provides that private property “shall not be taken or damaged for public use, without just compensation; *
*
Article VI, Section 35 of the Constitution provides that “The State of West Virginia shall never be made defendant in any court of law or equity, * * In the light of these two constitutional provisions, this Court has held that the state road commission, an agency of the state, may be required by mandamus to institute proceedings in eminent domain to ascertain just compensation for land taken or damaged for public purposes, including state highway purposes.
Hardy
*621
v.
Simpson, State Road Com’r,
“A writ of mandamus will be issued only upon a showing that relator has a clear legal right to the relief sought.”
State ex rel. Neal
v.
Barron,
“Although there is a sharp conflict between the parties in both allegation and proof respecting the *622 alleged damage, we are of opinion that the showing made by relators is sufficient to entitle them to have the controversy determined in a proceeding usual for such matters. Always, in some manner, there must be opportunity afforded property owners for judicial determination of their bona fide claims of damages to their property on account of public improvements. Any other conclusion would not be consonant with fundamental principles. Consult: Simms v. Dillon,119 W. Va. 284 ,193 S. E. 331 ,113 A.L.R. 787 . In this connection, however, the principle must not be overlooked that owners of property abutting a thoroughfare are not entitled to damages merely because a new way has been constructed on another location, thus leaving the complaining owner’s property less advantageously situated than previously. Dick v. Hinton,109 W. Va. 708 ,156 S. E. 81 ; Richmond v. Hinton,117 W. Va. 223 ,185 S. E. 411 ; Heavner v. State Road Commission,118 W. Va. 630 ,191 S. E. 574 .”
To the same effect see also
Quick
v.
Bailey, State Road Com’r,
The effect of the pertinent prior decisions of this Court is that, in a mandamus proceeding a landowner shows that a highway construction or improvement has resulted in probable damage to his private property without an actual taking thereof and that the landowner in good faith claims compensation therefor, he has thereby established a clear legal right, under the Constitution and statutes of this state and the decisions of this Court, to require the state road commissioner to institute proper proceedings in eminent domain to ascertain the compensation, if any, to which the landowner is entitled.
For reasons stated herein the writ of mandamus as prayed for will be awarded. Code, 17-4-5, authorizes either the state road commissioner or the state road commission to acquire real estate by eminent domain for state highway purposes.
State ex rel. State Road Commission et al.
v.
Professional Realty Co.,
The action of the Court herein must not be construed as in any sense a holding by the Court or an expression of a view that the relators are entitled to prevail in subsequent eminent domain proceedings or that the defenses which the respondents have undertaken to assert herein will or will not be tenable in such proceedings. In
State ex rel. Griggs
v.
Graney, State Road Com’r,
Writ awarded.
