This is a landowner’s appeal from a jury’s award of $7,500 in a condemnation action.
The tract contained 17.31 acres of which the state took 11.65 acres, leaving the balance of 5.66 acres adjoining a section line 'but without access to presently graded road. Defendant complains of one instruction given and one refused by the trial .court. The instruction given was:
“Evidence has been introduced * * * relating to some other sales of property in that locality * * * that evidence as to the selling price of those other tracts is no direct evidence as to the value of this particular property which you have for considera *453 tion and the evidence was admitted simply as a ■basis for the opinion which the particular expert witness gave as his opinion of the value of this particular tract involved in this action.”
The c'ourt refused the following requested instruction:
“You are instructed that in determining the fair market value of the property in question you may consider evidence of actual sales of other lands,, and prices for which they were sold, if they are similar in their situation, relative position, and other circumstances relating to value, and such sales are fair and open in the market.”
As to the admissibility of the sale price of other real estate to prove the value of the property in suit, the cases present two principal views (1) the New York or Pennsylvania rule that the evidence is inadmissible and (2) the Massachusetts rule, that the evidence is admissible. The conflict and divergent views are found in notes to the cases at
Defendant also testified to a sale of 4.88 acres off the west side of the tract condemned to the adjoining landowner. Where evidence of sales is admitted, it must be shown that the sale, among other'things, is made by a willing buyer to a willing seller, neither being under any coercion or compulsion. Forced sales or sales made under compulsion are not admissible. Tidball v. Miller,
As to the sales of other property referred to by one of the state’s expert witnesses the trial judge stated they were admitted in evidence “not * * * as an indication of the value of the Lacey land. They are * * * a basis for an opinion by this gentleman, and he has indicated that it is the basis * * They also, testified these sales were of land more valuable than defendant’s, yet sold for $222.50 to $500 per acre. Defendant owner is in no position to complain of instruction given for if it had any result, it was to eliminate them from the testimony of the state’s *456 witnesses and. from the jury’s consideration as direct or independent evidence of value at these lower prices, a benefit to defendant. The instruction advised the jury the selling price of “other tracts” of land was not direct evidence of its value and only applied to the evidence of the expert witnesses. Defendant testified as to his sale of 4.88 acres to the rendering company as owner, not as an expert; this instruction did not eliminate it from defendant’s argument to or its consideration by the jury and no prejudicial error resulted.
Defendant asserts error in permitting the state’s expert witnesses to testify as to sales of other property as foundation for their testimony, his objection being they were not similar. Whether land is similar initially, for the purpose of admission in evidence, rests largely within the discretion of the trial court. Barnes v. North Carolina State Highway Commission, supra; United States v. Ham, 8 Cir.,
Affirmed.
