It is an elementary rule that the State must pay for property taken for a public purpose. Art. I, Sec. Ill, Par. I, Constitution Code § 2-301. The amount of damages shall include not only the value of the property taken, but shall also compensate for the consequential damage to the remaining property not taken. These consequential damages result from the actions of the State in severing a portion from the body of the condemnee’s land and in interfering with his use and enjoyment of the remaining property.
City of Atlanta
v.
Greene,
67
Ga.
386. The consequential damage is damage that is specially suffered by the condemnee not suffered by the public in general.
Georgia Portland Cement
&c.
Co.
v.
Jackson,
143
Ga.
84 (
Headnotes 2 and 3 do not require further elaboration.
Judgment affirmed.
