The defendant in error First National Bank of Atlanta has filed a motion to dismiss the writ of error on the ground that service of the bill of exceptions upon all necessary parties has not been оbtained as required by law. It appears from the affidavit of a bailiff of a Carroll County militia district that Mrs. W. J. Stewart was served personally with the bill of exceptions and it further appears that the First Nаtional Bank acknowledged service. The bailiff served three of the remaining defendants in error personally, and served three others by leaving a copy at their residence in Atlanta, Gеorgia. This was obviously insufficient service as to these latter three parties under the provisions of Code § 6-911 providing the mode of service of the bill of exceptions where the defendant in errоr resides outside the county.
Under
Code
§ 6-1202 as amended by the act of 1957 (Ga. L. 1957, p. 224) there is. a duty upon the appellate court in cases
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where all necessary parties as shown by the record havе not been served to- require by proper order that service be effected unless such necessary parties shall have acknowledged or waived service. This act applies only where there is more than one defendant in error, and at last one of them has been properly served.
Anderson v. Heyward,
We held in
Johnson v. Fulton County,
All grounds of the motion for a new trial have been abandoned exсept special grounds 2 and 3 complaining of the following excerpt from the charge, which is all of the instructions given the jury as to determination of value: “Now, the law provides that in assessing dаmages in a case of this type the jury will determine the actual value or the market value of the land actually taken. Now, you look to the evidence and you are to determine from the evidence what the market value of the land actually taken is. Now, the land to be used for road purposes or highway purposes is the property of what is known as the W. J. Stewart estate, and you will determine what is the value of it. Whatever you find that to be, gentlemen, you will find an award that the State Highway Department shall pay *182 to the condemnees that amount for the proрerty actually taken.
“Now, gentlemen, in determining the value of the land you are not to consider the market value of the land sought to be condemned from a residential standpoint, that is, for rеsidential purposes alone, but the law says that you will consider the market value of the property for any purpose for which it is suitable or it is adapted whether for residential or whatеver the evidence may show it to be.
“Now, the market value of property is what a person who does not have to sell is willing to take from a person who is willing to buy but does not have to buy.
“Now, gеntlemen, I charge you in that connection that an owner of property taken for public purposes is entitled to receive as compensation therefor its fair market valuе.
“Now, gentlemen, value under our law, as used in reference to land taken under eminent domain, is a relative term depending on the circumstances. Thus, under such circumstances, the value might be the actual value, the market value, the salable value, the reasonable value, and the cash value.
“I charge you, gentlemen, further, that under the law, where a person has the right of еminent domain as in this case, you cannot take the other person’s property without giving him just and adequate compensation for it; and in this case, gentlemen of the jury, the valuation is not detеrmined by the market value of the property, but it is what was that property, house and lot, when taken, what was the actual value of that property to the owners.”
The unfortunate language of the last clause was taken from a charge to the jury in
Housing Authority of Augusta v. Holloway,
The property in question involved a large house of 17 to 20 rooms which had bеen converted into three apartments, one of which was used as a residence by Mrs. Stewart, two tenant houses, and a considerable tract of land suitable for subdivision. No reason appears why the actual value to the owner would be other than the true market value as correctly defined by the court in his charge. Even should other factors have appeared in the evidence for the jury to take into consideration, a charge that “in this case the valuation is not determined by market value” deprived the jury of considering market value in determining the amount to be awarded as just and adequate compensation, and was clearly error for . that reason. See also
Sutton v. State Highway Dept.,
The trial court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Judgment reversed.
