The applicant took possession of the easement and installed a twenty four inch transmission pipe line. As constructed the top of the pipe is two feet, and the bottom of the pipe is four feet, below the surface of the land. The line is built of metallic pipe, five sixteenths of an inch in thickness, in a solid, welded unit, with no flanges or couplings. The pipe is tested to withstand pressure of 1225 pounds and will carry a pressure of about 800 pounds on the easement. It is treated and prepared against corrosion and the line is capable of lasting for an indefinitely long period of time. The restrictions imposed upon the easement permit the landowners to make full use of the surface of the land except to the extent that such use will unreasonably interfere with the right of the applicant to use the easement for the purpose for which it is acquired. At the time of the trial, when the jury visited and viewed the premises, the line was not in use but the work of installing it had been completed except that the surface above the line had not been graded and smoothed.
Upon the
Brady placed a value upon the .86 of an acre occupied by the easement of $150.00 immediately before the easement was taken and stated that the land occupied by the easement had “very little” value immediately afterward. The applicant objected to the value of $150.00 before the
During the cross-examination of Thompson, a pipe line superintendent of the applicant and a witness in its behalf who testified about the character and the construction of the pipe line on the easement, the attorney for the defendants inquired if there was “a certain amount of danger to a proximity to this big line.” To this question the witness replied that he had worked around pipe lines for twenty years and that he did not “worry about it.” Asked about the possibility of a break in a transmission pipe line he stated that “there is always a possibility.” He also stated, in answer to a question whether he had been present when any break had occurred in any pipe line of the company, that he had not been present on any such occasion but that there had been one break in another line of the applicant. There was no objection by the applicant to any of these questions or answers. During the examination in chief of the witness Frazier, who testified in behalf of the defendants, he was asked if, in arriving at the values given by him, he had considered “the question of danger” and his answer was: “As far as I am concerned, it is very dangerous. I wouldn’t want to live within a thousand feet of the line.” Upon objection the court instructed the jury “to disregard the voluntary statement of the witness with regard to the danger of the line.” The foregoing statements of these two witnesses were the only references to any element of danger during the trial. They are here set forth because they constitute the basis of an instruction offered by the applicant which the court refused to give and which is dealt with later in this opinion.
In cross-examining the witness Yarnum, produced by the applicant, the attorney for the defendants, in referring to the pipe line, asked this question: “It brings gas clear from Texas to be delivered at one point in this state for distribution elsewhere?” This question was objected to by the applicant. The court overruled the objection but the witness gave no answer to the question.
At the conclusion of the evidence the applicant submitted four special interrogatories and two instructions, designated as No. 1 and No. 2. The court gave instruction No. 1 but, upon objection by the defendants, refused to give instruction No. 2 and each of the special interrogatories.
By its assignments of error the applicant seeks reversal of the judgment on these grounds: (1) The witnesses Brady and Frazier were not qualified to testify to the
In a proceeding in eminent domain the value of the land taken and the damage to the residue are necessarily matters of opinion.
State Road Commission
v.
Moss,
On the question of the value of the easement taken, the witnesses in behalf of the defendants first gave their opinion of the value of the .86 of an acre covered by the easement immediately before it was taken and then their opinion of its value immediately afterward. The applicant complains of the evidence of the value of the land before the easement was taken on the ground that it indicated its fee simple value instead of the value of the interest less than a fee represented by the easement. This contention is not well founded. By expressing their opinion of the value of the land covered by the easement immediately before it became subject to it and their opinion of its value immediately afterward, they necessarily gave their opinion of the value of the interest taken by the easement and the damage to the residue of that part of the land occupied by it, and their testimony in that respect constituted their opinion of the compensation to which the landowners were entitled for the easement taken and the damage to the residue of the sections of the land on which the easement is located. This testimony of the wit
nesses produced by the defendants together with their separate testimony relating to the damage to the residue of the thirty eight acre tract resulting from the easement represented their opinion as to the amount of compensation and damage to which the landowners were entitled and is in compliance with the requirement of the statute. Code, 1931, 54-2-9, as amended by Section 9, Article 2, Chapter 28, Acts of the Legislature, 1933, Regular Session. No benefits derived from construction on or use of the easement were shown or claimed by any of the parties,, and the opinion evidence of the witnesses who testified in behalf of the defendants, as well as that of the witnesses produced by the applicant, presented in the same manner,, was admissible for what it was worth on the question of compensation for the easement and the resultant damage to the land occupied by it and to the residue of the tract.
Cincinnati Gas Corporation Company
v.
Wilson,
The special interrogatories were properly refused. One of them, No. 4, obviously by inadvertence, related to an improved highway instead of the easement and for that reason was entirely irrelevant. Interrogatory No. 1 requested the jury to find the market value of the easement; No. 2, the market value of the residue immediately before the land occupied by the easement was taken; and No. 3, the market value of the residue immediately after the land occupied by the easement was taken. The obvious purpose of these interrogatories was to require the jury to specify each item considered by it in arriving at the amount determined as compensation for the easement and damage to the residue. The submission of special interrogatories is in the discretion of the trial court and this discretion, though subject to appellate review, will not be disturbed unless plainly abused.
Davis
v.
Pugh,
Instruction No. 2, offered by the applicant and refused by the court, would have told the jury, in substance, that in ascertaining the damage to the residue, it should exclude as an element of damage any danger “that allegedly depreciates” such value which is “not real, imminent and reasonably to be apprehended and not remote or merely possible.” The instruction, though ineptly drawn and somewhat confusing in the form submitted, perhaps states the correct principle of law that only danger which is real, imminent, and reasonably to be apprehended, and not remote or merely possible, may be considered in the ascertainment of damage which will lessen the value of the residue. The evidence which was admitted in this proceeding, however, did not indicate any danger whatever which would impair or depreciate the value of the residue of the portion occupied
During the cross-examination of a witness offered by the applicant with reference to the transportation of gas by it, the attorney for the defendants propounded this; question: “It brings gas clear from Texas to be delivered
at one point in this state for distribution elsewhere?” The question was objected to on the ground that it misstated the facts as testified to by a prior witness for the applicant. The attorney for the defendants answered the objection with this statement addressed to the attorney for the applicant: “That was the testimony by your own engineer.” The attorney for the applicant replied: “I challenge the record on that.” The court overruled the objection and the applicant noted its exception to the ruling of the court. The witness made no answer to the question and the examination proceeded with reference to other matters. The applicant contends that this unanswered question and the action of the court with respect to it constitute prejudicial error. The unanswered question related to an entirely irrelevant subject and should not have been asked. In the absence of an answer, however, it can not be said that it was prejudicial to any right of the applicant. “A question may be ever so bad but ordinarily there is no prejudicial error in its mere asking. The error generally lies not in the question itself and alone, but in the answer which the erroneous question adduces.”
State of West Virginia, which sues, etc., Connellsville By-Product Coal Company
v.
Continental Coal Company,
By its final assignment of error the applicant assails the
verdict as excessive. The verdict, which was for $850.00, included compensation for the easement taken and damage to the residue. The amount of the verdict is within the range of the evidence as to value given by the witnesses offered by the landowners. The testimony of these witnesses as to the difference between the market value of the land occupied by the easement immediately before and immediately after it was taken was from $126.00 to $225.00, and as to the difference between the market value of the residue, immediately before and immediately after the easement was taken, was from $1,200.00 to $2,500.00. This evidence is in sharp conflict with that given by the witnesses offered by the applicant which fixes the values in much smaller amounts. In addition to the testimony of the witnesses, the jury viewed the land, and though the view is not in all respects evidence, it enabled the jury to understand the opinion evidence adduced in court.
Doman
v.
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company,
As no prejudicial error appears in the case, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
