This condemnation action was initiated by declaration of taking pursuant to Code Ann. § 95-601 et seq. The department took for highway improvement purposes approximately 2.9 percent (or 2,i58 square feet) of a 1.7-acre tract developed as a shopping center. The jury returned a verdict for the condemnees in the amount of $4,484, *519 which was somewhat less than the amount which the department had paid into the registry of the court. In this appeal by three of the condemnees, 30 alleged errors are enumerated. Held:
1. The department has moved to dismiss the appeal, alleging that one of the original condemnees, who did not file a notice of appeal from the declaration of taking and who is not a party to this appeal, has pending below an application to be paid her portion of the amount originally paid into the registry of the court by the department. Because of this, and because there is no final judgment directing an allocation and distribution of the amount awarded by the jury, the department contends that the case is still pending below. However, since there are no substantive issues remaining to be litigated in the case, we conclude that the judgment denying the appellants’ motion for new trial is final within the meaning of Code Ann. § 6-701 (a) (1). The motion to dismiss is accordingly denied. Accord
Herring v. Herring,
2. The verdict was within the range of the evidence, and the attacks on the sufficiency of the evidence are without merit.
3. Appellants contended at trial that the elevation of the level of the highway in front of their remaining property made access more difficult and thus lessened its value as a shopping center. In alleged support of this contention, they sought to introduce four photographs taken of the roadway and adjacent property during the construction process. The trial court properly excluded these photos on the basis of the well-established rule that “damages caused by mere temporary inconvenience due to the construction of the project for which the property was taken is not a proper element for consideration in determining just and adequate compensation for condemned realty.”
Southwire Co. v. D. O. T.,
4. The court erred in charging the jury that they could reduce the amount of consequential damages to the remainder by the amount of special consequential benefits, as there was no evidence from which the jury could have formed a reasonable estimate of the amount or value of such benefits. See
Andrus v. State Hwy. Dept.,
93
*520
Ga. App. 827 (3) (
5. The judge did not err in charging the jury that a condemnee cannot recover for mere inconvenience in the use of his property resulting from the condemnation, except insofar as such inconvenience is shown to affect the value of the remaining property as an item of consequential damages. See Southwire Co. v. D. O. T., supra, at 610 (4). The charge was a correct statement of law and could not have harmed the appellants, particularly, if, as they allege, they were not seeking damages for such inconvenience.
6. The appellants will not be heard to complain of the court’s charge that the jury could not consider such general benefits to the remainder as increased general prosperity, beautification of the neighborhood, or benefits to through traffic, since this charge was favorable to them.
7. The court did not err in charging the jury that although the condemnees were entitled to compensation for any deprivation of access, they were not entitled to access at all points on the boundary between the property and the street, if the entire access was not cut off, and if they were offered a convenient access to the property and the improvements thereon. See
Brock v. D. O. T.,
8. The appellants contend that the trial court erred in charging the jury that in order to consider the “peculiar value” of the property taken, they must find that “its advantages to [the owner] are more or less exclusive, and would not be likely to apply to another owner.” The department points out, in defense of the charge, that it was taken directly from the Suggested Pattern Jury Instructions prepared by the Council of Superior Court Judges of Georgia, at p. 58, and that it is supported by language in
City of Gainesville v. Chambers,
We agree with the appellants that the charge may have been misleading as applied to the facts of this case. In
Housing Auth. of
*521
Atlanta v. Sou. R. Co.,
9. The appellants enumerate as error the court’s refusal to give 11 requested charges. We have examined these charges and have concluded that they contain nothing of substance which was not adequately covered in the charge given by the court. Furthermore, many of the requested charges were argumentative or contained language which was confusing or repetitive. We find no error in the court’s refusal to give any of them.
10. We have examined the remaining enumerations of error and have determined them to be without merit.
Judgment reversed.
