97 S.E. 748 | N.C. | 1919
1. What is the fair market value of the land of A. C. Walker taken by the plaintiff? Answer: "$16,921.09."
2. What damage, if any, has A. C. Walker suffered to the remaining portion of his tract of land? Answer: "$1,000.00."
3. What is the fair market value of the land of W. D. McCracken taken by the plaintiff? Answer: "$12,393.90."
4. What damage, if any, has W. D. McCracken suffered to the remaining portion of his tract of land? Answer: "$150." *12
5. What is the fair market value of the land of W. P. Ford taken by the plaintiff? Answer: "$14,204.68."
6. What damage, if any, has W. P. Ford suffered to the remaining portion of his tract of land? Answer: "$275."
7. What is the fair market value of the land of W. G. Ford taken by the plaintiff? Answer: "$2,256.25."
8. What is the fair market value of the land of J. A. Harris taken by the plaintiff? Answer: "$3,482.50."
9. What is the fair market value of the land of W. P. Harris taken by the plaintiff? Answer: "2,490.62 1/2."
10. What damage, if any, has W. P. Harris suffered to the remaining portion of his tract of land? Answer: "$175."
Judgment on the verdict, and plaintiff, the town of Canton, excepted and appealed. Appellant's objections are chiefly to the rulings of (12) the Court on questions of evidence:
1. That defendant W. D. McCracken, who had testified that in his opinion the lands of the witness condemned for the purpose was worth $175 to $200 per acre, admitted on cross-examination that he had appeared before the equalization board on the last assessment for taxes and tried to have the valuation of his land reduced. He was then asked: "To what figure did you try to get it reduced?" and on objection the question was excluded and plaintiff excepted. Witness was then asked: "What assessment did you ask the commissioners to put upon your land?" Answer: "The same they had in Buncombe." Question: "The figure?" On objection this was excluded and exception taken. It was stated as the purpose to show by the witness that he had insisted on having the land in question valued at $8 per acre.
There was marked discrepancy in the evidence of the opposing parties on the question of value, that of defendants tending to show that much of the land, as stated, was worth $175 to $200 per acre, that of plaintiff putting it at a much lower figure. The testimony of this witness, the owner and supposed to be familiar with the uses and worth of the land, was well calculated to have great weight with the jury, and this proposed evidence having, as it did, a direct tendency to challenge or weaken the estimate of the witness, was of the first importance on the issue, and in our opinion its exclusion must be held for reversible *13
error. We are not unmindful of the ruling that the value of land as assessed in the tax list is not ordinarily evidence against the owner on the question of values, he having no part in fixing such valuation (R. R.v. Land Co.,
Again, the witness A. C. Walker, testifying to the value of his land, was allowed to say that he had been offered $200 per acre for it within two years of the trial, and by one W. T. Shelton, who was financially able to comply. Plaintiff excepted and the said W. T. Shelton, over plaintiff's objection, was allowed to testify that he had made an offer of $200 for A. C. Walker's land, and he was able to pay for it and made the offer in good faith. An unaccepted offer of this kind may be influenced by so many considerations entirely foreign to such an issue, and may put the opposing party at such disadvantage, affording him, as it does, no fair opportunity to either anticipate or combat it, that its reception as evidence has been very generally disapproved by the authorities on the subject. Sharp v. United States,
In Sharp v. United States, supra, a condemnation proceeding, where the question of value was directly presented, some of the objections to such testimony, in the case of real estate, are stated by Associate Justice Peckham as follow: "Upon principle, we think the trial court was right in rejecting the evidence. It is at most a species of indirect evidence of the opinion of the person making such offer as to the value of the land. He may have so slight a knowledge on the subject as to render his opinion of no value, and inadmissible for that reason. He may have wanted the land for some particular purpose disconnected from its value. Pure speculation may have induced it, a willingness to take chances that some new use of the land might in the end prove profitable. There is no opportunity to cross-examine the person making the offer to show these various facts. Again, it is of a nature entirely too uncertain, shadowy and speculative, to form any solid foundation for determining the value of the land which is sought to be taken in condemnation proceedings. If the offer were admissible, not only is it almost impossible to prove (if it exist) the lack of good faith in the person making the offer, but the circumstances of the parties at the *14 time the offer was made as bearing upon the value of such offer may be very difficult, if not almost impossible, to show. To be of the slightest value as evidence in any court, an offer must of course be an honest offer made by an individual capable of forming a fair and intelligent judgment really desirous of purchasing, entirely able to do so, and to give the amount of money mentioned in the offer, for otherwise the offer would be but a vain thing. Whether the owner himself, while declining the offer, really believed in the good faith of the party making it and in his ability and desire to pay the amount offered, if such offer should be accepted, or whether the offer was regarded as a mere idle remark not intended for acceptance, would also be material upon the question of the bona fides of the refusal. Oral and not binding offers are so easily made and refused in a mere passing conversation and under circumstances involving no responsibility on either side as to cast no light upon the question of value. It is frequently very difficult to show precisely the situation under which these offers were made. In our judgment, they do not tend to show value, and they are unsatisfactory, easy of fabrication, and even dangerous in their character as evidence upon this subject."
In jurisdictions where this is the prevailing rule, the rare instances in which the position is apparently departed from are chiefly cases of personal property or stocks having a recognized market value (14) and for reasons that are not usually present in the determination of land values. McKelvey on Evidence (2d ed.), 264-265. Approving this as the general rule where the values of realty are concerned, we are of opinion that on the facts presented this evidence of a particular offer to purchase the Walker land is incompetent and its reception must also be held for error.
In Brown v. Power Co.,
It was urged on the argument that if there was error in these rulings of the court, its effect should be restricted to valuation of the Walker and McCracken lands, the issues to which the evidence was more especially addressed, but a perusal of the record will disclose that this was *15 a body of mountain land, composed of contiguous tracts of the same general nature and desirable for the same purposes, and much of it throughout of the same or similar values, and these, with other witnesses, giving their testimony as to all of the tracts, their evidence would naturally and well-nigh necessarily have weight with the jury in their consideration and decision of all the issues.
For the errors indicated, we are of opinion that there should be a general new trial, and it is so ordered.
New trial.
Cited: Carpenter v. Power Co.,