8 Nev. 165 | Nev. | 1873
By the Court,
This appeal is from the order of the district court confirming the report of commissioners appointed to ascertain and assess' the compensation to be paid respondents for lands to be taken by petitioner for its use; and from the order denying a new trial.
Appellant’s main objection is to the allowance by the commissioners of damages to the residue of the premises, from which a portion was taken; and it is strenuously insisted that the proper construction of the statute of this State forbids such allowance. Technically, yes, so far as the ultimatum of the report is concerned; and the one under review is awkwardly expressed when it finds “that the value of said ground appropriated by them and the damages to the remainder of the premises of defendants by reason of the severance of the part taken is,” etc.; but as the damage to the residue of a tract of land from which a portion is taken for public use is always an element of estimate in arriving at the compensation for the land taken; there is no substantial error. It is of form rather than of substance, of expression than real meaning. It is no such error in principle as should vitiate the report. So, for all that, it should stand. Troy and Boston R. R. Co. v. Lee, 13 Barb. 169.
Says the statute: “The said commissioners shall proceed to view the several tracts of land as ordered by said court or judge, and shall hear the allegations and proofs of=said parties, and shall ascertain and assess the compensation for the land sought to be appropriated to be paid by said company to the person or persons having or holding any right,
Upon this language, although the words “compensation” and “damages” are used, of course in the received and construed sense, petitioner insists that the measure thereof is filled by giving the private person the market value of the land taken. If such was the intention of the legislature, apt language has not been chosen to express it; and if such language had been used as of necessity clearly expressed such intention, then the act in that regard would have been opposed to the constitutional provision of the United States and of this State forbidding the taking of private property for public use without “just compensation,” and not only so but to the practice either of written or unwritten law of every civilized people. Upon principle and precedent the proposition is monstrous. While the law does and should provide in proper case for the surrender to the public use of individual property, so that no stay shall impede the general necessity, on the other hand it must jealously guard the rights of individual owners. They are never to be remitted, as counsel suggests, to litigation for all matter of loss save the naked market value of the property taken, but no part of their property shall be taken without just compensation “first made or secured.” It is difficult to imagine an unjust compensation; but the word “just” is used evidently to intensify the meaning of the word “compensation;”
In the case first above quoted occurs the following remarks applicable here: “Several witnesses were also allowed to testify, under like objection, as to how much less the remainder'of the quarter section was worth at the time the land was taken by the defendant than the whole quarter section would then have been worth had the same not been taken. The objection to the foregoing testimony is predicated upon the peculiar language of the charter of the defendant, providing for condemning land for its railroad, etc. The. charter simply makes provision for an appraisement and aAvard
It is next objected that the report does not show the proceedings had, in that it fails to disclose material testimony received. There is conflict upon affidavits filed as to what the omitted testimony in fact was; but, accepting the petitioner’s version as entirely correct, it could in no view of the case have been material. Henry, one of the defendants, testified that he swore his property before the assessor at much less than he valued it before the commissioners. As to the estimate for taxation, unfortunately too common a course! but one which could have no weight in determining the value of the property in question, incompetent in fact for that purpose though perhaps admissible to tend to contradict his testimony in chief; if any stress was given that,
The cross-examination of .Cooper, Brown, Butler and Robinson did not vary their direct testimony. So while the intimation made in Virginia and Truckee R. R. Co. v. Lovejoy, ante 100, as to the propriety of presenting all the testimony to the court suggests good practice and might well be followed, it is no vital error not to do so, especially when such is immaterial as in the case at bar. The district court has power to order in the testimony, and in a proper case would undoubtedly do so; here there was no call for an order. The district court saw that there was substantial testimony to sustain the award and that all such said to have been omitted could not touch the issue.
The only evidence in point came from Winterbauer, Cooper, Robinson and Eraser. This was based upon or approximated the basis of the rule, which is clearly summed up by a text writer thus: “ It has been said the appraisers are not to go into conjectural and speculative estimations of consequential damages, but confine themselves to estimating the value of the land taken to the owner. This is most readily and fairly ascertained by determining the value of the whole land without the railway and of the portion remaining after the railway is built. The difference is the true compensation to which the party is entitled.” Redfield on the Law of Railways, Sec. 71, Sub. 3.
Winterbauer fixes the value of the whole property before the severance at two thousand dollars, after at five or six hundred; Cooper at twenty-five and twelve; Robinson at sixteen and twelve; Eraser at fifteen and eleven; making, as will be seen, the various estimates of compensation fourteen,
Such is not the case here. As this court said in another case and iterates now, which affirmance it is hoped may be regarded as a settlement of the question: “If it be admitted that the testimony reported in the record preponderates against the conclusion of the commissioners on this point, it cannot be said, in any view that may be taken of it, that the preponderance is so great and decided as to justify an interference with the report. There is testimony decided and substantial in support of it; and furthermore under the statute the commissioners are required to examine or view the land themselves, which was done in this case; and thus their opinion of its value is added to the testimony of the witnesses on behalf of the respondent. Under such circumstances the decision of the commissioners will not be set aside if there be any substantial testimony to support it. Such is the rule repeatedly announced, and we think uniformly followed. * * This ease very clearly comes within the rule, and hence the report cannot be disturbed. ” The Virginia and Truckee R. R. Co. v. Elliot, 5 Nev. 358.