38 Ga. App. 373 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1928
The State Highway Board of Georgia filed petitions in the superior courts of Telfair and Jeff Davis counties, for the condemnation of certain lands for a right of way for a State-aid road and for material to be used in constructing and building the road. The record shows that the principal object of the condemnation proceedings was to procure a bridge site across the Ocmulgee river, with abutments therefor and approaches thereto. The lands sought to be condemned on both sides of the river were jointly owned by J. Clyde Willcox and I. L. Cook, hereinafter called defendants. The parties agreed to refer to a jury the issue as to the value of the land and the assessment and the fixing of the value of the land sought to be condemned. The bridge was completed before the trial of this issue. Upon the trial the evidence showed that on the lands sought to be condemned the defendants owned, and for several years had operated under a legally granted franchise, a public ferry across the Ocmulgee river, a navigable stream, for which as a legal right they charged toll; that the ferry was used
The charge of the court in each case was substantially the same, except that in the Jeff-Davis case the court charged at the request of the eondemnee as follows: “Whatever the time fixed upon with reference to which the compensation shall be estimated, the owner is entitled to the actual value of the land at that time; that is, in this ease the actual value of the land at the time it was taken, even though it may have been enhanced by reason of the projected im
When this ease was before the Supreme Court (Cook v. State, 162 Ga. 84, 97 (132 S. E. 902), that court held that the Highway Board had the right to condemn property for road purposes, and “the fact that the proper county authorities are required to furnish rights of way, free to the State Highway Board, does not prevent that board from condemning rights of way for State-aid roads whenever the county authorities fail or refuse to furnish said rights ■of way. This provision may make the counties liable for expenditures incurred by the State Highway Board in acquiring these rights of way; but it does not bar this board from proceeding to condemn rights of way.” And in headnote 3 of that decision it was said: “Where the State Highway Board instituted a proceeding to condemn lands of the plaintiffs for the purpose of laying out a State-aid road and for securing approaches for the erection of a free public bridge across a navigable river, and where the plaintiffs had previously entered suit against certain counties to recover damages for taking and appropriating a right of way over their said lands for the same purposes, such condemnation proceeding is no bar to the action for damages.” (Italics ours.) In other words, the right of the Highway Board to condemn pro bono publico
In one of the earliest decisions on this subject, that of Harrison v. Young, 9 Ga. 359 (4), the court held: “The value of land taken for public use is not restricted to its agricultural or productive qualities, but enquiry may be made as to all other legitimate purposes to- which the property could be appropriated.” And in the opinion (pages 364, 365) the court said: “Counsel for the Harrisons then proposed to prove the value of the land seized and occupied by the company as a bridge site, and that the land for the western abutment cost the company $6000, and that the location on the eastern side of the river was worth equally as much, and insisted that the value of the land for this and all other legitimate
At the second appearance of the Harrison case in the Supreme Court (Young v. Harrison, 17 Ga. 30 (1)), the court held: “Where the owner of a parcel of ground has been deprived thereof by an incorporated company, for the purpose of appropriating the same as a bridge site, and by virtue of a provision of their charter an appeal had been taken from the commissioners or appraisers to a jury, and the latter were called upon to award just compensation to the land owner: Held, that the value and damage, at the time the land was taken, was the thing to be ascertained; but to discover this, the jury was authorized to look to the prospective value
Surely this recent decision, written in the light of former decisions, and referring to some of them, is authority to guide us in this case. See Mitchell County v. Hilliard, 159 Ga. 502 (126 S. E. 719). Section 781 of the Civil Code says: “In determining the value of land taken for a bridge, its prospective value as a bridge site and its present value as a ferry, if one is in use, may be taken into the calculation.” Let us not confuse the principle involved in these cases with that of the right of eminent domain. Of course, the public interest must be served, and Willeox and Cook must sell whether they would or not, and they can not demand an arbitrary, excessive sum for their property; but they are entitled to receive just and adequate compensation for their property or the damage they have suffered by virtue of its loss; and to hold otherwise would endanger the property rights of every free citizen within our Commonwealth.
We do not in the least doubt the soundness of the foregoing decisions upon which we base our decision in this case, but whether
It is unnecessary to pass on those grounds of the motions for new trial which are not covered by the foregoing rulings. The court did not err in any of the rulings complained of in the cross-bill of exceptions.
Judgment on both main bills of exceptions reversed; on cross-bill affirmed.