Aрpellant is a corporation engaged in selling water for purposes of irrigation. It obtains the water which it sells from Clear Lake, in Lake County. Appellant proposed to increase its supply of water by raising the surface of the lake by means of a dаm to a height of ten feet above the mean low-water mark. In accomplishing this purpose the various tracts of land adjoining the lake would be flooded to the ten-foot level. This action was accordingly brought for the purpose of condemning and taking in fрe the lands below the proposed ten-foot level, these lands being portions of larger tracts belonging to respondents. The jury returned a verdict, finding for appellant and awarding to respondents a sum representing the value of the lands taken and the damаges accruing to the remaining lands by reason of the severance. The appeal is based upon alleged errors occurring at the trial and upon the contention that the amounts of the awards are not justified by the evidence.
The court permitted witness Rice to testify over objection that certain land known as the Mendenhall land situated in the vicinity of the lands herein involved had a market value of one thousand dollars per acre.
Appellant claims that the trial court erred in instructing the jury at the request of respondents in the following terms: “You are instructed that the value of the land for any special purpose may be taken into account as one of the elements to show its market value, and if these lands of defendants be specially adapted for reservoir purposеs,- its value for this use should be considered as one of the elements of the market value of the land sought to be condemned. ’ ’
Appellant also criticises the instruction of the court directing the jury to exclude the consideration of benefits, if any, derived by respondents from the construction of the reservoir. Conceding the error in the instruction, it was of cоurse harmless if there was no evidence from which the jury might reasonably have found that the lands of respondents would in fact be benefited by the construction of the reservoir. The only benefit which appellant could have desired the jury to consider was the benefit, if аny, to be expected from a possible prevention of floods above the ten-foot level. This, of course, could only be considered a benefit in case there was danger of damage by overflow above the ten-foot level under normal or nаtural conditions. The evidence shows that the lands between the ten and twelve foot levels had very rarely been inundated, and that the result of the overflow was to leave on the land small deposits of rich sediments, the effect of which was to add to the fertility of the soil. There is no evidence indicating that these rare inundations had ever occurred at a season of the year when the land was so far under cultivation that injury or damage to the crops resulted.
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Appellant also complains of portions of the tenth and twelfth instructions in so far as they declared that the jury were authorized to consider in estimating the injury to the lands not taken the “danger, if any, from underground seepage or from floods likely to be caused .by an overflow above the ten-foot level proposed by plaintiff.”
By instruction No. 17, given at the request of the respondents, the jury were told that they were not to be “confined to a consideration of the uses of the land at the time of the taking, but the possibility of its change to a more profitable use had it not been taken may be taken into account.” Viewed apart from its context, the instruction may appear open to two criticisms; first, that it permitted the jury to place upon the property a special value for a peculiar purpose, and, second, that it permitted the jury to enter the field of speсulative conjecture.
Appellant claims that double damages were assessed against it for the reason that the jury was permitted when assessing the value of the lands taken to consider the valufe of such lands arising from their availability for use in conjunction with the lands not taken, аnd, on the other hand, when assessing the damage caused by severance to the lands not taken it was permitted to consider the value of such lands arising from their availability for use in conjunction with the lands taken. Appellant’s argument in this behalf is based .upon the obvious fallacy that the value of the lands taken resulting from the possibility of their use with the lands not taken is identical with the value of the lands not taken resulting from the possibility of their use with the lands taken.
It is also claimed that the damages were excessive. Tfye jury fixed the value of the lands and improvements proposed to be taken at the sum of $160 per acre and fixed the severance damages to the lands not taken at fifty dollars per acre in the case of two of the, tracts of land and at one hundred dollars per acre in the case of the remaining tracts. Bespondents’ witnesses estimatеd that the land was worth from three hundred dollars to five hundred dollars per acre and *55 that by reason of .the severance the value of the land not taken would be reduced to from ten dollars to twentj dollars per acre. Appellant’s witnesses estimated that the land was worth from forty dollars to one hundred dollars per acre. The knowledge of values shown to be possessed by respondents’ witnesses compared favorably, to say the least, with that shown to be possessed by appellant’s witnesses. Upon this state of the record it is clearly impossible to hold that the award of damages by the jury involves an excessive estimate" of the value of the lands proposed to be taken and of the depreciation of the value of those not to be taken as a result of the severance.
The judgment is affirmed.
Melvin, J., Shaw, J., Olney, J., Lawlor, J., Wilbur, J., and Angellotti, C. J., concurred.
