Ohio Southern Railroad v. Snyder

5 Ohio N.P. 461
CourtClark County Probate Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. 461 (Ohio Southern Railroad v. Snyder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Clark County Probate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ohio Southern Railroad v. Snyder, 5 Ohio N.P. 461 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Charge to Jury.

Gentlemen of the Jury:

First. By your oaths administered to you in the case before you, in arriving at your verdict you are required, first, to assess,according to your best judgment, the amount of compensation due the property owners, the defendants herein, for the property sought to be appropriated by the Ohio Southern Railroad in these proceedings, which is a strip from 66 to 76 feet wide through their lands, and the land for a Y switch, irrespective of any benefits that may result to [462]*462such owners by reason of the building and operating of the proposed railroad.

It is no matter, if in your opinion the remaining portion of the owner’s property Would be enhanced in value by the reason of the building of this railroad, in an equal or greater sum than the value of the land appropriated, .yet the owners are entitled to receive from the railroad company the fair market value of the property so appropriated.

a. This market value is to be fixed at the time the property is appropriated, and in this case, that is the present time; and this price or value is not to be increased upon the necessity of the plaintiff on the one hand, to have'this property, nor on the other, diminished from the necessity of the owners to dispose of it.

. b. Tlie market value is the selling Value.

It is the price which an article will bring when offered for sale in the market.

It is the highest price which those having the ability and occasion to buy are willing to pay. The owner in parting with his property to the railroad company, is entitled to receive as compensation just such an amount as he could obtain if he were to go upon the market and offer the property for sale. I do not mean the price he would realize at forced sale upon short notice, but the price he could obtain after a reasonable time and notice, such as would ordinarily be taken by.an owner to make a sale.'

Mf rket value is not what a piece of property can be bought at by taking advantage of the necessities of the seller, nor by bringing the property to sale under foreclosure. Such situations have a tendency to diminish the value of the property. Nor on the other hand is it fair to make as a standard of value the case where the buyer may be compelled to take the property by reason of some unusual surroundings or circumstances.

Sales which fix a market value imply a buyer and seller both of whom .are free to act, and neither of whom act under any compulsion or pressure of circumstances.

c. The fact that the owner may be so situated financially or otherwise,' that a fair sale would be of great advantage to him, or that the railroad company is so situated in order' to properly locate and build its line of road or otherwise that it must have this property, should not be considered by you in any manner whatever.

The market value of the real estate must as a general rule be ascertained from sales either of property out of the same tract, sought to be appropriated, or of property in the immediate vicinity having substanfally the same surroundings and the same conditions.

d. Witnesses called to prove these matters are first qualified by showing that they have a general knowledge of . the tract sought to be appropriated, the relation it sustains as to its value, whether equal or greater to the surrounding lands, which have recently been sold at their market value. This having been shown, the witness may be asked his opinion as to the value of the land sought to be appropriated, and on cro.ss-examination he may be required to state .upon what he bases his opinion, so that you, the jury, may know what weight to attach to his opinion.

Likewise, persons dealing in real estate in the neighborhood or living in the vicinity may give their opinion as to the value of the tract sought to be appropriated, and on cross-examination it may be shown to you upon what they ground their opinions, so that you may know what weight to give to them in forming your verdict.

The value of their opinions depend upon their experience, their knowledge, their opportunities! for knowing and forming' an opinion, and on their honesty.. fairness and good judgment. You are not to put the value any higher than its fair market value, because the owner fixes a sentimental value on it: nor because he has lived on the land a long time and is attached to it.

e. The land sought to be appropriated in such a proceeding as this, may, by reason of its awkward oblong shape, surroundings and the limited uses to which it be applied, and from the fact that buyers or sellers of such a tract, or tracts, are so vory limited, be such that it can hardly be said to have general market value if considered as a separate and independent tract. Sellers at a fair market value there might be none; purchasers none but railroad corporations. If such be the case, and the lands sought to be appropriated has no general market value, in ascertaining the amount of compensation chat should be allowed the owner, it would be proper to consider the market value of the lands immediately adjoining, and if the land appropriated be of the same quality capacity and character as such adjoining lands it would have the same market value: or if the land appropriated be of the same average quality, capacity and character of that of the entire tract of which it is a part, it will have the same market value per acre the entire tract has, and should be so considered in allowingt compention to the owner.

To this should be added or subtracted, as the case might be, the difference of value, per a,ere, if any, resulting alone from the fact that one is a large and the other a small body of land. But the mere fact that the land appropriated is a small tract or narrow strip in or through the defendants’ land neither adds to ñor detracts from the amount to be allowed defendants as compensation therefor.

f. If the land sought to be appropriated [463]*463‘has no general market value, and the value cannot be determined from that of the adjoining or neighboring lands, then its value can only be ascertained from -the land itself, which is in evidence in this case,and from witnesses whose skill •and experience enable them to testify ’directly to such value in view of the hazards and chances and the business to which the land is devoted. The second matter which by your oath, you are re quired to do, is to determine according to your best judgment, how much less valuable the remaining portion of the defendants' property will be worth by -reason of this appropriation and the building and operation of the proposed rail' road. In this case the defendants, John and David L. Snyder are the joint owners of large bodies of land near to and adjoining this appropriation. It therefore becomes important to know whatlandare to be included as remaining lands to which lands, if injuries result from the building and operation of this railroad and the appropriation, damages may be allowed these defendants.

The plaintiff in its petition describes the land sought to be appropriated in five different tracts. The defendants, by maps and evidence introduced, claim that there are but two different tracts. You are not bound to accept either. Tracts two and three, in the petition described,- are a continuous line of the road through one 'Contiguous body of land of 595 cares herein usually referred' toas the “lower farm”. But the mere fact that it is continguous will not alone entitle it all to be considered as remaining lands to tracts two and three.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio N.P. 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-southern-railroad-v-snyder-ohprobctclark-1898.