Railroad v. Land Co.

49 S.E. 350, 137 N.C. 330, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 366
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 19, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 49 S.E. 350 (Railroad v. Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Railroad v. Land Co., 49 S.E. 350, 137 N.C. 330, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 366 (N.C. 1904).

Opinion

Douglas, J.,

after stating the case. The principles involved in this case are few and well settled. Its determination really depends more upon the weight given to the testimony, and that has been settled by the verdict of the jury. The first exception is to the admission of the following testimony given by a witness for the defendant: “There is a street two blocks away parallel to the one down which the railroad runs, which has been improved at considerable expense, having been paved with brick, and on this street several residences of good size and quality have been erected. The said improved street and the street covered by the right of way of the railroad are parts of the same tract of land, belonged to the defendant company and are near each other. The said improvements placed upon the property in question increase the value of the whole tract. Cross streets connected the improved street with Grice street.”

The record states that it was given on cross-examination. This is denied by the plaintiff. We must assume the truth of the record, hut it makes no difference, as we think the evidence was competent in either event. It does not come within the prohibition of the rule affirmed in Rice v. Railroad, 130 N. C., 375, following Warren v. Makely, 85 N. C., 12, and that class of cases. It does not seek to prove the *332 value of one piece of land by comparison with the value of another, but to show its value h.y its location and surroundings. It is common knowledge that suburban property will sell better if it is in a good neighborhood, near to a macadamized road and in the immediate vicinity of churches and schools. If this property is within two squares of a paved street and close to good houses it would necessarily sell for more than if it were far from any house, with a mile of mud-holes between it and the town. This seems to us less a question of law than of the natural and necessary effect of the evidence. The witness had testified on his direct examination that the lots on Grice street were worth $150 on an average; that the damage would average at least fifty per cent, and would amount, in his opinion, to $5,626, being an average of $15 per lot. On cross-examination he was testifying to facts which tended to show the reasonableness of the opinion he had expressed. We do not find any exception to this evidence in the record, but, as both sides argued it under the assumption that there was an exception, we have considered it in that view. We see no error in its admission.

The second exception is to the exclusion of the tax list which was offered-by the plaintiff to show the value of the land in question. It was properly excluded as being clearly incompetent for the purpose for which it was expressly offered. There are cases in which the tax lists have been admitted as some evidence, though slight, of claim of title and of the character of possession by the party listing the same. Austin v. King, 97 N. C., 339; Pasley v. Richardson, 119 N. C., 449; Barnhardt v. Brown, 122 N. C., 587, 65 Am. St. Rep., 725; Gates v. Max, 125 N. C., 139. Where the mere listing of the land is the act sought to be shown, the tax lists are admissible, because the lister is the actor; but the rule is essentially different where the value of the land is sought to he proved thereby, because the valuation is *333 the act of the assessors and therefore res inter alios acta as between the parties to this proceeding. As was said by the Court, through Pearson, C. J., in Cardwell v. Mebane, 68 N. C., 485: “The ‘tax lists’ were not competent evidence to show the value of the land, as the assessors were not witnesses in the case, sworn and subject to cross-examination in the presence of the jury.” In that case the tax lists were admitted for the purpose of proving the good faith of the vendees, who were charged with paying their father an exorbitant or fictitious price for the land, but not for the purpose of showing its actual value. In Ridley v. Railroad, 124 N. C., 37, this Court, speaking through Clark, J., says: “Acquiescence in listing and payment of taxes by another is evidence against the party out of possession. But the tax valuation being placed on the land by the tax assessors, without the intervention of the land-owner, no inference that it is a correct valuation can be drawn from his failure to except that the valuation is too low. Such valuation was res inter alios acta, and is not competent against the plaintiff.”

The third and last exception is to the following part of his Honor’s charge, to-wit:

“The jury would estimate the damages, if any, arising from the impaired value of defendant’s land caused by condemnation of plaintiff’s right of way; would deduct therefrom any advantages and benefits arising from the construction of plaintiff’s railroad which were peculiar to this land, but not such benefits and advantages as were common 'to this and the public generally; and on applying this rule the excess, if any, of the damages over the benefits and advantages would be the amount to award defendant in response to this issue.”

It is needless to discuss this question, in view of the recent and well-considered case of Railroad v. Platt Lands, 133 N. C., 266, in which the rule laid down in the charge *334 is expressly approved. In fact, the plaintiff-does not seem to question it as a general proposition of law, but in its brief explains the nature of its objection in the following words: “The objection to the charge of the Court is that the Court left it with the jury to estimate full damages for the right of way of plaintiff. We think this is error. The street had been appropriated for the public. The property had been laid off in lots and the streets were necessary for the use of the lots. They are marked on the plat and the property is being offered for sale in lots, so that the defendant owning this property would be entitled to damages by reason of the additional burden placed upon Grice street and not for the full damage for the right of way. Grice street, as shown by the plat, is donated for the use of the public, being laid off in lots, and the defendants cannot withdraw the right to the street and do not claim or desire to do so; therefore they are not entitled to the street which they have donated for the use of these lots and means to sell them, and they can only recover by reason of the ownership of the adjoining lots such additional burden as the right of way for the plaintiff shall place upon said Grice street. It is admitted by both plaintiff and defendants that where the railroad right of way goes is Grice street.” The plaintiff relies upon White v. Railroad, 113 N. C., 610, 22 L. R. A., 627, 37 Am. St. Rep., 639, and Hodges v. Telegraph Co., 133 N. C., 225, in support of its contention that the defendant can recover only for the additional burden of the railroad right of way. To the same effect is Phillips v. Telegraph Co., 130 N. C., 513, 89 Am. St. Rep., 868. We presume that the principle itself is not questioned by either party to this proceeding, however they may differ as to its application.

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.E. 350, 137 N.C. 330, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/railroad-v-land-co-nc-1904.