HUTCHESON, Chief Judge.
This appeal is from a judgment entered in a condemnation suit confirming the report of the commission1 and entering judgment accordingly.
The condemnee, seeking reversal of the judgment, assigns six specifications of error.2
[40]*40Reserving for later treatment, Specifications Nos. 3 and 4, we take up each of the others in due order.
Of Specification No. 1, it is sufficient to say that we find ourselves in agreement with it in principle,3 and that, if the judgment were affirmed, it would be modified accordingly to effect the desired clarification.
Of Specification No. 2, it is sufficient to say that it presents no prejudicial error because, under the evidence in- this case, it deals not with a real situation arising here but with a purely hypothetical one.
The same thing is true of Specification No. 5, both because it does not appear that any witness in any way based his valuation on this testimony, and because, in its report, the commission, while referring to the fact that there was some testimony on behalf of the government in an apparent attempt to show that the United States Engineers do not intend to exercise to their maximum extent all of the rights granted in the servitude, went on to state, “In fixing the value of just compensation, the commission has completely disregarded any testimony tending to show the intention of the government to exercise anything less than the full rights acquired under the servitude to the maximum extent which is possible in connection with Wallace Lake dam as constructed”.
As to Specification No. 6, appellant stands no better. While asserting in brief and oral argument that Specification No. 6, complaining of the action of the commission in rejecting evidence of prices paid by the United States for the purchase in fee by private negotiation, of lands in the flowage area, was error, appellant cites only authorities supporting the general principle that consideration should be given to prices paid in voluntary sales, that is in [41]*41dealings between persons willing and able, but not compelled, to buy or sell, it cites none applying that principle to prices paid by one having the right of eminent domain.
Appellee, on its part, cites many cases from this circuit and elsewhere,4 laying down the rule that “The prices paid in settlement of condemnation proceedings or the sum paid by the condemnor for similar land, even if proceedings have not been begun, is inadmissible”. This rule, based upon the view that such payments are in the nature of compromise to avoid the expense and uncertainty of litigation and are not fair indications of market value, is the generally prevailing rule in this circuit and elsewhere. The only recognized exceptions to it are in cases where the fact that parties were condemnor and condemnee either was not known or had no influence because the sale was not in connection with, or in anticipation of, condemnation proceedings.5
When it comes, however, to Specifications 3 and 4, which in a frontal attack upon findings and award as denying just compensation, assail the judgment as taking its property without affording due process of law,6 we think that the matter stands quite differently and that, for the reasons hereafter stated, the judgment must be reversed.
This is a period of great governmental expansion, with enormously stepped up numbers of takings of private property for public use by expropriation, a streamlining of the procedures for taking,7 and, because familiarity breeds [42]*42contempt, a consequent growing and, therefore alarming attitude of complacency, instead of viewing with alarm, with which government and public alike look upon the exertion of the power of eminent domain by which all that a man has can be taken from him by force. Because this is so, we deem it advisable, if not necessary, before stating wherein appellant was denied due process, to first set briefly down the simple but fundamental principles which, despite their being sometimes and in some places apparently more honored in the breach than in the observance, still govern expropriation proceedings.
Completely consonant, as it is, with Madison’s historic pronouncement, “In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies m this: you must first enable the government to control the governed, and, in the next place, oblige it to control itself”, perhaps the best and most moving statement of the basic principle controlling here is to be found in the opinion of the Supreme Court, in Monongahela Navigation Co. v. United States, 148 U.S. 312, 13 S.Ct. 622, 37 L.Ed. 463, a portion of which was recently quoted as the conclusion of the opinion of the minority in United States v. Twin City Power Co., 350 U.S. 222, 76 S.Ct. 259, in support of its view that the failure of the majority to correctly apply them had resulted in depriving the property owner of the protection which this basic principle affords.
“The question presented is not whether the United States has the power to condemn and appropriate this property * * * for that is conceded, but how much it must pay as compensation therefor. Obviously this question, as all others which • run along the line of the extent of -the protection the individual has under the constitution against the demands of the government, is of importance, for in any society the fullness and sufficiency of the securities which surround the individual in the use and enjoyment of his property constitute one of the most certain tests of the character and value of the government. The first 10 amendments to the constitution, adopted as they were soon after the adoption of the constitution, are in the nature of a bill of rights, and were adopted in order to quiet the apprehension of many that without some such declaration of rights the government would assume, and might be held to possess, the power to trespass upon those rights of persons and property which by the Declaration of Independence were affirmed to be unalienable rights.
“ * * * And in this there is a natural equity which commends it to every one. It in no wise detracts from the power of the public to take whatever may be necessary for its uses; while, on the other hand, it prevents the public from loading upon one individual more than his just share of the burdens of government, and says that when he surrenders to the public something more and different from that which is exacted from other members of the public, a full and just equivalent shall be returned to him.
“But we need not have recourse to this natural equity, nor is it necessary to look through the constitution to the affirmations lying behind it in the Declaration of Independence, for in this fifth amendment there is stated the exact limitation on the power of the government to take private property for public uses. And with respect to consti[43]*43tutional provisions of this nature, it was well said by Mr. Justice Bradley, speaking for the court, in Boyd v. United States, 116 U.S. 616, 635, 6 S.Ct. 524 [29 L.Ed. 746]: ‘Illegitimate and unconstitutional practices get their first footing in that way, namely, by silent approaches and slight deviations from legal modes of procedure. This can only be obviated by adhering to the rule that constitutional provisions for the security of person and property should be liberally construed. A close and literal construction deprives them of half their efficacy, and leads to gradual depreciation of the right, as if it consisted more in sound than in substance. It is the duty of courts to be watchful for the constitutional rights of the citizen, and against any stealthy encroachments thereon. Their motto should be obsta principiis.’
“The language used in the fifth amendment in respect to this matter is happily chosen. The entire amendment is a series of negations, denials of right or power in the government; the last (the one in point here) being: ‘Nor shall private property be taken for public use without just compensation/ The noun ‘compensation,’ standing by itself, carries the idea of an equivalent. * * * So that, if the adjective ‘just’ had been omitted, and the provision was simply that property should not be taken without compensation, the natural import of the language would be that the compensation should be the equivalent of the property. And this is made emphatic by the adjective ‘just.’ There can, in view of the combination of those two 1 words, be no doubt that the compensation must be a full and perfect equivalent for the property taken * * *. This excludes the taking into account as an element in the compensation any supposed benefit that the owner may receive • in common with all from the public uses to which his private property is appropriated, and leaves it to ■ stand as a declaration that no private property shall be appropriated to public uses unless a full and exact equivalent for it be returned to the owner.” 148 U.S. at pages 324-325-326, 13 S.Ct. at page 625.
With these declarations and admonitions kept firmly in mind, we turn to the record to test by this basic principle the claim of the appellant that the findings and award of the commissioner are clearly erroneous8 within the meaning of the cases in that they furnish the basis for taking its property without just , compensation and the due process the Fifth Amendment requires.
Appellant is the owner of a tract , of land of approximately 1200 acres, situr ated a short distance south and in thq direct path of growth of the, City of Shreveport, Louisiana. Numerous suburban residential subdivisions have1 already been opened near the property, and it is most likely that, in the not too distant future, a large portion, of it will be encompassed by the normal growth of Shreveport.
[44]*44The land has been owned by the Slattery family for more than sixty years, during which time Shreveport has grown from a small town a considerable distance away to a large city approaching this property. The land, because of its proximity to the City of Shreveport, was being held as an investment for subdivision purposes, which was its. highest and best use.
On July 23, 1952, the United States filed in the District Court for the Western District of Louisiana a Declaration of Taking9 by the Secretary of the Army, and on Aug. 14, 1952, a judgment of taking was entered expropriating a flowage easement in connection with the operation and maintenance of the Wallace Lake Reservoir dam project, which had been completed in 1946, on and over a number of tracts under separate ownership, including Tract 74, 915.40 acres of appellant’s 1200 acre tract.
The lands of appellant covered by the flooding servitude were all of the lands lying below the 165-foot contour, and the United States acquired the right to “intermittently and/or permanently” flood the lands with water impounded by Wallace Lake Dam up to the 165-foot contour. The flowage easement permitted the Government to remove all timber from the property below the 150-foot contour, prohibited the land owners from constructing any buildings or improvements on the land below the 158-foot contour, and required the removal of all buildings presently situated below that contour.
The landowners presented to the commission the testimony of three expert real estate appraisers, each of whom had been engaged in the real estate business in Shreveport for thirty years, who, with a unanimity not unusual in such cases, fixed the value of the 1200 acres as a whole without the servitude at $78,735, and its value subject to the servitude at $30,281.60 with a difference of value attributable to the servitude of $48,453.40. While they came at this by dividing the 1200 acres up into tracts for purposes of valuation and by putting a valuation with and without the servitude on each tract, the effect of their testimony was to value the tract as a whole without and with the servitude.
The government’s three experts, on the other hand, were interrogated, and they testified on the basis of an inspection made in 1954, not as to the value of the property with and without the servitude — this is greatly important because the project was completed in 1946, and though the servitude was not legally imposed until the order for taking was entered in 1952, the property had been in public estimation for six years [45]*45subject to the actual, though not the legal, burden of the dam — but with reference to the value before and after the filing of the declaration of talcing. Two of them, with the same not surprising unanimity that had attended the views of the condemnee’s witnesses, agreed on a value, just before of $36,000 and $38,000, and after the taking of $30,000 and $32,000. One of them, Mr. Buvens, however, confronted with the stock question, Did you arrive at and did you fix the fair market value in a transaction between a willing seller and a willing buyer at the moment prior to the declaration of taking, which was in August, 1952?, answered, “I did. I fixed the value at $50,000”; and when asked the next question, Did you arrive at a value of the property as of the moment after the taking, the lapse of one second, answered, “Yes, I get the same value of $50,000 before and after the declaration of taking.” “You mean the property is not hurt?” “Physically, I don’t believe so. But I did give damages of $5000.”
This answer to the question was a wise and proper one because, without full and careful instruction, it was inevitable that the witness would conclude that, for the purpose of the question, the property was already damaged by the presence of the dam, and that it could not have been damaged in any substantial amount more just after the declaration of taking than before because as regards damaging effects it had already been taken.
The same witness further testified:
“Q. Mr. Buvens, do you think the property would sell for as much immediately following the easement as it would sell immediately before?
A. I do. I base my opinion on this: Because I find a lot of other properties have sold for just as much if not more than what they did before the easement. I don’t mean to say they sold for more on account of the easement, but it was the general conditions. I have sold different property down there. I had to be very careful to explain to these people about this easement. It was on record and I made sure it was in the deed. After I explained it the way I saw it, there wasn’t any sales resistance getting them to buy the property on account of the easement.” (Emphasis supplied.)
While it is quite probable that the other witnesses for the government were laboring under the same misapprehension that, though the threat and menace of the servitude had been present for many years, the instant before and the instant after the filing of the declaration of taking in 1952 were the only matters to be taken into consideration, this is not quite as clear in their testimony as in the testimony of Buvens, though their chief witness, May, said that the influence of the dam on values 10 had been felt for many years prior thereto. Cf. Pappenheim v. Metropolitan Elev. Ry. Co., 128 N.Y. 436, 28 N.E. 518, 13 L.R.A. 401, at pages 405-406, 26 Am.St.Rep. 486.
As further evidence of the failure, of the proof on the part of the government and of the award of the commission, to conform to the standard of market value required, attention is particularly called to this testimony of their chief witness:
[46]*46• “I think in arriving at this damage, it .is purely a matter of judgment. You are actually not taking anything .away from the man. He has it yet and it has every value it ever had before and, therefore, it would be an arbitrary figure to try to state that property was damaged ten or twenty percent.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Cf. 18 Am.Jur., “Eminent Domain”, Sec. 356, p. 1001, where it is said:
“Opinion Evidence as to Damage. —In determining the damage to land not taken, a witness must be familiar with the market value before the injury was inflicted and the market value afterward, and estimates .of percentage of value lost, not based upon some substantial ground, should be excluded. * * * In some jurisdictions it is held that a witness should not be allowed to state the amount of damage, but should limit himself to the value before and the value after the injury. * * *”
and Cumulative Supplement thereto, page 131, citing People v. McReynolds, 31 Cal.App.2d 219, 87 P.2d 734.
In another way, the presence of the dam in contemplation for many, and completed more than six years before 1952,, had the effect, if not cleared up by appropriate questions and explanations, of clpuding the whole proceeding and everybody’s view about it, not only with reference to the evidence given as to purchases which were offered for purposes of comparison, which prices were necessarily influenced by the fact of the dam and its flowage, but also in the minds of the commission in trying to straighten the problem out.
Finally, perhaps the strongest evidence of the whole state of confusion, created by the existence and operation of the dam for some time before the declaration of taking was filed, is the amount of damages awarded by the commission. This appears in the fact that, while the commission apparently fixed the market value of the property before the declaration of taking at $60,000, it fixed the damage award at an amount which, if regarded as based upon the valuation of the property after the declaration of taking, was a value greatly in excess of the value fixed by three witnesses for condemnee and two witnesses for the government, and considerably above the price fixed by the lone witness for the government who, testifying not as to the value with and without the servitude but before and after the declaration, said that the property was actually worth as much after the filing of the declaration of taking as it was before.
With these basic considerations and facts in mind, we turn to appellant’s specific complaints against the findings and award. These are in substance that: contrary to the settled law pertaining to such awards that the standard and measure of value in condemnation proceedings, where the estate taken is less than the fee or absolute ownership, as a flowage easement or servitude, and of the compensation to be paid for the rights appropriated is the difference between the fair market value of the land as a whole, with and without the burden,11 and -“that a [47]*47parcel of land which has been used and treated as an entity shall be so considered in assessing compensation for the taking of part or all of it.” United States v. Miller, 317 U.S. at page 376, 63 S.Ct. at page 281; the commission has determined the value of the property without the burden and then deducted from it amounts arbitrarily arrived at by trying to state that the property was damaged ten, twenty, or some other arbitrary percent.
We think it clear: that the commission, instead of determining just compensation under the settled rule of law as the difference between the value of the land as a whole with and without the servitude, determined it by its unguided, unregulated, and, therefore, arbitrary opinion of the proper amount of damage to allow to theoretically separate parcels, and thus deprived the condemnee of the fundamental safeguards which the law has set up for its protection; and that its findings and award have operated to take appellant’s property without due process of law.
It is true that the witnesses for the condemnee testified that they had divided the land into separate tracts for the purpose of arriving at a proper valuation of it as a whole with and without the servitude, and that the commission, though not the government witnesses, used the same division. In their final testimony, however, condemnee’s witnesses gave a total value of the whole with and without the servitude, while the commission did not do so. It is true, also, that the commission does state in its award, “In fixing our values we have throughout kept in mind the fact that we are dealing with a 1200 acre tract of land. However, in order that this opinion may conform to the testimony, we will discuss our findings by reference to the above method of subdivision.”
When, however, they came to make up their findings, they did not follow the rule they had laid down for themselves, for though they found the fair market value for each of the separate tracts just prior to the declaration of taking, they made no finding as to fair market value of the property with the servitude. Indeed, they undertoook to determine the just compensation due as the equivalent of what was taken by a process not made clear, except as the commission states it on pages 464-5 of the record.12 Saying, “The deter[48]*48mination of the amount of impairment of value which resulted from the imposition of the servitude is extremely difficult”, it proceeded to determine, not the value of the property as a whole with and without the servitude, but, using the method which May, the government’s chief witness, correctly condemns as arbitrary, it declared: “We believe the percentage of damage to tracts one and two is twenty percent, and the amount of just compensation for the rights taken to be $8000”; as to tract, 3, “the damage to the land amounts to ten percent, or $480”; as to tracts 4 and 5, “We have arrived at a before taking value of $15,300 and a total value of the damage to this land of $765.”; and “based upon the above conclusions, we submit our findings of the amount of just compensation owed to the landowners as $9,285.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Thus, though the commission had stated that it had kept in mind that the property must be valued as a whole and it did this as to the fair market value of the sum of all the parts, free of the servitude, it did not make findings of value subject to the servitude, but merely of its opinion as to how much it should arbitrarily deduct for damage here and damage there.
The effect of this, in addition to being without support in the principles of valuation for condemnation, was to deprive appellant of just compensation for all the tracts below the higher contour lines by treating these tracts as though they were small isolated useless pieces of land, unconnected with and not a part of a larger tract, the value of which with and without the servitude they were entitled to have fixed as a basis for the award of compensation to which they were entitled. In addition, however, to the use of wrong procedures in arriving at their findings, the findings on their face are clearly erroneous. This is so because, valuing the separate tracts in the aggregate at $60,000 without the servitude, as the commission did, and then arbitrarily deducting about fifteen percent from this value for what the commission called damages, if indeed its award could be considered as really a finding of $60,000 without and $50,000' with the servitude, this finding would be unreasonable on its face when it is considered that all the witnesses but one fixed its burdened value at from $30,000 to $32,000, and that one fixed its value at $50,000 both before and after the declaration of taking.
Finally, if on another trial evidence is offered as to what might reasonably be expected in the way o'f actual, as opposed to theoretical, overflow-age from the dam, the judgment of condemnation should be so framed, as to conform it to the findings and the evidence on which they are based, and thus protect the condemnee from, having its award based upon a servitude which the evidence showed to be less than the judgment of taking conferred upon the taker, and finding itself in the position in which it now stands under the judgment appealed from.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for further and not. inconsistent proceedings.