Cranford Paving Co. v. Baum

Riely, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to a judgment of the Circuit Court of Alexandria county, affirming a judgment of the County Court. It presents for decision hut a single question, and that is whether or not the amount allowed the plaintiff in error as damages is a just compensation for the use of its land which is taken for the public road established through it.

The Cranford Paving Company owns a stone quarry of three acres on the south side of the Potomac river, which it has worked back into the hill about 100 feet from the original water line, and about 150 feet from the present water line, the line having been extended out into the river about 50 feet by the deposit of refuse material from the quarry. The court ordered the road to be established across the yard of the- company, which is the-space that intervenes between the present line of the river and the face of the quarry, and is used in transporting the stone from the face of the quarry to the flatboats in the river which convey it to market, and also- as a place for storing the surplus-stone. This yard, at the time the road was established, was 217 feet long and 150 feet wide, and, as the road is 30 feet wide, the-ground taken for the use of the road is a strip 2^7 feet long and 30 feet wide, which is less than, one-sixth of an acre. The road,, which was established by the court, is altogether two and one-fifth miles long, and was proved to- be of great convenience to the public generally, and also to- the proprietors' of the lands through which it passes, all of whom, except the plaintiff in eiTor and one other, donated the right of way. The viewers who *503located the line of the road were of opinion that the establishment of the road would be of such great convenience and benefit to the Paving Company and such other person that they also were not entitled to any damage. After the viewers had recommended that the road be established, and the County Court had entered an order to that end, it appointed, as required by the statute, five disinterested freeholders of the county, as commissioners, whose duty it was to meet upon the land of the Paving Company and ascertain what was a just compensation for its land that was so taken. They met upon the land, and, after idewing it and heaidng all the evidence produced before them, and having the assistance of eminent counsel on each side of the controversy, reported to the court that for the land taken for the use of the road and for the damage to the residue of the land of the company beyond the peculiar benefits to be derived in respect to such residue from establishing the road, the sum of $600 was a just compensation. Their report is to be regarded as conclusive on the question of damages until it is shown to the satisfaction of the court to be insufficient. Mitchell v. Thornton, 21 Gratt. 164. The commissioners returned with their report all the evidence that was produced before them, and this, together with the report itself, was all that was before the court affecting the matter of compensation or damages when the report came before the court for confirmation. jSTo other or additional evidence was produced, and the matter comes before us in the same way.

"When it becomes necessary to ascertain what is just compensation for land taken for a public use, as in the present.case, the statute directs that the court shall appoint five disinterested freeholders as commissioners to perform this duty, and requires that in its performance they shall themselves view the land so taken. The law lays great stress upon the matter of the view, and justly attaches great weight to the report of the commissioners. They are greatly aided, as they were in this case, by *504the evidence of their own senses. They have the advantage of seeing the land itself which is taken, and judging as to its value, and of determining the effect of the opening of the road upon the residue of the tract. They have, as they also had here, after having their attention specially drawn to the element of damage relied upon, the opportunity to apply the evidence produced before them to the subject of the controversy, and to determine the weight to be given to its several parts. We are without the benefit of their opportunities, and of what they saw and were the judges, and it should be a very clear case, indeed, of inadequate compensation, to justify the court in disturbing their sworn, deliberate, and disinterested judgment as disclosed in their report. The plaintiff in error bases its claim that the sum allowed by the commissioners "is inadequate compensation for the damage it will sustain from the establishment of the road upon several grounds, which may be grouped as follows: That it will prevent the free use of its yard in transporting across it the stone from the quarry to the river for shipment, and also as a depository for the stone until it is shipped; that it will also interfere with the steam pipes which run to the steam drill from the boiler, which it is necessary to keep on a barge in the river in order that it may be moved up and down the river when a blast is to be made, lest a stone may be hurled against it and injure it; and that it would prevent the laying of a railroad track from the river to the face of the quarry and the running of trucks to haul the stone to the river, in case this should become necessary when the face of the quarry is worked further back from the rivqr. The evidence introduced by the Paving Company in respect to these matters, and in support of its contention, is, in the main, very unsatisfactory. The witnesses for the plaintiff in error based their estimate of its damages upon the theory that these obstacles would wholly prevent the quarry from being worked, and render it absolutely valueless; and, acting upon this theory, and estimating the entire output of the quarry at its market value, as if *505the stone from the whole three acres were quarried, they fixed the damages at thousands of dollars. But the evidence furnishes no just basis for such conclusion, and the estimates of these witnesses, in the face of the facts shown by the evidence, are so extravagant and unreasonable as to be valueless in determining whether the-sum allowed by the commissioners is a just compensation to the Paving Company.

It is shown by the evidence that the demand for the stone is equal to the supply, and that it can be marketed as fast as it is quarried, and that not so much as one-half of the yard has been covered over at any one time with stone that has been quarried, and that generally not more than one-tenth is so covered; and to this it may be added that, as the stone is quarried, and the face of the quarry pushed forward, the size of the yard will be correspondingly enlarged. It is also shown that there are never more than two pipes running from the boiler to the drill, and generally only one, and that, where the road would pass over the pipes, each pipe could be thoroughly protected at a nominal cost by two six-inch boards, placed side by side, with strips across their ends so as to cover the pipe, and that it would be slight work to move the pipes and boards when there was any occasion to do so. It is further shown that, in case it should become desirable at any time to put down a railroad track, and to use trucks to haul the stone from the quarry to the river, it would only be necessary to cover between the tracks with earth for the width of the road, and that the expense of doing so would be very slight. The feasibility of this is too obvious for serious discussion. The estimates of the witnesses for the plaintiff were also based upon the theory that persons travelling along the road might, be injured by stones thrown from the blasts, and damages be recovered against the Paving Company for such injury. It is disclosed by the evidence that, whenever a blast is now set off, the barge containing the boiler 'has to be moved away from the front of the quarry, to prevent the boiler from being struck and injured, *506and the employees always go to the sides of the site of the quarry, both for their own safety and "to warn any persons who may be passing about. It would be but little, if any, additional trouble and expense to give timely warning to persons passing along the road at such time of danger. The report of the commissioners received the approval of both the County and Circuit Courts." JSTo satisfactory, reason is disclosed by the evidence, nor was any shown in argument, for disturbing it. The judgment of the Circuit Court is therefore affirmed.

Affirmed.