delivered the opinion of the court.
1, 2. Section 6839, L. O. L., provides, among other matters:
“No. appropriation of private property shall be made until compensation be made therefor to the owner thereof, irrespective of any increased value thereof, by reason of the proposed improvement.”
*85With the justice or injustice of this rule we have nothing to do, as the state has plenary power to prescribe the conditions upon which it will confer upon corporations the privilege of exercising the right of eminent domain. The language above quoted is plain, and clearly means that in computing the damages to a tract of land by reason of the construction of the road across it the owner cannot be heard to say that any increased value which may accrue to the land by reason of the facilities offered by the proposed improvement shall be added to his damages, nor can the corporation be heard to say that such increased value shall be treated as a part of his compensation and subtracted from the sum which would be compensation if the land were purchased for any other purpose than a railroad.
3. The measure of damages is the actual cash market value of the strip taken and the depreciation in market value of that portion of the tract not actually included in the right of way, which damages are sometimes termed incidental damages; and it is in respect to the measurement of these that courts have experienced the greatest difficulty. To the ordinary mind, unhampered by precedent and unrestrained by statute, it would appear that, if the owner were paid the full market value of the strip taken, the value of his property being greatly increased by the improvement and by the facilities afforded for marketing the produce grown upon the ground not included in the strip, he would not be entitled to a single cent by way of damages because his land had been cut into two parcels instead of being left intact. This would appear to be the common-sense view of the matter, even if the lands of his neighbors should be equally enhanced in value; but the statute in this state and statutes and judicial *86decisions in other states have said that increase in the value of the property by reason of the construction of the road shall not be considered in estimating damages, and, in effect, require the jury to estimate all the inconveniences caused by the construction of the road and to eliminate the incidental benefits which are shared in common by the other members of the community. This seems to be the law in Oregon, and, while the writer follows it with unwilling feet, the courts are bound to recognize it until it is amended. In this view the court was entirely justified in withdrawing the first three counterclaims from the jury. As intimated in Portland & O. C. Ry. Co. v. Ladd Estate, 79 Or. 517 (155 Pac. 1192), the benefits pleaded are shared in a greater or less degree by all of the community along the line of the proposed road; the difference being merely one of degree rather than of class. The last offset was not fully pleaded, in that it merely stated that defendants would be “greatly benefited” without stating any amount or sum in which defendant would be so benefited.
4. Exception was taken to the ruling of the court respecting certain testimony introduced by defendants for the purpose of showing the market value of the tract. The bill of exceptions is very meager, and appears to have been made up' and signed without service upon the defendants ’ attorneys and without any notice to them. In many respects it fails to show the relation of the testimony to which objection was made to that which preceded or followed it, and is far from being sufficient to bring before us the exact situation as it existed at the trial. J. E. Penney, being a witness in his own behalf, was asked the following question:
“Mr. Penney, I will ask you if you had any bona fide offers to purchase it [referring to the land in question] last year ?”
*87The witness, oyer the objection of plaintiff, answered :
“Before the railroad went through there Mr. Greene offered me $2,300. That was before the railroad ever came there. I said he could have it for $2,500, and it would have to be a cash proposition at that. ’ ’
The admission of this testimony was a technical error: Lewis on Eminent Domain (2 ed.), § 446, and cases there cited; 13 Ency. Ev. 451, and cases there cited.
Mr. Samuel Penney, being called ás a witness for defendants, gave the following testimony:
“Q. Are you acquainted with the value of the land?
“A. I know what I paid for what I have got.
“Q. Do you know what the Webber tract sold for just south?
“Mr. Cross: The Webster tract?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Mr. Cross: That does not make a competent, qualified witness as to the value.
“Court: Whether he knows the value of the land taken from sales taken place in recent times.
“Q. Do you know the market value of the lands sold in that vicinity from sales that have been made in recent years?
“A. I have paid no attention; I have heard of sales made, but I do not know of any positive sales that have been made.
“Q. You have heard of sales about there? Well, you know from just what you have heard? You were not present, you mean, when the money passed?
“A. I could not say about any tract the sale was made on, what price was paid on it. I could not come out here and say, because I don’t know.
“Q. Do you know what the people asked for their land?
“A. I know what I asked for mine.
“Q. Do you know what Mr. Greene asked for his?
“A. I have heard him say.
*88‘ ‘ Q. He has two five-acre tracts 1
“A. Yes, sir; one on the north, and one on the west.
“Q. Do yon know what people generally hold their land for?
“A. I have heard them say.
“Mr. Cross: I object to that as being incompetent.
“Q. You know what you ask for it and what you paid for it, and from what you heard after the sales of other land, and what you know of the sales that were made in the last year or two. From all that information what would you say was a reasonable market value of your brother’s property?
“Mr. Cross: I object to that. He has not shown himself qualified and the testimony is incompetent.
“Court: I think it is competent to go to the jury for what it is worth. I think the court has held a man who owns land himself in the immediate vicinity can fix what he takes the value of his land. The objection will be overruled, and the exception allowed.
“A. Well, the land on the road adjoining my brother’s place there that him and I owned at one time, that I bought for him I consider that is worth somewhere near $600 or $700 an acre.”
He was allowed to say in the same connection that his brother’s land, which is the land in controversy, was a better piece of ground than his. This excerpt standing by itself is too inadequate for the court to be able to say whether there was substantial error in permitting it to go to the jury. From it we gather that the witness is an adjoining proprietor; that he knows for what another tract of land just south of the land in controversy sold; that he had heard of sales of land being made in the vicinity, but could not say of his own knowledge what price was paid; that he knew by general hearsay at what the neighbors held their land; that he bought his brother’s land for him; that his own land adjoining was worth $600 an acre; and that he considered his brother’s land a better piece. Mr. *89Greene, who owned a tract adjoining the land in controversy, was permitted to testify as to the value of his own land and of other lands in the immediate vicinity, and to state what the asking price of such land was. He testified that he would not take less than $1,000 an acre for his tract, and described his buildings and improvements. It does not appear that there was any objection made to this part of his testimony. Thereafter the following questions were asked:
‘ ‘ Q. What is the character of your five acres on this side of Mr. Penney’s five acres adjoining on the west? Is it improved or unimproved?
“A. Most of it is improved ground.
“Q. Is it all cleared?
“A. There is about an acre that is not cleared. I have a peach orchard on it, and I have commenced grubbing the peaches there last year.
“Q. What is the value of the tract on the west side of his [meaning Mr. Penney’s]?
“Mr. Cross: I object to that, and ask to have the answer stricken out on the ground that he has not shown himself to be competent. It seems to me the rule does not permit a man to show the value of his tract of ground, but it has already been answered.
“Court: I still think the only way where there are no sales that are known of for the men to fix what they know is the value of their own property.
“Mr. Cross: I note an exception to the ruling of the court.
“Q. What is the reasonable market value of this tract on the west side of Mr. Penney’s land? How much is that worth?
“A. I know what I would ask for it.
“Q. Well, knowing the character of the land and all those things and from all the information you have—■
“Mr. Cross: I object because he has not shown himself qualified as a witness.
*90‘ ‘ Court: It is a question of what it is worth on the market.
“A. I would not take less than $500 an acre for it.
“Court: Would you pay that much for it?
“A. I would if I wanted it; yes.”
Counsel for plaintiff moved to have the answer last quoted stricken out, which was refused, and an exception allowed. John Wise, a neighboring proprietor, testified that he had lived on his place all his life, and had been engaged in farming; that he had heard of a tract about a mile from defendants’ land being sold within the preceding two years, but did not state for what it sold. He testified, over objection, that the reasonable value of his own land was about $800 an acre.
5. Incomplete as the bill of exception is, it is evident that at and about the time of the occupation of this tract by defendants there was little or no active market for lands in its vicinity, and there were few sales by which to fix a standard of market value. Under such circumstances the courts adopt a very liberal rule as to the admission of evidence tending to show value, and very much is left to the discretion of the court. It would seem that under such circumstances persons residing and owning land in the vicinity ought to be presumed to have some knowledge of the value of their own and their neighbors’ land without being required technically to qualify as experts.
“It is presumed that a person who has owned and resided upon land for several years is sufficiently familiar with it and with the value of lands in the vicinity to be qualified to testify thereto”: 13 Ency. Ev. 489; Robertson v. Knapp, 35 N. Y. 91; Pinkham v. Chelmsford, 109 Mass. 225; Hayden v. Albee, 20 Minn. 159 (Gil. 143); Chicago & Rock Island etc. Ry. v. Buel, 56 Neb. 205 (76 N. W. 571); Union Pac. R. Co. *91v. Lucas, 136 Fed. 374 (69 C. C. A. 218); Mains v. Haight, 14 Barb. (N. Y.) 76.
Tbe fact that tbe land in question was situated in the near vicinity of other lands of the value from $600 to $800 an acre, coupled with the additional fact stated in the reply that it was suitable for gardening purposes, furnished at least two of the elements by which the jury might arrive at some approximation as to its value. Such testimony is quite as valuable as that of so-called experts who are brought from a distance, make an examination of the soil and general capabilities, and testify from the data thus obtained. The witnesses seem to have been careful, cautious farmers, not inclined to overestimate their own knowledge, and it is evident that under the circumstances their testimony was the best that could be obtained, and the court did not abuse its discretion in admitting it.
6. That the court committed a technical error in permitting J. R. Penney to state what was offered him for his land and. what he demanded, it is true, but it is not probable that this statement substantially injured plaintiff’s case. It was merely the witness’ crude way of putting a value upon his land. The effect of his whole testimony was merely that he considered his own land worth $2,500 cash. There is hardly a case tried into which some slight technical error will not creep; and, if appellate courts search microscopically for errors, few cases would go unreversed.
In our opinion this record does not disclose any such substantial error as would justify a reversal, and the judgment is therefore affirmed. Affirmed.
Mr. Justice Burnett and Mr. Justice Eakin absent.