This proceeding was begun before the clert to assess the damages caused to plaintiff’s lands by opening a public road through them, and was tried on appeal in the Superior Court.
The plaintiff owned about sixty acres of land about three-fourths of a mile from the town of Concord. There were al
In Miller v. Asheville, 112 N. C., 768, the Court said: “All the landowner can claim is that his property shall not be taken for public use without compensation. Compensation is had when the balance is struck between the damages and benefits conferred on him by the act complained of. To that, and that alone, he has constitutional and vested right. The Legislature in conferring upon the corporation the exercise of the right of eminent domain can, in its discretion, require all the benefits, or a specified part of them or forbid any of them, to be assessed as offsets against the damages. This is a matter which rests in its grace, in which neither party has a vested right, and as to which the Legislature can change its mind always before rights are settled and vested by a verdict and judgment.”
But in Bost v. Cabarrus, 152 N. C., 536, the Court held that the statute now before the Court was different from that in Miller v. Asheville, and that the general rule in condemnation proceedings applied. The judge therefore properly charged the jury that they should' “deduct from the damages only those benefits which are special to the owner and not such as he shares in common with other persons in similar circumstances.” But in fact there was no evidence of benefits to the land which was common to others similarly situated. There were no others similarly situated.
The first prayer for instruction was: “The jury in considering the special benefits are not permitted to consider the evidence that the land is near town and may be cut into small lots of 100 feet front and sold, because that is not evidence of
The second prayer was to instruct the jury “that the fact that said property could be cut into lots and sold is what the law calls speculative benefits, which may or may not accrue to the owner, and the jury will not consider any speculative benefits or damages in this case.” The last paragraph of the prayer was correct, but the court was not required to give it, since the instruction asked, as a whole, was faulty. The fact that property could be cut into lots and sold was in evidence and a proper matter for consideration by the jury in estimating the benefits accruing to the plaintiff. This was not speculative, but practical.
The last exception is because the judge in arraying the contentions of the parties recited a contention of defendant’s counsel which he had made to the jury without objection on the part of the plaintiff. It is too late to object to it after verdict. S. v. Tyson, 133 N. C., 692; S. v. Davis, 134 N. C., 635.
No error.