The action below was an appropriation proceeding in probate court, which resulted in an award and judgment of $600 for one-half acre taken and $1,250 damages to the residue of a mining leasehold estate. This award is complained of as excessive, but the point is made that we can not weigh the evidence on this or any other issue herein, because the bill of exceptions fails to exhibit all the evidence which was submitted to the jury’s consideration.
A view was had under the statutes; and, following a former decision of this court, all parties acquiesced in the court’s instruction to the jury to consider such view as evidence in making their award. The Supreme Court has since overturned this doctrine, in Zanesville, M. & P. Ry. v. Bolen, 76 Ohio St. 376 [81 N. E. 681; 11 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1107; 10 Ann. Cas. 658], declaring in the opinion that—
‘ ‘ Counsel is surely right in assuming that if the impressions obtained by the jury from the view are themselves evidence in the case, there is no way by which that evidence can be carried into a bill of exceptions, and hence it inevitably follows, as he insists, that there is not power in a reviewing court to pass upon the weight of the evidence.”
*102Here, where the view was expressly made evidence, not indeed by force of the statute, but by what is equivalent to an express stipulation of the parties, it is manifest that the evidence before us in the bill of exceptions is incomplete and hence incapable of review.
The witnesses of the plaintiff railroad company should have been permitted to answer the questions put to them on direct examination, at pages 158 and 159, asking what was the fair value of the acre of land taken, and for error in sustaining objections to said questions (and for no other error, for we find no other in the record), the judgment of the courts below are reversed, and the cause remanded to the court of common pleas for a new trial.
Winch and Henry, JJ., concur.