Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
This controversy grows out of the attempt of the city to close an alley. The record presents a number of questions that will make it necessary to state at considerable length the respective contentions of the parties, and, to afford a better understanding of the local situation, the following map has been copied from the record!:
The alley in question is known as Ayres alley. It was 18 feet wide, and extended from Main street to 'High street, crossing Water street, which runs parallel with and about midway between Mlain and High streets. Water street has for some years been occupied! almost entirely by the railroad tracks of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company, and at the *397point where it crossed Ayers alley there were some four tracks. As a result of the occupation of Water street by the railroad, and the movement of trains and engines thereon, the alley crossing was exceptionally inconvenient and dangerous for vehicles and the traveling public. Three of the railroads entering Lexington, two of them having depots and terminal facilities in different parts of the city, desired to erect a union station into which all their passenger trains might run. This movement upon the part of the railroads met with the approval of the city authorities, and the result was a proposition upon the part of the railroad companies to erect a union station fronting on Main street, west of Ayres alley, and extended back to Water street, on which street the train sheds for the accommodation of passengers in entering and leaving trains should be located. As a part of this scheme for the erection of the union station, it was contemplated that Ayres alley should be closed and a viaduct constructed from Main to High streets immediately west of and parallel with Ayres alley. The result of the negotiations between the city and the railroad companies was the erection of an ample and attractive station at the place proposed and the viaduct. This viaduct, where it crosses Water street, is elevated so as to permit the passage of trains. It is 43 feet wide, substantially built, and affords safe and easy passageway both for pedestrians and vehicles between the two streets. When the arrangement for the erection of the viaduct and the station had been perfected, the city enacted an ordinance, directing the closing of so much of Ayres alley as lay between a point 236 feet frpm the curb line of Main street to a ' point 192% feet from the curb line of High street. In other words, under the ordinance, the alley was closed *398by .a wall erected on each side of 'Water street, so as to effectually prevent persons wbo used tbe alley on either tbe Main street or High street side from crossing Water street; the parpóse being to have Water street at this point practically free for the use of the railroads that occupied it. The ordinance recited in a preamble the reasons for closing that part of the alley heretofore described, and directed the city solicitor to institute an action in the Fayette circuit court for the purpose of closing that portion of the alley described in the ordinance. It was enacted under the authority of an act of the General Assembly, approved March 22, 1906 (Acts 1906, p. 136, c. 130), providing, in part, that: “Upon the adoption of an ordinance by the general council authorizing and directing the closing of the whole or any portion or a street or alley or other public highway within the limits or jurisdiction of the city, it shall be the duty of the city solicitor to institute an action in the circuit court for the purpose of having the same closed, and to such action all the owners of ground in the squares of lots, divided by such street, alley or highway, or the portion thereof proposed to be closed, shall be made defendants; and if all of such defendants are competent to act for themselves and fail to object to the closing prayed for, then the court shall render a decree accordingly; but if any of said defendants object, or are under disability other than coverture, the court shall impanel a jury, which shall hear evidence and determine the amount of compensation in the form of damages to be paid to each of such defendants. The court shall thereupon direct that said street, alley or other highway be closed upon payment to each of such defendants of the amount of damages awarded to him, or, if any defendant refuses to accept such payment *399or be for any reason unable to do so, upon payment into court of the amount awarded such defendant or defendants. ” As directed by the ordinance, the city solicitor brought this action, naming as defendants therein the railroad companies, who were equally interested with the city in its closing, and Alice MeOonathy, M)ary E. O’Rear, W. H. Henderson, M. E. Oombs, and W. E. Barron, the only persons who owned property abutting on the alley between Main and High streets. These property owners objected to the closing of the alley upon various grounds, some of which will be later noticed. The case coming on for trial, a jury was impaneled to assess the damages, and awarded to Henderson $3,500' to 0 ’Rear $100, giving nothing to Barron. From the judgment upon this verdict, these parties prosecute this appeal.
Pending the action James McAllister, H. E. Wright, and J. P. Wright, who owned- property fronting on Main street east of the alley and running back to Water street, offered to file their separate petitions to be made parties defendant. Upon objection by the city, their tendered pleadings were rejected. They also1 appealed, but have dismissed their appeal. Among the questions presented by counsel for appellants are: First. The constitutionality of the act of 1906. Second', The right of the city to- close Ayers alley. Third. The necessary parties to the proceeding. Fourth. The right of each of the parties to have a separate trial. Fifth. The admission of evidence as to the amount of damage resulting to each of the parties, and the competency of other evidence rejected. Sixth. The correctness of instructions upon the meas • ura of damages. Seventh. That the verdict of the jury is grossly inadequate. Eight. Whether or not the alley was closed to carry out an illegal, agreement *400between the city council and the railroad companies for the purpose of granting to the railroad companies that portion of the alley proposed to be closed.
Taking up these questions in the order named, which is also the order of their importance from a public point of view, we will first consider the act of 1906. It will be observed that, under this act, the council may adopt an ordinance directing the closing of a street, alley, or public way, and thereupon an action shall be instituted against the owners of ground in the squares or lots divided by the street, alley or way proposed to be closed; and, if they object to the closing,the court shall impanel a jury to hear evidence and determine the amount of compensation to be paid. Under this act the city council is empowered to determine the necessity for the closing, as well as the question of whether the closing is for a public use; the only matter left by the terms of the act to the courts being to impanel a jury to ascertain the amount of compensation. The serious objection urged to the validity of this act is that it invests the city council with the sole authority to decide whether the closing is necessary for public purposes, apparently denying to the courts the right to inquire into this question. Section 13 of the Constitution of the state provides in part-, that: “Nor shall any man’s property be taken or applied to public use without the consent of his representatives, and without just compensation being previously made to him. ’ ’ And section 242 declai es that: “Municipal and other corporations and individuals invested with the privilege of taking private property for public use shall make just compensation for property taken, injured or destroyed by them.; which compensation shall be paid before such taking, or paid or secured at the. election of such corporation or indi*401victual before such injury or destruction.” It is admitted that, the closing of a public street, alley, or highway is a taking of private property within the meaning of these constitutional provisions, and that compensation must be made to the abutting owners, and, further, conceded that the closing must be necessary for public purposes. Indeed, these two prim ciples are too well settled to need more than the mere citation of the authorities that support them. Transylvania University v. City of Lexington, 3 B. Mon. 25, 38 Am. Dec. 173; Lexington & Ohio R. Co. v. Appelgate, 8 Dana, 289, 33 Am. Dec. 497; Gargan v. Louisville, New Albany & Chicago R. Co., 89 Ky. 212, 12 S. W. 259, 11 Ky. Law Rep. 490, 6 L. R. A. 340; City of Louisville v. Bannon, 99 Ky. 74, 35 S. W. 120; Bannon v. Rohmeiser, 90 Ky. 48, 13 S. W. 444, 29 Am. St. Rep. 355; Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, p. 651. So that the question narrows down to the proposition: Is it essential to the validity of an act like the one under consideration that the courts should be given the right and discretion to pass upon the question whether or not the taking is for a public purpose when this issue is made, or can the General Assembly of the state by a legislative act deprive the courts of the power to inquire whether or not the taking is necessary for a public purpose. In the consideration of this question it should not be overlooked that, although public corporations cannot, except for public purposes, take without his consent the property of the individual, yet there is a difference as we will presently point out between taking private property for the use of a private corporation and taking property by a municipal corporation for the use of the municipality.
{Whenever it is attempted in the interest of a private *402corporation to take private property and devote it to a public use, the question as to whether the use to which it is to be put is or not a public one rests with the courts to decide. This principle is well settled in this state. In Tracy v. Elizabethtown, Lexington & Big Sandy R. Co., 80 Ky. 259, 3 Ky. Law Rep. 813, a proceeding was instituted by a railroad company to take by condemnation for its use the land of an. individual. No evidence was offered by either party relative to the character of the use or the necessity of the taking, although the property owner denied that the taking was necessary for a public use. The court-, after holding that as an issue was made upon this point the burden was upon the railroad company to show that the property desired to be taken was intended for a public use, said: “For if the use be not public, or no necessity for the taking exists, the Legislature cannot authorize the taking of private property against the will of the owner, notwithstanding compensation may be required. The courts cannot control or supervise the propriety or policy of the condemnation authorized by the Legislature. But this uncontrolled' power does not authorize the Legislature to so determine that the use is public as to make the determination conclusive upon the courts. * * The existence of the public use in any class of cases is a question to be determined by the courts.3 ” To the same effect is Chesapeake Stone Co. v. Moreland, 126 Ky. 656, 104 S. W. 762, 31 Ky. Law Rep. 1075. And this rule which is applicable to municipal or public corporations is not peculiar to the jurisprudence of this state, but is the one generally prevailing. Thus it is said in Lewis on Eminent Domain, section 158: “All the courts we believe concur in holding that whether a particular *403use'is'public or not within the meaning of the Constitution is a question for the judiciary.” If, therefore, the General Assembly should undertake to enact a statute giving to a private corporation, such as a railroad, turnpike, or telegraph company, invested with the power to*exercise the right of eminent domain or to a municipal corporation authority to take- theprivate property of an individual upon the payment of compensation and d-’eny to the courts the right to say whether the taking was necessary for a public purpose or not, we would not hesitate to declare so much of the act as undertook to deprive the courts of jurisdiction inoperative and void, upon the ground that the Legislature could not take from the courts the right to determine whether or not the property proposed to be taken was needed for a public purpose.. But municipalities and counties are agencies and subdivisions of the state. The streets, alleys, and highways of a municipality are public places. They are under the exclusive control of the municipality. And when the properly constituted authorities declare that the necessities, welfare, comfort, and convenience of the public demands that private property shall be taken or that public ways shall be closed1, the municipality is merely exercising a public function, such as the county courts exercise in the opening or closing of public roads. And it must be assumed, that the officers of the city as public agents will exercise with wisdom and discretion the power lodged' in their-hands. They occupy towards the public a different relation from the officers and agents of private corporations. The latter it may be assumed1 are.largely, if not altogether, influenced in the acquisition of property by the interest of the corporation they represent, and are more concerned with the private affairs en*404trusted! to their care than they are in the welfare of the public. • Therefore, when a private corporation desires to take private property, it must, if the matter is put in issne, affirmatively show by evidence that the property is needed for its use in the performance of its duties to the public. On the other hand, when a municipal corporation invested by the Legislature with the power to close streets', alleys, and -highways, or to acquire property, undertakes to exercise the power, the presumption will be indulged that it is in the- interest of and for the benefit of the public, and that the proceeding is not for private or individual use or advantage. And so, if a municipality ordains that an alley or highway shall be closed, or a street opened, it will be presumed that it is done in the interest of the public and necessary for public purposes-, and the burden of showing to the contrary will be put upon the persons who object to the proceeding, and the court should usually permit the defendants to make- the issue and present evidence in support of it. But, in- the case before ns, it was so manifest from the pleadings that the closing of the alley was in the public interest that the court did not err in refusing to permit an issue of -fact to be made on this point. A case might be presented where the court after hearing the evidence would refuse to- permit a- municipality to open, widen, or close a street, alley, or way as if it was made to- appear that the purpose was to promote private ends and that the action was not in the interests of the public. City of Louisville v. Bannon, 99 Ky. 74, 35 S. W. 120, 18 Ky. Law Rep. 10. Lewis on Eminent Domain, section 134; 27 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 114. Nor is the act unconstitutional because it seems to deny the right of the courts to inquire into the question -of public use by *405failing to provide for the submission of this fact to the judiciary. We will not assume that the Legislature intended to take from the courts the consideration of this question. This is not our construction of the act. It was not essential to its validity that it should expressly stipulate that the question of public use was a matter to be judicially investigated and determined, and we hold that the act does not take from the courts the control of the subject.
It is also argued that the question of the necessity for the taking should be left to the decision of a judicial tribunal. But all the authorities agree that the question of necessity is distinct from the question of public use, and that the former question is exclusively with the Legislature. The necessity, expediency, or propriety of exercising the right of eminent domain for a public purpose, and the extent, and manner of its exercise for such purpose, are questions of general public policy, and belong to the Legislative department of the government. Thus in Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, p. 663, it is said: “The authority to determine in any case whether it is needful to permit the exercise of this power must rest with the state itself; and the question is always one of strictly political character not requiring any hearing upon the facts or any judicial determination.” And in Lewis on Eminent Domain it is laid down in section 238: “Whether the power of eminent domain shall be put in motion for any particular purpose, and whether the exigencies of the occasion and the public welfare require or justify its exercise, are questions which rest entirely with the Legislature. When the use is public, the necessity or expediency of appropriating any particular property is not the subject) of judicial cognizance. The general principle is now *406well settled that, when the uses are in fact* public, the necessity or expediency of taking private property for such uses by the exercise of the power of eminent domain, the instrumentalities to be used, and the extent to which such power shall be delegated are questions appertaining to the political and legislative branches of the government.” The meaning of this is that the lawmaking department may invest municipal and certain private corporations that perform some public service with the right to take private property, and the courts will not inquire into the power of the Legislature to grant this authority. But, when the corporation that is invested with this power undertakes to exercise it, it is for the courts to say whether it is exercised for a public purpose or not. In other words, to determine whether or not the taking of the particular property the corporation desires to condemn is necessary for a public use. To illustrate, a telegraph, telephone, or railroad company might be invested by the General Assembly of the state with the power to take private property .of individuals for its use, and the courts would not assume to say that, the Legislature did not have the power to grant to the corporation this authority; but, when the corporation undertook to take private property, then the courts would have the unquestioned right to determine whether or not it was being taken for a public purpose; that is, whether or not it was in fact needed by the corporation in the performance of its dnties to the public, or whether it was being taken for some other use not necessary in connection with the operation and conduct of the corporation in the performance of the duties it owed to the public.
The motives of the council in closing this alley are also assailed, and the accusation is made that their *407action was influenced by a desire to assist the railroad companies that wanted the freer and safer use of Water street. But we will not stop to inquire into the motives that prompted the council in the enactment of the ordinance in question. The record discloses that the only purpose they had was to subserve the public good. There is no evidence whatever indicating improper motive. But, aside from this, when the exercise of authority by a city council is within its power, the motives that influenced it will not be inquired into, except in rare cases, where it is manifest that a flagrant wrong had been perpetrated upon the public, and valuable rights have been surrendered ostensibly for the public good, but really for the benefit of private individuals. And the exceptional conditions that would authorize the courts to interfere are not in any manner presented by this record. Taylor v. Beckham, 108 Ky. 278, 56 S. W. 177, 49 L. R. A. 258, 94 Am. St. Rep. 357; Chicago & N. W. R. Co. v. Morehouse, 112 Wis. 1, 87 N. W. 849, 56 L. R. A. 240, 88 Am. St. Rep. 919; Waterloo M’fg. Co. v. Shanahan, 128 N. Y. 345, 28 N. E. 358, 14 L. R. A. 481; Ligare v. City of Chicago, 139 Ill. 46, 28 N. E. 934, 32 Am. St. Rep. 179; Farist Steel Oo. v. City of Bridgeport, 60 Conn. 278, 22 Atl. 561, 13 L. R. A. 590; Smith v. McDowell, 148 Ill. 51, 35 N. E. 141, 22 L. R. A. 393; Van Witsen v. Gutman, 79 Md. 405, 29 Atl. 608, 24 L. R. A. 403; Horton v. Williams, 99 Mich. 423, 58 N. W. 369.
The mere fact that a corporation or an individual might be interested in or benefited by the taking of property will not of itself deny to the city the right to exercise the power. It is probable that in every case where the right of eminent domain is exercised private interests will be more or less benefited1; but the exist*408enoe of this fact will not be allowed to defeat tlie benefits that will accrue to the public. The case before us is an illustration. The railroad companies occupying Water street were benefited by the closing of this alley. Its closure removed the liability of accidents at tbe crossing, gave the companies freer use of Water street, and diminished the cost and expense of damage suits; hut at tbe same time tbe erection of the viadfiot in connection with the closing of the alley furnishes a safe and1 convenient passageway for the public from Main to High streets, relieving travelers of tbe dangers incident to the grade crossing of the alley. So far as the general public -are concerned, there is no room to doubt that the closing of the alley and the building of the viaduct was a benefit. The only persons injured by the closing of the alley were those whose property abutted' on it between the streets closed by its obstruction. And the mere fact that the railroad companies were benefited! and to secure the benefit defrayed1 part of the expense incident to the condemnation proceedings will toot be sufficient ta defeat the right of the city to exercise its power to take the property for the public good. Knapp v. City of St. Louis, 153 Mo. 560, 55 S. W. 104; Vacation of Union Street, 140 Pa. 525, 21 Atl. 406; Summerfield v. Chicago, 197 Ill. 270, 64 N. E. 490.
The next question is: When the city undertakes to close one of its highways, what persons are necessary parties to the proceeding? The streets and highways-of a city are for the use of the public, but this does not mean that the entire public of the city must he consulted before any particular highway or part thereof is closed, or that all property holders in the city shall be made parties to the action or receive compensation. If this was necessary, it would be im*409practicable to close any street, alley, or highway, or any part thereof, however essential to the comfort, convenience, and health of the city the closing might be. Thus it is said in Transylvania University v. City of Lexington, 3 B. Mion. 25, 38 Am. Dec. 173: “Every owner of ground on any street in Lexington has a right, as inviolable as it is indisputable, to the common and unobstructed use of the contiguous highway, so far as it may be necessary for affording him certain incidental easements and services, and for a convenient outlet to other streets. * * * The extent of this appurtenant right, depending on circumstances, may not in a particular case be easily definable with mathematical precision. * * * But it cannot, as to each proprietor of ground, be coextensive with all the streets and alleys of the city. As- a private right, it must, like that of vicinage, be limited by its own nature and end; that is, chiefly by the necessity of convenient access to, and outlet from, the ground of each proprietor. Beyond some such general limit, as to each proprietor of ground in the city, the streets are altogether public highways, and subject, like other public roads, to alteration and even occlusion by the sovereign will for the common weal. We could not adfnit that there is no power to change any portion of a street in any part of the city without the consent of every proprietor of ground in the whole-city, or without making compensation in money to every such proprietor.” It is, however, difficult to determine with fairness to the public, as well as the private owner, what property owners- are so interested in the street, alley, or highway proposed to be closed as to render it necessary that they should be parties to the action. But our conclusion upon this question is that the only persons who are entitled to compensa*410tion and are necessary parties to the proceeding are those whose property abuts upon or adjoins the street, alley, or highway proposed to bo closed. We do not mean by this to limit the property owner entitled to compensation or who are necessary parties to the action to those who own property immediately at the point of closure,but that it should embrace all persons and all property abutting upon the street proposed’ to be closed; To illustrate, if it is desired to close a portion of the street, or the entire street known as A., between B. and C. streets, then all the persons owning property upon A. street between B. and C. streets are necessary parties to the action, and entitled to compensation. So that in the case before us, as it was proposed to close a part of Ayres alley between High and Main streets, all persons who owned property abutting on either side of Ayres alley between High and Main streets were necessary parties to the action and entitled1 to compensation. But owners of property abutting on Main or High streets not adjoining the alley were not necessary parties or entitled to compensation because the closing of the alley did not, except indirectly, interfere with the right of ingress or egress to or from their property. In cases of this character, if it should be laid down that persons who own property not abutting on the street or alley intended to be closed as herein indicated were necessary parties or entitled to compensation, it would be difficult, if not wholly impracticable, to select the persons who should be made parties and who were entitled to compensation. Property owners on adjoining streets or squares might with a show of reason and evidence assert that their property was damaged by the closing, although they had ample access and outlet through other streets. Therefore the equitable *411and practicable rule is to limit the persons entitled to compensation, and to be made parties to the property owners abutting on the street, alley or highway-proposed to be closed between the nearest streets intersected by the street, alley, or highway to be dosed. Although if a case was presented in which it was made plain that there was a fraudulent arrangement between these property owners and the city to close the highway, not in the interest of the public, but for private ends, the court might permit in the interest of the public some- other property owner not entitled to. compensation t:o come in and resist the closing.
It is further insisted that, as Ayres alley was conveyed to and accepted by the city under a deed providing that “it shall always remain free and open as-a public street or alley,” the city had no power to-close it in violation of the express conditions under' which it was accepted. This argument, if sound* would in many instances impose upon municipalities unnecessary and unreasonable burdens. If a street of highway dedicated to a city should cease to be either useful or convenient for the public, and yet the city be obliged to keep- it open and maintain it in sufficient repair, it would be imposing upon the public a useless, expense; and to- so hold would be opposed to both reason and public policy. In our opinion the correct doctrine is that the city has the same control over highways deeded to it as was Ayres alley that it does-over its other public ways, whether acquired by -gift* purchase, or condemnation. In short, all the streets and public ways of a city, however acquired, are subject equally and alike to the control and regulation, of the municipal authorities. In accepting the alley under the. conveyance, the city did not bind itself irrevocably to keep it open. This is not the fair *412meaning of the contract. The city assumed' the duty of keeping it open as other streets and alleys were kept open, and the right to dose it as it might dose other streets and alleys.
The city made all of the appellant© defendants to the action to close the alley, insisting that the damages to which each of them was entitled should1 he assessed by the same jury and determined in the same proceeding. The appellants objected to- tbis procedure, and demanded that they be- awarded separate trials. The matter of allowing separate trials in cases of this character is largely in the discretion of the trial judge, and his discretion we would not feel authorized to interfere with unless it worked- serious injustice to some of the defendants. The action of the trial court in the ease before ns was not an- abuse of discretion, and seems to be in accordance with the provisions of the act,- which declares that all the necessary parties shall be made diefendlants to the action, and contemplates that the damages to be assessed shall be determined' in one trial. But, aside from this, there were only three parties defendant. The amount of damages to which each one of them was entitled could as well be assessed by a single jury as- in separate- trials before different .juries. The question involved as to each of them was identically the same; the only difference being that one might be entitled to recover more damages than the other. Separate trials would have involved the consideration by the .jury of every question of fact developed upon this trial except that relating to the damages to the particular property of each individual. S!o that the time of the court would have been taken np in th!e hearing of three oases in which the same identical question was involved, except as to the amount of damages to *413be awarded to each. 7. Ency. of Pl. & Pr. p. 503; Washburn v. Milwaukee R. Co., 59 Wis. 379, 18 N. W. 431; McKee v. St. Louis, 17 Mo. 184; Colcough v. Nashville R. Co., 2 Head (Tenn.) 171.
It is also -complaiued that numerous errors were committed in the admission and rejection of evidence, and instructing the jury-as to-the measure of damages. An examination! of the record discloses that the evidence was allowed to take a wide range, and every material fact necessary to enable the jury to properly .understand and assess the amount of recovery to which each of the appellants was entitled was brought out. Accepting as correct expositions of the law the instructions given by the court, the jury could not have failed to understand those facts in the case necessary to enable them to properly estimate the damages in accordance with the instructions. The court instructed the jury that-: “If they believed from the evidence that either of said'property holders will be damaged by closing of Ayres alley, the jury should say in their verdict what sum- of money will compensate the said property holder for such damages. In estimating the damage done to each property holder, the jury will consider-the value to the property owner of the property abutting on said alley and belonging to such property holder,- and, if said property is of less value to the property holder by reason of the closing of Ayres alley than it would be if said alley were left open, the difference of value to the property holder of .the property as it now is and its value as it will be when said alley is closed is the measure of damage done to the property holder by reason of the closing of said alley.” This instruction was more favorable to the property owners than they had the right to demand. They were entitled to the difference *414in the market value of the property with the alley open and its market value with the alley closed. Whereas., in the instruction given, the jury were authorized to find the damage to he the difference in the value of the property to the property owner before and after the alley was closed. The value of the property to the property owner might in some instances be a great deal more than its market value and in others less. In estimating and assessing the damages under the instruction, the jury had the right to and may have taken into consideration the personal and individual inconvenience and loss from a business standpoint that the property owner sustained. The measure of damage to which the property holder is entitled in cases of this character does not include loss occasioned by injury to his business. He is only entitled to compensation for loss sustained to his property, and this loss is the difference in the market value of the property. Any other criterion of damages would enter the field of speculation, and make the loss incapable of reasonable ascertainment. The market value of a thing is generally the best evidence of its worth — the fairest standard of its value. The individual whose property is taken might not be willing to surrender it for three times its market value. To bim it might be associated with sentimental notions that would enlarge its value far beyond the real and substantial. Again, the owner may have established a business in a particular place or building that was more valuable to him than it would be to any one else, and as a consequence the property would have a value to him far above its market value. But these eviddences or elements of value are the best of personal or individual preference and effort. They affect the individual more than they do the property, and, if al*415lowed to- enter into or control the damage,it would be virtually impossible to estimate or fix with reasonable certainty the real value of the property. It must be admitted that, when the standard by which the loss is to be measured is fixed at the market value of the property, the owner in some cases will not secure what is to him its fair value, but on the other hand, the purchaser ought not to be required to pay more than the fair market value for any property that the law gives him the right to take upon the payment of just compensation, and, when the owner has recovered1 this price, he will generally get what he is entitled to. There is some apparent conflict in the cases on this subject largely attributable to the different states of fact presented, but in Miadisonville, Hartford & E. R. Co. v. Boss, 103 S. W. 330, 31 Ky. Law Rep. 584, City of Louisville v. Hegan, 49 S. W. 532, 20 Ky. Law Rep. 1532, and L. & N. R. Co. v. Cumnock, 77 S. W. 933, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 1330, the rule we have announced is fully sustained. It is also the one approved in Lewis on Eminent Domain, section 463; Dillon on Municipal Corporations, section 623; Elliott on Streets, section 271; 15 Cyc. 701; 10 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 1151. In disposing of this question, we have not deemed it pertinent to the subject in hand to discuss the range the evidence may take in elucidating what is the market value of the property proposed to be taken. No fixed rule of universal application can be laid down. The relevancy and competency of evidence must be left to be controlled by the facts of each case as it comes up. But generally all of the facts as to the condition of the property, its surroundings, improvements, and capabilities may be shown. A full discussion of this subject will *416be found in Lewis on Eminent Domain, sections 478, 479; Elliott on Streets and Roads, section 260. In tbe case before us the injury was to the whole property. None of it was., accurately speaking, taken. Tbe only injury consisted in depriving the property of .tbe full use of an adjacent alley; and, while this was in the meaning of the Constitution a taking, yet the damage done was susceptible of being fairly estimated' upon the basis of the injury done to the market, value of the property. And what we have said upon this point must be accepted as our understanding of the law controlling cases presenting questions like the one under consideration. .
The court further instructed the jury that: “The right at present exists in the property owners on Ayres alley, as well as in all citizens of tbe city of Lexington, to use as a public highway the land adjoining Ayres alley, as originally constructed, on the west side, and being north of Water street, and lying-under the viaduct, and being opposite W. H. Henderson’s property, but this right on the part of each and every citizen is subordinate to the superior right of the Lexington Union Station to use said land for the purpose of its business as it may desire.” The land mentioned in this instruction is indicated on the map by the words “vacant space under viaduct.” To understand why this instruction was given, it will be necessary to relate briefly the situation of this space and the conditions under which it exists. Henderson’s property runs back with the alley and! on the east side thereof, to Water street. Under the viaduct at Water street, there is an open space some 70 feet long and about 30 feet wide, in which wagons and other vehicles can go from the alley. This open space is immediately across the alley from Hender*417son’s building, and teams going down tbe alley from Main street to Henderson’s building can unload, and go in the space under the viaduct, there turn around, and go out the alley to Main street. While it is a fact that vehicles going in the Main street mouth of the alley cannot cross Water street, they can be driven as far as Water street and turn around' in the space under the viaduct, and go out the way they came in. Before the alley was closed, vehicles coming from Main street could not be turned in it, but had to go out to either Water street or High street. It will thus he seen that the open space under the viaduct was a benefit to Henderson’s property, and in a large measure compensated him for the obstruction of the alley. Admitting this to be true, the argument is made that Henderson’s use of the vacant space under the viaduct is limited so as- to impair if not destroy its value to his property, and hence the court should not have instructed the jury upon this point. This argument is rested upon the ground that under the contract between the city and the railroads it is provided that the railroad companies, or rather the Lexington Union Station Company standing in their place shall be allowed to use in perpetuity so much of this space as it may desire for its purposes, and that, the right of Henderson or persons doing business at his building to its use may be at any time taken away or so curtailed as to render the use of little importance. That the giving of this instruction exercised a weighty influence upon the jury in estimating the damage to the property of Henderson by closing the alley we have no doubt. And if the right of the public as well as property owners in Ayres alley .to use this space in common with other citizens could be taken away, or so curtailed as to render it *418valueless, there would be great force in the contention of counsel for the appellants that the instruction upon this subject was misleading and prejudicial. But neither the railroad companies nor the Union Station' Company will be permitted to deny to the public or any individual the use of this space as a public highway; and the public generally may use and occupy it upon equal terms with its 'use by the Lexington Union Station for the purposes of its business, and this use by the Lexington Union Station Company must be a reasonable and a necessary use. It cannot arbitrarily exclude the public from or unnecessarily obstruct their use of this space.
It is also contended that the verdict of the jury is grossly inadequate, but we will not extend this opinion in discussing this question. The amount of damage was a matter entirely within the discretion of the jury. They were doubtless • familiar with the location of the property, and the injury to its value that resulted from closing the alley. They saw and heard the witnesses testify, and their finding of the amount o.f damages will not, as we have frequently announced, be disturbed, as it was not so inadequate as to indicate that the conclusion was the result of passion or prejudice.
After a careful consideration of all the material questions presented by the record, we have reached the conclusion that the judgment should' be affirmed; and it is so ordered.