166 A. 747 | Conn. | 1933
The plaintiffs appeal from an assessment of benefits resulting from the layout of new street and building lines along a portion of Main Street in the city of Hartford. Under the charter, the appeals were taken to the judge of the Court of Common Pleas for Hartford County and were by him referred to a committee. The matter comes before us upon appeals taken from his judgments accepting the reports of the committee and fixing the damages and benefits as found by him. A considerable number of properties were affected by the proceedings, there were about forty-one appeals to the judge of the Court of Common Pleas, thirteen of these were withdrawn, and the others were divided between appeals taken from awards of damages, by various lessees of buildings or portions thereof upon the lands affected, and appeals taken from the assessment of benefits. The cases before us fall within the latter class. The committee first took up for hearing the appeals from the awards of damages and after he had concluded them he heard those taken from the assessments of benefits. The charter provides that, "when separate appeals are taken by different parties from one assessment and appraisal, all such appeals shall be heard and tried as one cause." 7 Special Laws, p. 527. This provision has its basis in practical *78 necessity, because the charter also provides that if, upon any appeal, the judge or committee hearing it shall find cause to alter the appraisal or assessment, he shall proceed to reapportion the whole amount of damages and benefits upon the persons or land specially benefited. 7 Special Laws, p. 527. It would hardly be feasible to carry out this provision if each appeal were separately determined.
The committee began his work by summoning to a conference all the attorneys representing interested parties and at that conference made certain assignments by days to hear some of the appeals from the awards of damages, but made no such assignments to hear appeals from the assessments of benefits. When he was ready to take up the latter, he held another conference with the attorneys of interested parties. At this he suggested that the issues as to whether or not there were any benefits to the properties affected, and if so the percentage or percentages of values to be used, were general and could be heard at one time, leaving individual matters as to the value of each particular piece to be heard separately; or, as he stated it later, that there was no particular reason for having the witnesses for the city testify in each case as to their reasons for fixing values and for a benefit and its amount and that the evidence as to these matters could be heard at one time for all cases. To this statement there was no dissent. The committee also stated that it was customary for the appellants to present their evidence first, and he proceeded to assign some of the appeals for hearing on days certain and at once began hearing one of the appeals, that of Julius Gold and others.
Upon the filing of his reports remonstrances were filed in the various appeals and the transcript of the entire record before the committee, as the trial judge *79 states, was available for reference by counsel in argument and was submitted to him in considering and ruling upon the points raised in the remonstrances. When he filed his memorandum of decision he recited in it the statements made by the committee at the conference with attorneys which we have summarized above, and ruled that the evidence of the real-estate experts given in any appeal was available in passing upon the remonstrance in each appeal. After his memorandum of decision was filed, the appellants now before us made motions for reargument upon the ground that this ruling of the judge was erroneous, but in his memorandum of decision upon the motions the trial judge states that the argument upon them developed into a reargument of the original remonstrances and he refused to change his decision. The appellants have assigned as error the use by the trial judge, in deciding each appeal, of evidence offered upon the hearings of other appeals, except that of Julius Gold and others, and those as to which they state in their assignments of error special agreements were made.
Compliance with the charter provision that all appeals are to be heard and tried as one cause would make the evidence offered upon any appeal, when relevant, proper for consideration in determining each appeal. When there are as many appeals from a single appraisal and assessment as occurred in this instance, no doubt this may impose a heavy burden upon each appellant, to be represented at the hearing of all appeals, but if so, this is an incident of the procedure established by the charter and the remedy, if any, does not lie in the power of the court. If there was error in the use by the trial judge in determining the cases before us of evidence offered at the hearing of other appeals than those recognized as applicable in the assignments *80 of error, it must be because of some understanding between the committee and counsel evidenced by the circumstances we have recited and the course of procedure actually followed consequent thereon. The memorandum of the judge discloses that he considered only evidence offered upon the appeals from the assessment of benefits, and we may restrict ourselves to that evidence. The suggestions made by the committee as to the course of procedure to be followed were vague and indefinite, particularly in view of the fact that the procedure followed called upon the appellants to go forward first with their evidence, and it was not suggested that the evidence offered by the defendants upon the general issues outlined by the committee should be heard at any particular time. The assignments of error, by excepting the first appeal heard from the appellants' claim that evidence taken upon other appeals should not have been considered, indicate that they regarded this appeal as being the occasion when the city would offer evidence upon these general issues, but the committee's suggestion does not indicate this, but rather that he had in mind an occasion which would be apart from the consideration of any particular appeal. However that may be, we are not apprised in any way which we regard as authoritative as to the procedure which was actually followed. Nor can we entirely absolve counsel for the appellants of their share of responsibility for the situation which has developed. Confronted with so indefinite a suggestion for future procedure, surely they should have sought a definite understanding as to the course to be followed, and if they now find that the course which was actually taken did not accord with that which they anticipated, it is difficult to see where they can place the whole blame upon the committee or the attorneys for the city. *81
In each of these appeals the report of the committee consisted merely of a statement that the plaintiff owned certain premises at the date of the taking of the property for the widening of the street, that the land had a certain value as of that date and that the plaintiffs were benefited in a certain sum. The plaintiffs in each case filed a rather long remonstrance, in which they did not seek additions to the report of the committee or ask its recommittal. They did make some indefinite claims that the committee erred in certain matters of law, but these claims did not accord with our rule that a remonstrance must specifically state the errors which it is claimed were committed at the hearing before the committee, and they will be disregarded.Liefeld v. Coffin,
The contention made in one of the appeals before us, that the committee erred in basing the assessment of benefits upon the value of the land exclusive of any buildings, does not appear in the remonstrance; indeed, so far as the record shows, it was never made before the committee despite the fact that early in the hearing of the appeal of Gold and others, the first appeal heard, he suggested that he would probably follow the rule he finally adopted. The only ground of remonstrance requiring consideration is that the finding of the committee as to the amount of benefits in each case was not supported by the evidence.
If, upon the hearing of the remonstrances, the trial judge concluded that, giving to the evidence the effect to which it was entitled in law, the conclusions of the committee were reasonably supported, the trial judge had no choice except to overrule the remonstrances.Heublein, Inc. v. Street Commissioners,
In order to determine whether there was any evidence which could reasonably support the finding of the committee as to the amount of damages, it is necessary to examine the evidence in the light of certain *83
principles of law. Benefits to be assessed in such proceedings as these must be special, as distinguished from the general benefits from the improvement to the public at large; that is, they must be such pecuniary benefits as result to the particular landowner by reason of his ownership of the land affected; the theory upon which they rest is that by reason of the improvement the landowner has received an increment of value to his land which it is no more than just, to the extent necessary to pay for the improvement, he should remit to the municipality. Ferguson v. Stamford,
Again, benefits to be assessed must be direct, immediate, appreciable and certain, not contingent, remote and uncertain. Bridgeport v. New York N. H.R.Co.,
If we confine ourselves to the evidence of the expert witness upon real-estate values offered by the city upon the hearing of the appeals of Gold and others, of Cohen and others, of Feinberg and others, and of Goldberg and others and, as regards the two appeals last mentioned the evidence of an expert witness offered by the appellants, there was undoubtedly positive testimony that the lands involved in these appeals would be benefited by the improvement to the extent of at least ten per cent of their value. It is true that the appellants claim that the expert witness offered by the city, in stating the method by which he arrived at his estimate of the amount of benefits included certain elements not properly to be considered; that upon *85 cross-examination, to summarize his testimony rather baldly, he stated that in all street widenings in the city, with some exceptions, there was a minimum benefit to the lands affected amounting to ten per cent of their value; that the minimum measurable difference in land values was ten per cent, explaining that less than this difference would not have any material effect upon a sale of the property; and that the increase in value in his judgment would not be immediately realized but would accrue within a reasonable time, possibly in one to three years, a statement which a reading of his testimony suggests was largely if not entirely based on the fact that, since the land was taken, there had been little market for any real estate in the city. It is also true that the witness called by the appellants, to whom we have referred, testified that he doubted whether the owner of the property could have gotten the increased value immediately upon the taking of the land, but in his judgment it would be a matter of years before that increase would be actually realized.
The claim of the appellants is that the testimony of these witnesses, by the inclusion of elements not properly to be considered, and by the qualifications made by them upon cross-examination, could not reasonably support the conclusion of the committee. The purpose of offering in evidence the opinions of expert witnesses as to such matters as land values is to aid the trier to arrive at his own conclusion, which is to be reached by weighing those opinions in the light of all the circumstances in evidence bearing upon value, and his own general knowledge of the elements going to establish it. Head v. Hargrave,
The judgments entered by the judge of the Court of Common Pleas provide in each instance that the city should recover the amount of benefits found to be due by the committee, with interest from the time which the committee had found was agreed upon by all parties as that of the taking of the property. The appellants, in amendments to their assignments of error, attack that part of the judgments allowing the city interest. In Bishop v. Meriden,
We have examined the charter of the city of Hartford to see if there are any provisions in it which make inapplicable the conclusion we reached in the Bishop case and find none. Indeed, there are provisions which point clearly to the necessity of following that rule. The charter provides that the judge of the Court of Common Pleas "shall have, for the purpose of disposing of said appeal, all the power of the Superior Court, and may render judgment thereon, and may tax costs in favor of either party, and issue execution for said costs, to be taxed as upon civil process in the Superior Court." 7 Special Laws, p. 527. It is clearly implied in this provision that the judge in appeals such as these can issue execution only for costs, and hence any judgment he might render for the recovery *88 of money damages would not be directly enforcible, but resort would be necessary to an action at law upon his judgment, thus in no way simplifying the procedure of collecting assessments. The grant to the judge of all the power of the Superior Court in disposing of such appeals must refer to the procedural matters involved in the determination of the amount of damages and benefits.
The charter also provides that an appeal may be taken from the assessment of benefits only; 7 Special Laws, p. 527; and also that where damages are appraised to and benefits assessed against a property owner the latter shall be set off against the former, but that in any such case the court of common council may order the entire amount of such damages to be paid and the amount of the benefits to be collected. 6 Special Laws, p. 874. If an appeal is taken from an assessment of benefits only, the judge of the Court of Common Pleas would not be in a position to make such an off set, and in an appeal involving both damages and benefits he could not preempt the right of the city to determine whether there should be such an off set or not. As judgments upon appeals such as these should not provide for recovery by the city, they should not fix the amount of interest due upon an assessment. While we appreciate the desire of the parties to have determined the time from which the interest would run upon the assessments involved in these cases, any decision upon that matter would be outside the scope of the issues presented and we cannot properly make it.
There is error in the form of the judgments alone, they are set aside and the causes remanded with direction to enter judgments in all respects in accordance with those from which these appeals are taken, except