271 Mass. 415 | Mass. | 1930
These four cases are petitions for the assessment of damages arising out of taking of land for highway purposes by the town of Arlington, on May 3, 1927, under G. L. c. 82, §§ 21-25; G. L. c. 79, §§ 12, 14. They were tried together to a jury, which took a view accompanied by the trial judge. At the close of the evidence the cases were submitted to the jury with instructions in no respect excepted to by any of the petitioners. In each case a verdict was returned of $1 for the petitioner. The cases came before this court on exceptions taken by the petitioners to parts of the testimony of an expert witness called in behalf of the respondent without objection being raised as to his qualifications. The case of Baker is before us also on his exceptions to the exclusion of evidence of the expense to him which was caused by the lowering of the grade of the land taken, and in respect to an alleged injurious effect of the taking of his land upon a scheme or plan of division into lots of his remaining land.
It was in evidence that on December 17,1923, prior to the taking in question, the town of Arlington duly established exterior lines for Gray Street under the provision of G. L. c. 41, §§ 80 and 81. By said § 80 it is provided that a town accepting § 73 of chapter 41 relative to the appointment of a board of survey may “establish, in the manner provided for the laying out of town ways, the exterior lines of any way, the plan of which is approved under section seventy-four or seventy-five or under such special act; and thereafter no structure shall be erected or maintained between the exterior lines of the way so established, except that buildings or parts of buildings existing at the time of the establishment of said lines may remain and be maintained to such extent and under such conditions as may be prescribed by the board of survey of such town.” Section 81 provides that “Any person injured in his property ... by the establishment... of exterior lines under section eighty may recover the damages so caused under chapter seventy-nine.” G. L. c. 79, § 12, provides that the damages for the taking of property “shall be fixed at the value thereof before the taking, and in case only part of a parcel of land
On September 29, 1924, the town of Arlington took an easement for sewer purposes over and in the land within the exterior lines which had been established on December 17, 1923, and within the lines which now constitute Gray Street, in front of all the lots except the Baker lot, by a taking duly made under St. 1896, c. 282; St. 1904, c. 3, and G. L. c. 79. These statutes provide for the payment by the town of all damages sustained by reason of such taking, such damages, if not agreed upon, to be assessed by a jury in the Superior Court in the same manner as in the case of lands taken for highways. It is plain the amount of damages which the several petitioners were entitled to receive because of the taking of their lands for the purposes of a highway was to be ascertained upon consideration of the fact that, before the taking on May 3, 1927, those lands were subject to easements for sewer purposes, for the establishment of exterior lines — one or both easements as the fact might be — and that under these conditions the amount of the damages was to be measured by the diminution in the value of the property by reason of the taking of the easement for highway purposes. Boston Chamber of Commerce v. Boston, 195 Mass. 338. At the trial the petitioners testified as to the fair market value per foot of their several lots before the taking and estimated their damages to be the value of such lots so ascertained less the amount taken or the fair market value of the area remaining after the taking.
Upon the issues, whether the several petitioners had been damaged by the taking and the amount of such damage, the respondent put to its expert witness a hypothetical question which, save as it was required to be changed to state the name of the owner of the lot, the area of the lot as a whole, and the area of that part of the lot which was taken for highway purposes, in each case was as follows: “Now, Mr. Francis, I want you to assume that in regard to the MacCully lot here, that it originally consisted of
The petitioners objected that the question in the form put was “not the proper way to ask it. The question is what was the fair market value of the property before the taking and what was the fair market value of the property after the taking.” The trial judge then said: “Well, having in mind the general question . . . you may answer, Mr. Witness, what in your opinion was the fair market value of that particular strip . . . Before the taking.” The petitioners, still contending that the form of the question was improper because the question related to the measure of damages to the property as a whole, the judge said: “There are different ways of asking these questions. ' You may center your attention on the particular part of the taking or you can ask questions to bring out the comparative values of the whole property before and after.” Thereupon, sub
On this part of the case the judge charged the jury as follows: “We have been dealing with this damage question in two ways. Some of the questions have been directed to the market value of the triangular piece of land actually taken and secondly as to the damage of the land which is remaining. Personally I feel that in this kind of a case you will probably get at it better by comparing the fair market value of the whole lot just before the taking with the fair market value of the whole lot right after the taking, but you may use either method, the result theoretically is the same. That is, compare the market value of the whole lot just before the taking and the market value of the whole lot just after the taking and you may ask yourselves what in fact was the fair value of the land actually taken and then ask yourselves secondly what the result or damage was to the land remaining and then by using the figures arrive at the difference, as answer to the two questions, you determine what the total damage, if any, to the whole lot was.. Your difficulty, of course, is where you have a small strip of land like this. Counsel all agree there is little, very little opportunity for selling such a strip of land in the market. In other words, it has no real market value, although the taking of that strip of land may lessen the value of the land remaining. It is for you to say. In any event, what you are striving to arrive at, is the total damage to the lot caused by the taking, if you find there to be any.”
We find nothing in the questions admitted or in the charge which supports the contention of the petitioners, in substance, that the experts under the rulings of the judge, and the jury under his instructions, were permitted to split up an afea and give an opinion as to the market value
As respects the excluded evidence supra in the case of Baker the petitioner made no offer of proof and therefore we are unable to determine whether the exclusion of the evidence was prejudicial.
In each case the exceptions are overruled.
So ordered.