252 Mass. 311 | Mass. | 1925
This is a petition for the assessment of damages caused by a taking of real estate by the defendant on July 8,1924, to widen Salem Street and Riverside Avenue in Medford. The petitioner’s property, consisting of five thousand two hundred and eighty-five square feet of land with a brick building thereon, was located at the corner of the two streets. The city took two thousand and seventy-three feet of this land and rendered valueless the portion of the building which remained after the taking.
The testimony of the petitioner tended to prove that before the taking his front land was worth $18 and his back land $16 per square foot, and after the taking that his remaining land was worth $14.35 per square foot; while the testimony of the respondent tended to show that the fair market value of the land before the taking was $4 to $5 per square foot and the value of the land remaining was not changed by the taking. In support of his contention that his remaining land was damaged, the petitioner, subject to the respondent’s exception, introduced testimony that this land was sold by him in October, 1924, for $45,200, or at the rate of about $14.07 per square foot. This testimony was properly admitted. Evidence of sales made after the date of a taking, have been held to be competent. Manning v. Lowell, 173 Mass. 100. Peabody v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 187 Mass. 489. The fact that the price for the property was paid in large part by mortgages did not affect the competency of the testimony, provided the sale was a genuine one. Fourth National Bank of Boston v. Commonwealth, 212 Mass. 66. Sufficient testimony was introduced to justify a
A ruling admitting testimony means, even in the case where a statute requires a preliminary finding of facts, that all the findings required for the determination of its competency have been made. Newton Centre Trust Co. v. Stuart, 208 Mass. 221. The jury then have the responsibility of weighing the evidence and deciding the case upon all of the evidence, and it is within their exclusive province to decide what testimony they will believe.
The second exception relates to testimony offered in rebuttal. The respondent, without objection, introduced in evidence the assessed value of the property for the last twelve years before the taking. It appeared that in 1916 this valuation was on the basis of $3 per square foot, and that the petitioner asked for and received an abatement of ten per cent in that year. In cross-examination he was asked his reason for requesting the abatement, and stated in substance that it was because other land in the vicinity of Medford Square adjoining his land was assessed lower than his and that he wanted to be put on a basis with other property owners abutting on the square. The respondent in rebuttal called an assessor to testify to the assessed value, in 1916, of the property of one Lawrence on the southerly side of Salem Street, and abutting on the petitioner’s property in the rear;
In Johnson v. Lowell, 240 Mass. 546, it was held to be reversible error to admit assessed value of other land in the vicinity of the petitioner’s land after the respondent had introduced evidence under the statute of the assessed value of the petitioner’s land for the three years preceding the taking. The assessed valuation in 1916 was not competent under the statute. It was in without objection, but testimony which gets into a case.in this way does not give the party putting it in the right to impeach it. Gorham v. Moor, 197 Mass. 522. Casavan v. Sage, 201 Mass. 547. The testimony offered in rebuttal raised a collateral issue and might, if admitted, lead to an inquiry into the relative values of all land abutting on Medford Square. The ruling of the trial judge excluding the testimony was right.
Exceptions overruled.