Opinion by
At the trial of the plaintiffs’ appeal from an award of viewers for damages to their property due to the condemnation of a portion by the defendant municipality, the jury returned a verdict in the sum of $6,000. The court en banc refused the defendant’s motion for a new trial conditioned upon the plaintiffs’ filing a remittitur for $1,000 which was done. Judgment for $5,000 was accordingly entered and the defendant appealed.
The plaintiffs were the owners of a tract of land in the City of Jeannette improved with a four-room dwelling. They had acquired the property in two parcels, viz., (1) a tract having a frontage of 32 feet on Sellers Avenue and a depth of 100 feet whereon the dwelling was erected, and (2) an adjoining vacant lot with a frontage of 25 feet on Sellers Avenue and a depth of 123 feet. For the extension of another street (Seventh), the City appropriated of the plaintiffs’ property all that had been the vacant lot and a portion of what had been the lot whereon the dwelling stood. The dwelling itself remained intact and the entrance thereto, from. Sellers Avenue was unaffected. In addition to the actual taking, however, the street improvement left the rear of the unappropriated portion of the property substantially below grade.
;. The appellant assigns for error (1) the trial judge’s refusal to permit the defendant to cross-examine the husband-plaintiff as to the' prices paid for the' house and lot and the vacant lot upon the plaintiffs’ acquir *379 ing them, respectively, 10 months and 4 months prior to the condemnation, the witness having testified in direct examination to the value of the property as a whole at the date of the condemnation; (2) the trial judge’s refusal to permit the defendant to cross-examine one of the plaintiffs’ valuation witnesses as to the price at which a somewhat similarly situated vacant property had been sold; and (3) the alleged inadequacy of the court’s charge on the measure of damages with respect to (a) detention of payment and (b) the meaning of fair market value.
In
Rea v. Pittsburg & Connellsville Railroad Com
pany,
The scope of the ruling in the
Rea
case was later extended by this court in the case of
Greenfield v. Philadelphia,
The rule to be deduced from the
Rea
and
Greenfield
cases is that, when an owner of property offers himself as a witness upon the trial of his claim for damages due to a condemnation of his property or a portion of it, he may be asked on cross-examination what he paid for the property, if his acquisition thereof is not so remote as to deprive the purchase price of any relevant evidentiary worth; and, that is so, whether or not he testified to the value of his property upon direct examination. Introduction of the purchase price is not permitted, however, in order to influence, by comparison, the jury’s determination of the property’s value at the time of the condemnation. Its legally intended office is to affect the credibility of the witness in respect of his valuation opinion (as in the
Rea
case) or to impeach the integrity of his claim (as in the
Greenfield
case). The rule is, therefore, not applicable to a situation such as the record here discloses. What the defendant’s counsel sought to elicit on cross-examination of the husband-plaintiff was not what the plaintiffs had paid for the property as an integrated whole but what they had paid for each of the tracts separately at different times. The two sums added together would not have given a figure by which the witness’s opinion of the value of the properties as a whole at the time of the condemnation could have been impeached. It is not only possible, but probable, that each of the constituent lots took on an increased value upon its being merged with the other which was forthwith to be reflected in the value of the properties as a whole. If anything, testimony as to the several purchase prices would have been confusing rather than justly impeaching: cf.
Goodman v. City of
Bethlehem,
Coming to the question of defendant’s proposal to cross-examine a valuation witness for the plaintiffs as to the price for which a somewhat similarly situated vacant tract of land had been sold (more or less contemporaneously with the condemnation), the rule in general is that “while a party cannot bring out on cross-examination evidence of the price paid for other property unless the witness has already testified that his opinion is based on his knowledge of the sales of such property, yet, if he has so testified, he may be cross-examined as to prices, for the purpose of testing his good faith and credibility”:
Llewellyn v. Sunnyside Coal Company,
While the court’s charge on the question of damages for detention of payment of the compensation due for the taking was meager, it did not reflect positive error. In that situation, the defendant, having failed to ask for fuller or more specific instructions, is not now in position to assail the charge as inadequate. The same can be said for the appellant’s complaint that the trial judge neglected to define the term “fair market value”. The defendant neither presented a point for instructions in such regard nor did it ask the court to define the term even after the matter had been brought directly to counsel’s attention by the court’s affirmance of the plaintiffs’ point that the measure of damage was “the difference between the market value before and after the taking.” No exception to the affirmance of this point was taken. Nor is it assigned for error. Immediately after the affirmance of the plaintiffs’ point, the trial judge inquired of counsel, — “Is there any request for further instruction to the jury.” Defendant’s counsel made none. The procedural situation thus revealed parallels that in
Tibbetts v. Prudential Insurance Co.,
The record impels the conclusion that the case was thoroughly tried by counsel and fairly submitted by the court. After a review of the testimony, the court en banc affected a proportionately substantial reduction in the verdict with a view to arriving at a just result which we believe has been achieved.
Judgment affirmed.
