393 Pa. 589 | Pa. | 1958
Lead Opinion
Opinion by
The power of eminent domain is one of the most awesome as well as arbitrary rights of government. By it the State may take a citizen’s property, whether or not he approves of the taking. However, the citizen has a right equally as awesome and that is, his government must pay him the value of the property taken. What represents that value sometimes develops into a legal controversy. It has so developed here.
In extending MeKnight Road, a fine 80-foot boulevard carrying traffic from Pittsburgh into the beautiful North Hills area of Allegheny County, the Commonwealth found it necessary to condemn certain property belonging to Brown & Vaughn Development Company, because the course of the highway was cast through the. very holdings of Brown & Vaughn. This company owned a 92.16-acre tract which it had laid out in lots for homes. In preparing the residential site, which it called Longvue Acres Plan No. 9, it levelled ground, cut, graded and paved roads, installed sewers and dug foundations for homes. In fact, by the time the Commonwealth appeared on the scene ready to plough through the very center of Longvue with bulldozers, the company had built 17 homes and was in the process of constructing 45 more. The bulldozer invasion meant the outright taking of 4.80 acres and the isolating mutilation of 9.21 acres more.
A Board of Viewers appointed to evaluate the plaintiff’s loss awarded damages in the sum of $20,000. The Commonwealth appealed to the Court of Common Pleas
In his opening address to the jury, plaintiff’s counsel made the assertion that it was the Commonwealth which was dissatisfied with the award of the Board of Viewers and had taken the appeal to the Court of Common Pleas. Commonwealth’s counsel objected and moved for the. withdrawal of a juror. The Trial Judge instructed the jury to disregard the remark and explained that it did not matter which party appealed to the Court of Common Pleas: “Ladies and gentlemen, in a case of this character much of what counsel outlined is correct. However, .it makes no difference who files a petition to have viewers appointed or who takes an appeal. Frequently they both take appeals. The Board of Viewers is an agency of the Court, an instrumentality of the Court; they do the preliminary work to help the Court along.”
At the termination of the taking of testimony in the case the Trial Judge made the same error committed by plaintiff’s counsel by stating: “This is an appeal by the defendant from an award by the Board of Viewers.” When this was called to his attention, he admitted the mistake and instructed the jury: “I did say that, but it does not make any difference who takes the appeal. Frequently both do it. They have a right to have a jury decide it. Nobody knows what occurred before the Board of Viewers. You have no right to consider that. This is a trial as if it had never been tried before.”
While not approving of the reference to the identity of the appellant before the Court of Common Pleas, we
Commonwealth’s counsel, however, in their appeal, still insist that the reference to the Board of Viewers proceedings constituted basic error, which entitles them to a new trial. On this point they lean heavily on the case of Fisher v. Dela. L. & W. R.R. Co., 227 Pa. 635. While that case is a sturdy oak of authority in the field over which it throws its protective shade, it can serve in this case only as a twig of relevancy. In the Fisher case, counsel for the plaintiff specifically mentioned to the jury the amount of the award rendered by the Board of Viewers. In the case at bar, there was not the slightest shadow of an intimation as to the nature of the award of the Board of Viewers. We are satisfied from a reading of the record that the lower Court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to withdraw a juror or grant a new trial because of the reference made by plaintiff’s counsel and by the Court itself.
The Commonwealth contends that the Trial Judge told the jury to ignore the testimony produced by its experts as to the value of the plaintiff’s property before and after the taking. In support of this argument, Commonwealth’s counsel in their brief quote various excerpts taken from the Judge’s charge to the jury. Several of those excerpts read: “You have a right to reject, in toto, the opinion of an expert witness you may disbelieve, whether it is contradicted or not — and they are contradicted in this case — and supply your own good common sense and horse sense.” ... “I know
Taking disconnected fragments of a Court’s charge and - considering them unrelated to context is like cutting up a painting and then pasting the pieces together on. a new theme. By this process, Washington Crossing the Delaware may be made to look like Custer’s Last Stand. The Trial Judge did tell the jury to use their common sense in determining the fair market value of the property under consideration but he also told them: “We must use expert testimony; that is the only way Ave can prove this case because we must rely exclusively on the testimony of expert AAdtn esses.”
It is true that the Trial Judge at times in his charge placed something less glorious than laurel wreaths on the heads of expert witnesses. It is true he did say: “If I were to give my interpretation of an expert witness, you . wouldn’t like it and the lawyers Avouldn’t like it, — ” But he followed this immediately Avith the statement — “but both sides must use it.”
Much has been said in the reports, in text books, and in legal dissertations on the asserted unreliability of expert testimony, especially in the field of real estate values. In this very ease, the enormous disparity betAveen the market values testified to by plaintiff’s experts and those announced by the defendant’s experts would seem to emphasize the poor opinion generally entertained on real estate experts. It may be noted that one plaintiff’s expert testified that the plaintiff suffered darnagés in the sum of. $64,400; another said the damages amounted to $72,700. The three experts called by the Commonwealth testified that the darnagés did
Commonwealth counsel cite Avins v. Commonwealth, 379 Pa. 202, in contending for a new trial. In -the Avins case a new trial was ordered because, as this Court recorded it, the Trial Judge said — “that he rejected the opinions of the experts and, having himself viewed the premises, applied instead ‘good, sound, common horse sense.’ ” Our Court properly held that: “A jury may not disregard the evidence as to property values in a condemnation proceeding and substitute its own ideas . . . And, what a jury thus may not do, a court as the fact-finder without a jury likewise may not do. . . Likewise here, the common sense exercised by the court should have been in the appraisal of the testimony; it should have looked for any possible enlightenment touching the elements to be taken into consideration in determining the fair market value of the property and the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the opinions of the expert witnesses.”
The difference between the Avins ease and the case at bar is obvious: There, the Trial Judge completely
In the case of Leaf v. Pennsylvania Co., 268 Pa. 579, this Court affirmed a charge in which the Trial Judge said: “ ‘When it comes to the question of damages, in a case of this kind, you should use above everything else your good common sense, your horse sense, if I may use that term.’ ”
In the present case the Trial Judge also called upon the jury several times to use “horse sense.” It is suggested, in the absence of any showing that an equine evaluation of real estate values is of particular merit, that such phrase be omitted from future charges, especially in view of the fact that the birth rate of horses in recent years has been declining so steadily that there is danger that within the foreseeable future jurors will have no knowledge of horses.
Commonwealth’s counsel complains in their brief that “The learned Court erred in disparaging the evidence of the price paid by plaintiff, six months prior to the condemnation.” It is not apparent from a reading of the record that there was any such disparagement. The Court allowed evidence of the purchase price; in fact, the deed showing the consideration was introduced as an exhibit and the Commonwealth real estate experts commented on the purchase price. The Trial Judge at one part of the proceedings did say: “Here is a development with 17 homes sold. It is an improper question to ask what the original cost was. If they had proposed plans and nothing done, that would have been different. It is for the jury.” But it is not evident that the remark could have influenced the jury against the Commonwealth because two of its expert witnesses testified that the plaintiff’s property
In their brief, Commonwealth counsel enumerate seven alleged trial errors, none of which would justify a new trial. For instance, it is complained that the Commonwealth was not allowed to cross-examine a witness, Andrew Shuty, as to why he failed to testify to certain matters before the Board of Viewers. Since all proceedings in the Court of Common Pleas are de novo, it is not clear what possible help it would be to a jury in that Court to find out what a witness before the Board of Viewers did not say.
It is also lamented by the Commonwealth that a witness was asked the same question four different times. Since the question was asked twice by plaintiff’s counsel and twice by defendant’s counsel, we do not feel that any new trial could effect a more equitable ratio of volubility.
Nor do we see any reason for ordering a new trial so that the Commonwealth may ask an expert witness to testify to the Zoning Ordinance of McCandless Township. The Commonwealth could have introduced the ordinance itself at the trial if it was really concerned about the matter, which we doubt that it was.
Finally, the Commonwealth wants a new trial for a reason which, of course, embraces all the other reasons, that is, an asserted excessive verdict. An analysis of the testimony fails to give substantiation to the appellant’s alarm as to excessive compensation. In addition to outrightly losing 35 building lots (averaging in size 75 x 140 feet), the plaintiff expended some $18,000 for fills to relocate streets and rehabilitate building lots affected by the condemnation. The plaintiff company also made an outlay of $11,609.89 to relocate and install additional sewer lines to serve the
The Commonwealth here appealed from the Board of Viewers’ award of $20,000 to the Court of Common Pleas where it was set back with a verdict of $57,700. There is no assurance that another venture into the assizes may not result in an even heavier reverse.- We are satisfied from a reading of the record that the lower Court was justified in concluding, based on the jury’s findings, that $47,800 represents fair and just compensation for the property taken by the Commonwealth. The plaintiff is satisfied with that amount and the Commonwealth should not be content to pay less than what the facts, fortified by the law in the matter, prove to be just and fair compensation.
Judgment affirmed.
Black v. Troutman, Co., 385 Pa. 138.
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting Opinion by
I would reverse the judgment and would order a new trial because of the errors, appearing of record, so egregious as to be unsusceptible of eradication by the trial judge’s related caution to the jury or of correction
However, since this court is affirming the judgment, no useful purpose would be served by my now detailing the reasons, which appear to me to be overwhelming, why the jury’s verdict should have been rejected by the trial court without further ado and why the remittitur ordered by the court below failed to rectify the serious injustice done the Commonwealth. The appropriation of private property for public use through an exercise of the power of eminent domain is indeed “most awesome”, not only for the condemnee but for the condemnor as well. Both are entitled to scrupulous fairness in the determination of the damages entailed. Such, however, is not the standard of treatment accorded the Commonwealth in this case, as I see it.