43 N.Y.S. 524 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
Lead Opinion
The appellants call our attention to rulings of the referee in. the admission of testimony which they claim violate the rule laid down in the case of Jamieson v. The Kings County Elevated Railway Company (147 N. Y. 322), and ask us to reverse the' judgment on account of such rulings. The case was tried before a referee, and before the commencement of the trial the parties stipulated “ that either party may read' in evidence such portions of the testimony taken in the case of William P. Douglas against the New York Elevated Railroad Company and the Manhattan Railway Company, excepting the testimony of the experts therein, as counsel may desire.” In pursuance of that stipulation,
The records of the court show that, prior to the announcement of that decision by the Court of Appeals, the parties to this elevated railroad litigation had not applied, in any of the cases, that rule; but these cases were largely tried upon the evidence of the value, both fee and rental, of particular adjacent properties, both on the same street as that of the plaintiff .and on ad joining streets; and it is quite evident that counsel for the defendants did not wish in this ease to rely upon the objections to the testimony as applied in the Jamieson case appears from the fact that this form of objection was not taken to any questions asked of witnesses actually examined in this case. To none of these questions calling for either the rent received or the amounts, realized upon sales of property, other than that described in the complaint, was the objection applied in the Jamie-
Much of the testimony offered by the plaintiff’s experts was, objected to, but in no instance to' which our attention has been called, or that we have been able to discover; after a careful examination of the record, was any objection taken on the ground that, the witness was testifying as to collateral issues, or that such testi-' mony was not within the issues in this case. .
It seems to us quite clear that neither of the parties, upon the trial of this action, had in mind the rule applied in the Jamieson case;; that they did not, as a fact, nor did they intend to, take the objection that the testimony as to the rental or fee value of other specific, property was incompetent for any purpose, but that it was the intention of both parties to rely upon such evidence in determining the-questions at issue.
We have carefully gone over this record, however, and considered the testimony taken before the referee, having eliminated all the testimony which was incompetent within the ruling .of the Jmnieson case, and, after thus eliminating such incompetent testimony, even where it was not properly objected to, we think that the finding of the referee is amply sustained by the evidence. The property >yas. in a business part of the city upon a narrow street, with the defendants’ road running close to the front of the buüding. The locality of the property, the use to which it is applicable and the proximity and location of the defendants’ road are all to be considered by the trial court in determining the amount of damage sustained by the-use of the street, whereby there has been a.trespass upon the plaintiff’s property and an appropriation of his easement. That the evidence shows that such injury is serious is perfectly apparent, and we do not think that we would, upon any view of the case, be justified in putting the parties to the expense of a new trial,- where, eliminating all of the incompetent testimony, we cam see that the injury inflicted upon the plaintiff’s property was serious, and that the award which was made, considering all the circumstances, was moderate.
The judgment should, therefore, be affirmed, with costs.
Williams, Patterson and O’Brien, JJ., concurred; Van Brunt,.
P. J., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. The exceptions were duly before tlie court. It is 'plain that that was the understanding of the court and counsel. They were then considered by plaintiff to be valueless, and, although he was mistaken, there is no reason for depriving the appellants of the ruling.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.