190 Pa. 51 | Pa. | 1899
Opinion bt
The defendant in the construction of its steam railroad appropriated for its roadbed fifty-three one hundredths of an
The first assignment is much better supported. James T. Hamilton, one of plaintiffs, testified that the value of the propertjr when defendant entered upon it was $75,000, and that by reason of the entry, it had depreciated $30,000; that they contemplated putting additional buildings upon the part cut off by the railroad, at an expense of $10,000, and by reason of such improvement with their then supply of gas for fuel, they estimated a saving of - $1,300 per month in the cost of their
The second assignment of error is also sustained. The plaintiffs proposed to prove that the wareroom, a wooden structure, was located within six feet of the railroad; that in this were
As to risk from fire incident to the lawful operation of a road, there are two theories upon which the claimant for damages can properly argue such risk is material evidence in his favor. 1. He can claim the danger is so imminent, that no man of common prudence would maintain his building in such proximity to the railroad. In that case he is entitled to the cost of- removal of his building and its reconstruction in a safe place. 2. If the danger be not great, either from the fireproof character of the structure, or its distance from the railroad, yet if it can still be said there is some risk from fire by reason of the lawful operation of the road, he can claim that that fact depreciates the market value of the land entered upon. In the first case it is the loss of the improvement; in the second, a disadvantage in the
As to the fifth assignment, there was no error on part of the court in its rulings on the admission of the evidence. The question to Albert Hamilton, one of plaintiffs, then on the witness stand, was: “Is the construction and operation of this road
There is nothing in the charge of the learned judge of the court below which conflicts with the oft repeated rules of law applicable to such cases. In the abstract it is rigidly correct, and if it had been addressed to a jury of lawyers would probably have controlled them in their conclusions upon the evidence. But what defendant had a right to expect, nay, to demand, was not alone a perfunctory statement of the law,
The judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.