124 N.Y.S. 744 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1910
This matter comes on before me on a motion for the confirmation of the second separate report of the commissioners heretofore appointed.
Objection is made upon the part of the corporation counsel of the city of New York to the award of $20,000 to Mary Caroline Hover on parcel 170, containing about seventy acres of land, on the ground that the award is excessive and that errors were made in the rejection of testimony by the commissioners, exception being duly taken thereto.
It appears that, a comparatively short time prior to the filing of the oath of the commissioners herein, the owner, Mary Caroline Hover, had placed the property" in question in the hands of certain real estate agents for sale and had announced to them a selling price for the same, that is, a price at which she would dispose of her property to any purchaser who might appear and was willing to purchase the property at her figure. She was asked the amount of this price and, upon objection by her attorney, the evidence was excluded by the commission, to which the corporation counsel duly excepted. This evidence was clearly competent and admissible. 2 Lewis Em. Dom. (2d ed.), § 446, p. 970; Rand. Em. Dom., § 235, p. 217; East Brandywine, etc., R. R. Co. v. Ranck, 78 Penn. St. 454, 457; Mifflin Bridge Co. v. Juniata Co., 144 id. 365, 375; Mills Em. Dom. (2d ed.), § 172 ; Patch v. Boston, 146 Mass. 52, 56, 57; Manning v. Lowell, 173 id. 100—103; 10 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2d ed.), p. 1154.
The price which this owner gave to this real estate agent or firm of real estate agents was an admission on her part-as to what she considered her premises worth at that time and is clearly competent as against her. It was an asking price not a selling price and hence, perhaps, would not be
Confirmation of this parcel is refused, and the same is returned to the same commission to proceed according to the law as here laid down.
In parcel 176, Hover and Boice claimants, among other objections made by the corporation counsel to the confirmation of the award is that, some time before its appropriation by the city of Hew York, the then owner made a contract of sale which was never carried out and that the offer to prove the consideration of this contract of sale or the agreed price therein was refused by the commission. That presents a different case from parcel 170. It appears in evidence that the party who was the then owner is now dead. He is not here now to give his version of the transaction. The contract itself has not been lost. It does not appear that there would be any way for the present owner to contradict the evidence of the proposed witness’ recollection as to the transaction, nor would the present owner be in any way bound by the value placed on the property by a former owner. There might have been expected benefits to the then owner that the present owner would not be cognizant of. The consideration for an actual sale of the property would be competent, but the consideration for a proposed sale not carried into effect' is not competent.-
Report as to this parcel is confirmed, as is the entire report except as to parcel 170.
Report as to this parcel affirmed, as is entire report except as to parcel 170.