Opinion by
This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment entered on a verdict for the defendant, in a case involving the exercise by the latter of the right of eminent domain. The City of Pittsburgh regraded all thoroughfares in a neighborhood known as the “Hump District”; the plaintiff was a subtenant of certain premises located in a street affected by the change of grade; its property had a frontage of 60 feet, and the cut in the grade at this point ran from 24 inches at one end of its building to 2 inches at the other, although, during the course of the improvement, there was a temporary excavation of greater depth. The plaintiff had a verbal lease from year to year, with an obligation to vacate at any time upon three months’ notice; the particular yearly period here involved ran from April 1,1913, and, before renewing its lease for that term, the plaintiff knew the regrading was to take place in front of its property. The work which affected the premised in question commenced early in April, 1913, and continued for about four months; during this time the city “put posts up along the curbstone and nailed two beam planks up on those posts, completely shutting off the access (from plaintiff’s property) to the street”; this obstruction was necessarily incidental to the regrading, but, since the plaintiff conducted an automobile garage, the operations in
The trial judge ruled, on the admission of evidence, that “loss of profits” must be excluded as an element in fixing the plaintiff’s damages. In this connection, he said: “You are permitted to state what the value of this leasehold was on the day the work began there, at or about April 6, 1913, as unaffected by the improvement ......, and you are permitted to state what the leasehold was worth on the 8th of August, as affected by the improvement; was it worth more or was it worth less?” The expert witnesses for the defendant adhered to the ■rule thus enunciated, and testified that the improvement had not depreciated the value of the plaintiff’s leasehold interest, stating that, because of its short term and uncertain tenure, it would at no time, and under no circumstances, command a premium in the market, that its value was the amount of the rent ($300.00 per month) and no more, both before and after the regrading. Some of these witnesses went further and said the improvement was of a character that tended to, and actually did, -bring many more automobiles into the neighborhood
In submitting the case to the jnry, the trial judge charged: “The value of the leasehold as it stood April 1, 1913, unaffected by the improvements, mnst be taken,then the value of the leasehold as it stood August 1,1913, as affected by the improvement, must be taken, and the amount which would represent the diminution in value thus ascertained, is the sum which you should allow this plaintiff, if you allow it any compensation.” After this, the jury were told they were not to allow as separate items of damage anything for “inconvenience,'interruption of business or loss of profits” during the period occupied in making the improvement; bnt that any relevant fact, properly proved, might be considered by them “in determining the aggregate diminution in value of this leasehold.” The trial judge .then went on to say: “Now if, npon the completion of this work on August 1, 1913, the residue of that leasehold, the unexpired term, the end of the lease year was of greater value than it had been before the entry by the city and the interruption of the right, then there can be no recovery at all in this case, because you can readily see that there was no damage.” He further said: “The same principle is to be applied as if the owner of the property, upon which this leasehold is situated, the owner in fee, had complained of the injury to his property by reason of the grading, and the; cut made in front of it; and the final test in this case would be — while he may have .been damaged to some extent by the cutting, and the interruption of the access to his property, yet, if, after the cutting was done and the whole scheme completed, his property was more valuable than it had been before, he could not be allowed any compensation in damages. So in this case the same rule applies. If, notwithstanding the interruption in
The above quoted and recited instructions reflect the attitude on the law assumed by the court below throughout the trial of the case; and the various specifications of error consist of complaints in relation thereto, excepting four which deal with rulings.as to the competency of certain witnesses. We have repeatedly stated that the question of the qualification of a witness called to prove value is primarily for the trial court, and that we will never interfere with rulings in reference thereto unless manifestly erroneous; in the present instance we find no such error. The other, and bigger, question called to our attention by the appellant’s assignments, concerning the measure of damages and the proofs relevant thereto, is one as to which there seems to be some confusion of thought, or, at least, of expression, in our cases.
In James McMillin Printing Co. v. Pittsburgh, Carnegie & Western R. R. Co.,
In Philadelphia & Reading R. R. Co. v. Getz,
Philadelphia Ball Club, Ltd., v. Philadelphia,
In Becker v. Philadelphia & Reading Terminal R. R. Co.,
Geo. W. Shaw & Co. v. Philadelphia,
In Coons v. McKees Rocks Boro.,
Ehret v. Schuylkill River East Side R. R. Co.,
In Consolidated Ice Co. v. Penna. R. R. Co.,
The lessee of a wharf was the plaintiff in Kersey v. Schuylkill River East Side R. R. Co.,
Penna. R. R. Co. v. Eby,
Pittsburgh, Va. & Charleston Ry. Co. v. Vance,
While we have found no' Pennsylvania case which directly discusses the exact point as to whether or not damages can be recovered for business losses accruing during the progress of, and dne to temporary obstructions and inconveniences caused by the actual work of making a public improvement, yet, inferentially, all the authorities above cited rule in the negative. The preponderance of authorities in other leading jurisdictions is quite clear on the point. The cases almost uniformly hold that damages cannot be recovered for inconvenience in the transaction of business, or for the interruption, total suspension or loss of trade, custom or profits caused by the work of making a public improvement; that this temporary inconvenience, and all losses therefrom, must be suffered, for the law permits a recovery only of the permanent depreciation in value of property taken or injured, be it a leasehold or otherwise, such depreciation to be judged by the effect of the improvement when completed. The Constitution of Illinois (1870), provides (Art. II, Sec.
At the common law no damages were recoverable when property was taken for a public improvement. While, in course of time, compensation was allowed for an actual taking, and subsequently for an injury to property, yet, from the authorities which we have reviewed,, it may seem that our constitutional provision allowing “just compensation for property taken, injured or destroyed” (Article NYI, Section 8) “made no change in the character of property for which damages could be recovered,” and that under no circumstances can “profits of buáiness” be claimed in condemnation, proceedings.
To sum up, the authorities already cited lay down, or indicate, the following general rules: The measure of damages is the same whether the plaintiff be a tenant for
The rulings and instructions here complained of seem to be in entire accord with the law as laid down in the
The judgment is affirmed.
