Mayor of Baltimore v. Himmel

107 A. 522 | Md. | 1919

The Mayor and City Council of Baltimore instituted proceedings for the condemnation in fee of eleven pieces of property for use in connection with the establishment by the City of a Civic Centre. A portion of the property was subject to ground rent. By their inquisition the jury found that the damages which would be sustained by the owners of the *67 entire property by the taking, use and occupation by the City to be $283,500.00. The value of the ground rents (which was fixed by agreement and about which there is no question in this case) was found to be $15,230.00. The balance, $268,270.00, was awarded to the other owners. The appeal before us was taken from the judgment entered on the inquisition by the Baltimore City Court.

The property condemned is located in the block bounded by Frederick, Lexington, Harrison and Fayette streets, and contains about one-half of the block. Eight pieces of this property are improved and three are unimproved. The entire property condemned was used and occupied by the appellees as a manufacturing plant for the manufacture of furniture. The business was an old, well established and quite an extensive one. The property is located in a manufacturing section of the City, on good streets, and of easy access to wharves and railroads. The buildings are well adapted to the land and the locality, and are so connected up as to enable the owners to use them all as useful and separate units in the prosecution of their business. Expensive and suitable machinery was installed upon the property — boilers, engines, a sprinkler and heating system, shafting, motors, elevators, electric wiring, plumbing, etc. Some of this mechanical equipment was permanently attached to the soil, and others of it could not be detached without greatly injuring it. The evidence shows that the appellees were the owners of a large, valuable and well equipped manufacturing plant.

For the disposition of the legal questions presented by the record it will be sufficient to deal with the evidence according to its general purport and effect as it relates to the questions to be decided. The method pursued by the City to prove the present fair market value of the property taken was this: It called competent real estate experts, who first valued each separate piece of land, and then gave their opinion as to how much the value of each lot was enhanced by the improvements, and stated fully the reasons upon which their valuations were based. This method of arriving at the value *68 of the property was made very clear from the following extract from the testimony of Harry E. Gilbert, the first witness called by the City. After testifying to the value of each lot as unimproved and to the amount the improvement thereon added to each lot, he testified that: "The aggregate of his land value is $36,835. He thought that the added value which the improvements gave to the property was $107,150, without reference to the sprinkling system. He considered that the latter gave another added value of $5,500 and that the boiler house gave an added value of $500, making the aggregate value of the property in fee $150,230. He had reached this conclusion through sales in the neighborhood and had considered rentals and his knowledge of what buildings added to the land values, what they are worth on the market. He had not given or attempted to give any construction value of the buildings or a reproduction value. The reason for this was that it was his experience and the experience of every real estate man (and it is acknowledged) that that process will not give one the value of the land plus old buildings; because there are other things that enter into the value of property that depreciate the property. There is a thing that is very vital and important known as economic depreciation, independent of structural depreciation." Charles N. Boulden, the other real estate expert for the City, adopted the same method of valuation, and "gave his judgment as to the value of the land in each separate lot, these figures aggregating $38,320.83, and testified that he considered the building added to the value of the property an aggregate of $105,300, making the aggregate value of the property $143,620.83. Deducting the value of the ground rents, as agreed upon, $15,320, the value of the Himmel interests in the property was $128,390.83. He testified that he reached these conclusions from other sales in the neighborhood in comparison with the land value and values of the buildings on the property. Then he checked it up by comparison with rental value." Richard R. Pue testified that: "He considered the fee simple value for the property $135,596, *69 and that the interest of the Himmels, after deducting the capitalization of the ground rent, to be worth $120,366. The land value alone he considered to be $34,010. It was his opinion that the buildings added $101,586 to the value of the land. After an inspection of the property and a consideration of its location, he compared that information with sales of other properties, which he analyzed, and with their rental values. And to this information he applied his experience as real estate man and reached the conclusion stated." Neither of these witnesses placed any value on the machinery or other mechanical equipment other than that mentioned by Mr. Gilbert. These witnesses furnished the principal evidence on the part of the City to prove the value of the property taken. Mr. Gilbert valued the entire interest in fee at $150,230.00; Mr. Boulden at $148,390.83, and Mr. Pue's valuation was $135,596.00.

The landowners pursued, in one respect, a totally different method of arriving at the fair value of the property. They called James Carey Martien, William E. Ferguson, and Charles H. Steffey, each competent real estate experts, and each gave his valuation of the land embraced in the condemnation. Mr. Martien valued it at $72,877.00 in fee; Mr. Ferguson at $68,328.32; Mr. Steffey at $73,910.00. Mr. Martien and Mr. Steffey said the buildings upon the property were well adapted to the land and the surroundings, and that the property was being used for its highest utility. These witnesses, although familiar with the character of the buildings, expressed no opinion as to the amount they added to the value of the land, but said their structural value represented a fairly proportionate enhancement in the market value of the land, and that the accurate or best method to determine the value of the property, where it was improved as this was to its highest utility, is to ascertain through the real estate broker the value of the ground, and through the builders the value of the improvements. The appellees then called Otto G. Simonson, an architect of high qualifications and wide experience in his profession, and R.B. Mason, a contractor *70 and builder of forty years' experience. Each of these witnesses was familiar with the buildings upon the land, and each testified as to the structural or reproduction value at the present time, with what they considered due allowance for depreciation. Mr. Simonson estimated the reproduction value to be $255,351.42, and Mr. Mason's valuation was $287,532.11. Other witnesses, upon the same principle, fixed a value upon the boilers, engines and other items of equipment which the appellees claimed to be fixtures.

Upon the testimony produced by the appellees, as we have outlined it, arises one of the principal questions in the case. It is this: Was evidence of structural or reproduction value, with due allowance for depreciation, admissible in this case to show market value? This question is raised by the seventh, eighth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, seventeenth, nineteenth and twentieth bills of exceptions. InMcGaw v. Baltimore, 131 Md. 430, decided in 1917, the lower Court by an instruction directed "the jury to disregard the testimony of the appellant's witness as to the costs of constructing the building at the present time." This ruling was held to be reversible error. In discussing the question of the admissibility of evidence of structural value in condemnation cases the Court stated the general rule to be, "that such value may be proved, with a due allowance for depreciation, as reflecting upon the market value of the land, provided the buildings are well adapted to the land and its surroundings and their structural value represents a fairly proportionate enhancement of the market value of the land. New York v. Dunnet al., 198 N.Y. 84, 41 L.R.A. (N.S.) 411, note; Patch v.Boston, 146 Mass. 52; Jacksonville S.E. Ry. Co. v. Walsh,106 Ill. 256; Sedgwick on the Measure of Damages, 9 Ed. Vol. 3, Sec. 1168, 10 R.C.L. Sec. 124." All the conditions justifying the admission of reproduction value under the rule laid down in that case are present in this, and unless we overrule that case we must hold that the evidence excepted to was properly admitted. It must be admitted that the decisions in other jurisdictions are not uniform *71 upon the question, but it is useless to discuss them if we are prepared to adhere to our former ruling. It is contended that the application of that rule in condemnation cases, when the cost of construction is abnormally high, would result in great injustice. But as to that it may be said that under any rule that might be applied some injustice and some unfairness to one or other of the parties may be found to exist. We do not apprehend that the fears of the City will be realized by the application of the rule in proper cases. What the owners are entitled to is just compensation for the property taken, and that was the present fair market value of the land taken as enhanced by the buildings and fixtures upon it. The City was condemning the land — not personal property. The buildings and fixtures are a part of the realty, and must be considered and allowed for to the extent that they enhance the value of the land to which they are affixed. It is said in 10 R.C.L., Sec. 124, that: "When a piece of land upon which buildings have been erected and affixed to the soil is taken by eminent domain, so far as the buildings add to the market value of the land, they must be considered in determining the compensation to be awarded to the owner; and in determining the damage to land not taken, injury to buildings standing thereon must be included. When fixtures become part of the realty, if the land on which the building stands is taken in whole or in part for the public use, the owner is entitled to have the fixtures considered in determining the amount of his compensation. An owner is not entitled to have buildings or fixtures valued as separate items additional to the market value of the land; but the issue in each case is the market value of the land with the buildings and fixtures upon it. The owner, therefore, receives nothing for the buildings and fixtures unless they increase the market value of the land. In the ordinary case, however, the character of the structures is well adopted to the kind of land upon which they are erected, and the cost of the buildings and fixtures, after making proper deductions for depreciation by wear and tear, is a reasonable test of the amount by *72 which they enhance the market value of the land." In New York v. Dunn et al., 198 N.Y. 84, 41 L.R.A. (N.S.) 411, 139 Am. St. Rep. 791, the Court said that reproduction value may be by no means a conclusive test as to the market value of premises condemned for public use. "But that is not the question at issue. The question is whether evidence of structural value is competent to show market value, when the buildings are suitable to the land. There are instances, of course, when precisely similar buildings upon identical parcels of land may have the same potential market value, just as the price of commodities, like cotton, flour or potatoes, is regulated by the law of supply and demand without reference to cost of production in particular cases. When that is true, the market value may be the value of the land as enhanced by the value of the buildings, without reference to structural value. But when a building has an intrinsic value, which must be added to the value of the land in order to ascertain the value of the whole, the owner may not be able to establish his just compensation unless he is permitted to prove the value of his land as land and the value of his buildings as structures. By adding to each other these two quantities, the result is really the value of the land as enhanced by the buildings thereon." We, therefore, hold that the evidence offered upon the question based upon structural value was competent to aid the jury in fixing the just compensation, as above defined, for the property taken.

The other important question arises upon the property owners' first prayer, which is as follows:

"The jury are instructed that they must award to the property owner the present fair market value of the property being condemned in this proceeding by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, which is the price which would be paid for such property by a buyer willing but not compelled to buy to a seller willing but not compelled to sell; and that in arriving at saidpresent fair market value they may take into consideration asreflecting upon the market value of the property the presentstructural value of the buildings upon *73 the land, with a due allowance for depreciation; provided thejury shall find that the buildings are well adapted to the landand its surroundings and that the existence of the buildings onthe land enhances the market value of the land in an amountfairly proportionate to the present structural value of thebuildings, with a due allowance for depreciation as aforesaid. And if the jury shall further find that the land and buildings which are being condemned in this proceeding constitute a manufacturing plant, then they are further instructed that so much of the machinery, shafting, belting, engines, boilers, sprinklers, elevators, heating plant, heating and water pipes, plumbing, dust and shaving collectors and conveyors, fumixers and electric wiring as the jury shall find to be (1) actually annexed to the buildings or land that are being condemned, and (2) to have been so annexed with the intention of their remaining permanently for use in connection with the said buildings and land, and (3) to be essential to the purposes for which the buildings and land are being used, are fixtures and constitute a part of the buildings and land that are being condemned by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore in this proceeding; and maybe considered as part of said land and buildings by the jury inestimating the damages to which the owners are entitled."

The jury reported to the Court that it found "that the boiler house, equipment, blower system, fume mixers, dust chute, sprinkler system and heating plant are a part of the building and land and due allowance has been made in the verdict." In the first italicized part of the prayer there is incorporated the language used by this Court in passing upon the admissibility ofevidence in the McGaw case, supra, but the mere use of the language of the Court did not give the jury a clear and definite understanding of how it was to be applied to the facts of the case in order to arrive at the just compensation to which the owners were entitled. This part of the prayer was dealing with land and buildings only, and, in order that the jury might be fully and certainly informed as to their duty, there should have been added that they should award to the owner the fair market value of the land *74 at the time of condemnation as enhanced by the buildings thereon. The last clause of the prayer relates to land, buildings and fixtures. The facts stated in the prayer, if found by the jury, under the authority of the case of the Warren Mfg. Co. v.Baltimore City, 119 Md. 188, would constitute the several items mentioned fixtures, but, for the reasons herein expressed, there was error in that clause. The clause should have been substantially as follows: And may be considered as part of said land and buildings, and the jury are instructed to award the owners the present fair market value of the land taken as enhanced by the buildings and fixtures thereon. Under this clause of the prayer, the jury were at liberty to value such separate items as they found to be fixtures and include the amount in their finding, and this they in fact did as appears by their report accompanying the inquisition. The value of these items, as testified to by witness for the owners, was in excess of $20,000.00. It, therefore, appears that substantial error resulted from this clause of the prayer.

In the third exception, it appears that John H. Robinette, the President of the Commissioners for Opening Streets, after stating his knowledge of real estate and its values, was permitted over the objection of the appellees to testify to the market value of the property condemned. He fixed this value in fee at $152,161.00. The Court subsequently struck out his valuation upon the ground that he was not competent to testify as to values, because his knowledge of real estate values was based upon purchases made by the City. If his knowledge was based solely upon sales made with a view of obviating condemnation proceedings, he was not a competent witness to testify to values in this case. Bonaparte v. Baltimore, 131 Md. 80; Lewis onEminent Domain, 2nd Ed., Sec. 447. But we are not satisfied that this was the case. He testified that he had made a study of real estate for four years, and that in connection with his duties it became necessary for him to acquaint himself with its value; that he had studied its value carefully and had consulted the largest real estate people. This was sufficient to have given the witness *75 a special knowledge upon the subject independent of sales made in view of condemnation cases. In Swan and Others v. Middlesex,101 Mass. 173, the Court said: "The knowledge requisite to qualify a witness to testify to his opinion of the value of lands may either be acquired by the performance of official duty, as by a County Commissioner or Selectman, whose duty it is to lay out public ways, or by an assessor, whose duty it is to ascertain the value of lands for purpose of taxation, or it may be derived from knowledge of sales by the witness himself or by other persons." See also Rogers on Expert Testimony, Sec. 155, and BaltimoreCity v. Hurlock, 113 Md. 674.

The fourth and twenty-second bills of exceptions present the question of the admissibility of assessment returns made by M.L. Himmel, one of the owners and a member of the firm of M.L. Himmel Son, to the Appeal Tax Court, in which he stated the full market value of the property which it is proposed to take in this proceeding. The statement was not under oath. The returns were made in 1915. In response to a question by the Court, counsel for the City stated: That he proposed to show what the owner of the property stated to be the value of the buildings, the value of the improvements and the other facts mentioned in the statements relative to the assessments. He offered their statements as to the original cost of the buildings, the expenditure upon the same and their statement as to the value of the property at the time the same was made, as admissions against the interests of the defendants to this proceeding. He proposed also to show that in consequence of those statements the Appeal Tax Court made certain changes in the assessments. It is proved that the papers were part of the records of Appeal Tax Court, and that one of the owners had made them himself. It had been previously testified that in consequence of the statement as to one of the buildings the assessment on it had been reduced. The appellees objected to this offer and the Court refused to admit the statements in evidence, and this ruling constitutes the twenty-second exception. The general rule is well settled that the assessment of property made by public *76 authorities for purposes of taxation is not admissible in condemnation proceedings, and it may be said that it is equally well settled, as a general proposition, that the sworn return made by the owner to the assessor showing the value of the property is admissible both to impeach the owner and asindependent evidence of value. The assessments were not offered, nor was the return sworn to, and neither of the owners testified as to values. The question, therefore, raised by these exceptions is: Are these unsworn returns as to value of the property admissible as independent evidence? There is a diversity of decisions upon the question. In Lowell v. The City ofLowell, 73 Mass. 100, and in St. Louis, O.H. C.R.R. Co. v.Fowler, 142 Mo. 670, it was held that such unsworn statements were admissible as independent evidence. It was held otherwise inVirginia Truckee R.R. Co. v. Henry, 8 Nev. 165, and some other cases. We do not see, upon the question of admissibility, why a distinction should be made between sworn and unsworn statements. The fact that the statement was sworn to may affect the weight to be given to it, but, as both are admissions or declarations of the owner as to the market value of the property, we see no good reason why both should not be admitted. The valuation is not conclusive, and its weight must depend upon all the facts and circumstances and changed conditions existing at the time of the taking. The case of Gossage v. Phil., B. W.R. Co., 101 Md. 698, is an authority for holding these returns to be admissible.

We have carefully considered the other exceptions in the record; and, without discussing them, it will be sufficient to say that we find no error in any of them. The City's sixth and seventh prayers were properly refused, because they do not, upon the facts of this case, state the law as to fixtures in accordance with the decision in the case of the WarrenManufacturing Co. v. Baltimore City, supra. For errors committed in the rulings embraced in the third, fourth and twenty-second exceptions, and in the granting of the owners' first prayer, the rulings must be reversed.

Rulings reversed, with costs, and new trial awarded. *77