This is a petition for the assessment of damages caused by a change of grade and other alterations in Boylston Street in Clinton, opposite to the petitioner’s land. St. 1895, c. 488, § 13. The case comes here on two exceptions taken by the petitioner on questions of evidence relating to damages.
1. An expert called by the petitioner having testified as to the va-Iue of the petitioner’s property and the depreciation of it, was asked by the petitioner whether he had taken into consideration in his appraisal the sales and the number of sales in that vicinity. The judge called attention to the fact that there was no evidence of any sales, and said that unless they ’were referred to he should exclude the question. The petitioner excepted. The exception must be overruled. Ho doubt experts, under the guise of giving the reasons for their opinion, are allowed to get facts before the jury which the jury have no right to consider. But there are limits even to this. Hunt v. Boston,
2. An exception was taken to the admission of a sale to the metropolitan water board. If the judge had been of opinion that, as was found in Cobb v. Boston,
Exceptions overruled.
