194 Pa. 336 | Pa. | 1899
Opinion by
The plaintiffs’ statement of claim set forth the ownership of an entire property extending on both sides of Forbes street, giving all its courses and distances, with improvements, consisting of a two-story frame dwelling house and out buildings erected thereon. By the testimony it appeared that the whole tract contained about four and one half acres, of which about two and a half acres were on the left side of Forbes street without any buildings, and about two acres with the buildings were on the right side of the street. The defendant’s railroad was located through the two and a half acre part of the tract, at a distance of about 160 feet back from Forbes street. The statement claimed damages to the entire property, and the verdict was general for $4,710, which must necessarily be considered as the sum representing the whole amount of damages sustained by the plaintiffs by reason of the location and construction of the railroad on the property as an entirety. Beyond all question no further claim for this cause can ever again be established for any part of this property. The claim for which the verdict was given is a unit, and it covers the whole of the property. As a matter of fact, it appeared on the trial that no damage whatever was inflicted upon the two-acre part lying on the right-hand side of Forbes street with the buildings on it. It was not only Forbes street which separated the two parts of the property, but a further distance of 160 feet of land lying on the opposite side of the street, and between it and the railroad. It was perfectly manifest that the location and construction of the road could not and did not affect the .part of the property on the right side of Forbes street, and this was so testified by the plaintiffs and their witnesses, and no attempt was made to prove any damage to that part of the property. In these circumstances we cannot possibly see any objection to the admission of the testimony to prove what was the actual state of the facts, to wit: that the injury was confined to the part of the property through which the road was laid. If that part of the property was injured and the other part was not injured at all, why could, not that fact be proved? We can see no reason why. We are clearly of opinion, therefore, that there was no tfierit in any of the objections that were urged upon the ground that the testimony showed injury only to a part of the property. If all the injury was confined to that part, and there was no injury to
An objection was made to a question put to Beben, one of the plaintiffs’ witnesses, that he was asked to express an opinion of the value of the property, in view of its possibilities for being laid out in lots. The exact question to the witness was in these words: “What would you say was the fair value of the property as it stood immediately before the railroad was constructed; that would be in the summer of 1889? I don’t want you to take into consideration the laying out into lots, but the possibilities that it could be done and the possibilities of developing the property.” This was not an inquiry as to all the possible uses that could be made of the land, nor as to the erection of improvements, or the carrying on of business upon it, but merely an inquiry as to the value of the land, considering that it was possible to lay it out in lots. We think this was a proper question, and that it is positively ruled by our decision in the case of Wilson v. Equitable Gas Co., 152 Pa. 566. It must be borne in mind that the property in question was a rather large-sized piece of ground situate on a public street of a large city, this particular part of it without any buildings upon it, and manifestly capable of being laid out and sold in lots. We do not understand that an owner may not prove that fact as to property thus situated. On the contrary, such an obvious and advantageous use of the land situated as this is, would be a fundamental and essential feature in considering
The foregoing authorities fully sustain the learned court below in ruling that the testimony offered was admissible. In point of fact the testimony was not given. The assignments of error from three to nine inclusive are dismissed.
There is no merit in the tenth and eleventh assignments. The evidence offered was not a contradiction of anything, and if the former owner placed a certain value upon the property, the best evidence of that fact would be that person’s testimony to that effect. There was no objection to any proof of the value of the property at that time by any legitimate testimony on that subject.
As to the thirteenth and fourteenth assignments, of course, the court could not have intended to say that the plaintiffs were deprived of the use of any part of the property except what was occupied by the railroad. The jury could not have been misled as to this, especially as the court explicitly said to them it was only the part covered by the railroad that was kept from the possession of the plaintiffs. The language complained of in the fourteenth assignment is nothing but a restatement of the undoubted law of the case. The twelfth assignment is not pressed and has no merit.
Judgment affirmed.