46 N.Y.S. 784 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
This is one of the ordinary suits brought to restrain the operation of elevated railways and, as incidental thereto, to recover damages for impairment of rental values caused by the maintenance of the-defendants’ structure and the use of the same as a railway in front, of the plaintiffs’ premises. The .subject of fee damage has been eliminated from the case, that matter having been settled by the' defendants making compensation (since the judgment herein was-entered) for the easements taken. We have, therefore, to consider only so much of the case as is involved in the claim for past damages to rental value, covering a period of something over nineteen years, viz., from the time of the completion, of the railway structure up to the date of the trial. The premises are Nos. 148, 150 and 152 Pearl street, an important piece of property, forming the southeast corner of Pearl and Wall streets, and No.. 92 Pearl street, between Wall street and Old Slip.
The main objection urged by the defendants on this appeal is that the awards are excessive. The argument is made that the trial justice fixed the amount allowed by him as damages for depreciation in rental value upon an erroneous basis, and hence the claimed exorbitant award. An attentive reader of the voluminous record before us could not fall to be impressed by the fact that within the scope of the evidence the amount awarded might have been very largely increased had the judge below adopted one theory upon which a recovery might be sustained, viz., the application of an established ratio between rental and fee value; but it is evident, from the result arrived at, that that means of ascertaining the amount of damages was not used by the court. It is assumed by
speak.” On cross-examination these witnesses were interrogated as to particular properties; and the extent of their knowledge and the reliability of their testimony were thus tested by an examination as to their acquaintance with the history of such specific properties. That was legitimate cross-examination and within the permission of the rule in Jamieson’s case. But when the defendants came to put in their case they sought to examine witnesses in chief as to the rental history of specific properties situated in the same streets, as to which on cross-examination they had interrogated the plaintiffs’ witnesses. That evidence was excluded, and it is now contended that the defendants were entitled to it, and that the rule in the Jamieson case did not compel its exclusion, because it was addressed, first, to showing that the plaintiffs’ experts were not possessed of sufficient knowledge to enable them to give reliable testimony; second, to show the existence of other causes tending to reduce rents than the presence and operation of the elevated railway, and, third, to rebut any inference to be drawn from the testimony of the plaintiffs’ witnesses that the elevated railway was the sole cause of the decline in the rentals of the plaintiffs’ property.
The argument of the appellants is plausible, but if we are to follow and be governed by the rule as deduced from the Jamieson case, and subsequently reannounced in the Witmark Case (149 N. Y. 393), that argument is unsound. What is that rule? In a word, that such evidence as that sought to be given here is incompetent, relating as it does to purely collateral matter. It may be introduced on cross-examination and there it ends. The kind of evidence condemned in the cases referred to is not admissible in chief for any purpose. The errors of experts or other seemingly qualified persons may be shown, and the inferences to be drawn from their testimony rebutted by better instructed persons on the other side, and the operation of causes other than the elevated railway in reducing
Van Brunt, P. J., Rumsey, O’Brien and Parker, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.