229 Pa. 106 | Pa. | 1910
Opinion by
The plaintiffs claimed compensation for 88,000 square feet of land lying between Greenough street and the yard tracks of the defendant railroad in the city of Pittsburg appropriated by the defendant company in March, 1903. Viewers were appointed April 13, 1903, and awarded $416,000, from which award both sides appealed. The appeals were tried May 4, 1908, and resulted in a verdict for $775,133.33, which the parties agree was composed of $616,000 principal and $159,133.33, compensation for de
The first question we have to consider is whether the defendant was properly chargeable with compensation for delay. The defendant claims that this case is governed by the rule in Phila. Ball Club v. Phila., 192 Pa. 632, and Stevenson v. Coal Co., 203 Pa. 316, to the effect that where the delay is due to the unconscionably high demands of the claimant no such compensation should be allowed. The facts at bar are quite different from those in the cases relied upon by the defendant. There was no actual taking of property in either of those cases. The ball club case was an instance of a change of grade. A claim for $85,000 was “sought to be supported by theories and testimony of an illegitimate character,” and a verdict obtained for $29,000 was reversed. On a new trial “other theories and testimony were set up in support of a demand for $62,000, quite as indefensible and unreasonable as the demand in the first trial,” and a verdict for $39,000 was cut by the court below to $30,000. But the trial judge had instructed the jury, “You must add to the damages which the plaintiff has suffered reasonable compensation for the detention of those damages.” We said it was manifest that “the oppressive and unreasonable demands of the plaintiff” caused the delay, and reversed, holding that the plaintiff was not entitled to any damages on that score. The Stevenson case was an action of trespass to recover damages for the pollution of a stream with coal dirt, and this court characterized the plaintiff’s claim as “extortionate, unconscionable and incredible.”
In the present case the defendant company took actual possession of the plaintiff’s property in 1903, and has ever since enjoyed whatever revenues there were to be
Although it well may be contended that the verdict approaches the verge of excessiveness, this is not a case which moves us to interfere under the Act of May 20, 1891, P. L. 101. The power conferred upon this court by that act has never been exercised on the plea of the ex-cessiveness of the verdict, except in a most extreme case: Stevenson v. Coal Co., 203 Pa. 316. The question of the amount of the verdict is ordinarily for the court below, and where a grossly excessive amount is returned the trial court should never allow it to stand, no matter how many new trials it may be obliged to grant. The third assignment of error is overruled.
The plaintiffs offered in evidence for the purpose of proving title the deed of the Consolidated Gas Company to Henry Rea, Jr., dated June 21, 1900, showing a consideration of $140,000 paid by the grantee. When Henry B. Rea, one of the claimants, was upon the stand he testified that the value of the property was $12.00 a square foot, which would give a total of $1,056,000, and under cross-examination he was asked, “In June, 1900, what did you or your father pay for this property?” This was objected to, and the objection was sustained.
But after serious consideration we have reached the conclusion that under the peculiar facts of this case the question as to the purchase price of the property in June, 1900, was proper cross-examination and should have been allowed. In Davis v. Penna. R. R. Co., 215 Pa. 581, we said: “But after a witness has testified in chief .... the largest latitude should be allowed on cross-examination. ... In fact, any and every pertinent question may be put to him on cross-examination which will enable the jury to place a fair estimate on his testimony as to the damages sustained by the plaintiff by the construction of the road through the latter’s premises. The learned judge in his rulings failed to observe the difference between the
If a claimant who has expressed an opinion on the value
We have examined the cases called to our attention by counsel for the plaintiff, and we find nothing in them which necessarily excludes the question on cross-examination. Schuylkill Navigation Co. v. Farr, 4 W. & S. 362, was an action to recover damages for injuries to a grist-mill and furnace caused by the raising of a dam. The plaintiffs sought to introduce into their testimony in chief evidence
Mifflin Bridge Co. v. Juniata County, 144 Pa. 365, was a proceeding to condemn the bridge and the franchise of the owning company. A witness who had taken the contract for the erection of the bridge was called by the company and asked the value of the structure. This was objected to on the ground that he should' have been asked the contract price. We held that the objection was not well taken, and said, “The true question was the value of the bridge, not what it cost. The contractor may have taken it at too low a figure, or the owner may have paid too much. The county is entitled to pay for it at its actual value at the time of taking.” Bo many elements enter into the contract price of a.
In East Brandywine & Waynesburg R. R. Co. v. Ranck, 78 Pa. 454, the defendant proffered evidence that the plaintiff had offered to sell his farm for a certain price, and the rejection of this evidence was assigned for error. In reversing we said: “While the evidence referred to was not conclusive, nor perhaps very important, it ought not to have been excluded.” The fact that the plaintiff had offered to sell his farm at a
The market value of a particular piece of real estate is to be measured by the price usually given for such property in that neighborhood, “making due allowance for differences of position, soil and improvement:" Searle v. Lack. & Bloomsburg R. R. Co., 33 Pa. 57. In Henkel v. Terminal R. R. Co., 213 Pa. 485, we said: “We see no reason why a party against whose interest a witness has testified may not show that the opinion expressed is valueless as evidence because it is, founded on a misapprehension of the facts. . . . This does not
It becomes unnecessary for us to pass upon the remaining assignments of error. To enter upon a discussion of those which question the competency of certain of the witnesses called by the plaintiff to prove value would unduly extend this opinion. The competency of at least six of the witnesses called for that purpose is not questioned in the assignments, and presumably their testimony would have been sufficient to take the case to the jury. But as the case must go back for another trial we take occasion to say that although “the market value of
The judgment is reversed with a venire facias de novo.