36 F.2d 949 | 9th Cir. | 1929
In its background and general aspects this ease is like Sacramento Suburban Fruit Lands Co. v. Melin (No. 5671) 36 F.(2d) 907, this day decided.
In the course of the trial the appellees called as a witness a young man, Herbert C. Davis, as an horticultural expert. After explaining his educational qualifications, he testified that for about seven years he was manager for United Orchards Company in the development and handling of about 100 acres of orchard lands at Antelope, a part of which adjoined the Rio Linda tract, and that these lands were somewhat similar to the Rio Linda lands. Whereupon the following occurred:
“Q. Did you try to raise fruit on that hard-pan land? A. Yes.
“Q. What was the result? A. It was an absolute failure.
“Q. Can you tell us how much of a financial failure it was?
“Mr. Kelly. That is objected to as immaterial.
“The Court. Objected overruled.
“Mr. Kelly. Exception.
“A. In the seven years the company lost about $47,000 in its operations.”
Appellant assigns the exception thus noted as one of the errors relied upon in this appeal. Upon an issue such as was herein involved, there is always difficulty in resorting to experience and observation upon other lands as a basis for determining the character and productivity of the lands in question. Where the land in suit is of a uniform character and the lands compared therewith are also of uniform character, and it is shown that the two tracts are similar, experience upon the one may with safety be resorted to as of probative value. But, admittedly, within itself the Rio Linda tract exhibits great diversity in subsoil conditions. The problem is stated and instructively discussed by the District Court of Appeals of California in Palladine v. Imperial Valley Farm Lands, 65 Cal. App. 727, 225 P. 291. While, under the conditions shown, it may not have been error for the court to permit
“The witness also testified to you that he had had practical experience at Antelope, adjoining these lands — seven years, he lived on it for five years before — extensive orchards, more than one hundred acres, and that after seven years’ management of it, the soil on the average somewhere around only four feet, proved that the rule was good that he had learned in school, and he made a failure of that and lost some $47,000.
“In respect to that, Gentlemen, you all know that young men, sometimes, coming out of school think they know it all, and that the rules are not of any account, and that they are going to prove that they are wrong. Well, Mr. Davis says he tried it out, he' has come back to the rule, and he-has paid for his experience.”
True, there was no appropriate exception to this instruction, but we are .here considering the question whether o-r not testimony erroneously admitted over defendant’s objection was prejudicial, and for that purpose, of course, we are to resort to all the circumstances of the trial as disclosed by the record.
We express no views upon the other assignments of error. Some of the questions will probably not arise in the course of another trial, and some are ruled by our decisions in other eases in the group.
The judgment will be reversed, with directions to grant a new trial.