57 Misc. 2d 308 | New York Court of Claims | 1968
This is a claim for the appropriation of claimants’ land pursuant to section 30 of the Highway Law.
During the course of the trial claimants’ counsel called the State’s Senior Bights of Way Agent as a witness. He elicited from said witness that a prior appraisal had been prepared for subject property by a staff appraiser. Said appraisal was marked for identification but was not offered in evidence, although claimants’ counsel stated for the record that said appraisal established a damage' figure of $10,510. The damage figure utilized by the State at the trial was $7,900. The State vigorously objected to the production of said appraisal. We reserved decision on said objection. After a review of the pertinent authority, we now .sustain said objection and strike said testimony. We have not considered or relied upon the information placed before us relative to said appraisal.
The question of the use of prior appraisals at the trial of an appropriation claim or condemnation proceeding has developed a substantial amount of heat. Beeent cases have shed some light on the problem but it still appears to be in a rather murky area.
As a general proposition, all of the Trial Judges of this court would, in my opinion, concur absolutely with Judge G-ualtieri, who stated in Murphy v. State of New York (41 Misc 2d 906, 908): “No .self-respecting expert, conscious of the ethics and standards of his profession should change an opinion, honestly and properly arrived at at the behest of the party engaging him. * * * The condemning authority has no moral right to seek out cheap or low appraisals but .should
It has been clearly established that an appraisal prepared by an expert who is not called as a witness and which was intended to be utilized solely for litigation; or, for negotiation in an effort to accomplish a settlement prior to trial; or, to establish a basis for the partial payment to be made to the claimant pursuant to subdivision 13 of section 30 of the Highway ■Law, is not admissible on the trial. (Murphy v. State of New York, 29 A D 2d 81, 82; Lieberthal v. State of New York, 22 A D 2d 831, 833, affd. without opn. 16 N Y 2d 1012; Brummer v. State of New York, 25 A D 2d 245, 249. Cf. City of Buffalo v. Ives, 55 Misc 2d 730.) One exception to the above is that all prior appraisals prepared by an expert witness called to testify or by the appraisal firm by whom that appraiser is employed must be produced upon proper demand. Such appraisals are admissible, if relevant and germane to the proceeding, when utilized to impeach said witness’s credibility by developing prior statements inconsistent with his testimony at the trial. (Matter of Port Authority Trans-Hudson Corp. [Hudson Rapid Tubes Corp.], 27 A D 2d 32, 39, mod. 20 N Y 2d 457; City of Watertown v. Jerry’s Watertown Rest. & Hotel, Sup. Ct., Jefferson County, May 25, 1967, Lynch, J., affd. without opn. 29 A D 2d 847; Matter of the City of New York [Brooklyn Bridge], 50 Misc 2d 478, 480.) We further find that all appraisals filed under rule 25a of the Buies of the Court of Claims, whether made by the witness called to testify or by another appraiser totally unrelated to said witness, may be utilized by an adversary as an admission against interest relative to factual descriptive data, the before and after market values and the damage figures. As stated in Schade v. State
Justice J. Robert Lyjstch, in the unreported decision of City of Watertown v. Jerry’s Watertown Rest. & Hotel (supra) in ruling on a motion for protective order stated: “ The City need not produce appraisals prepared solely for the litigation herein. It must produce other appraisals made by the same experts it will call as witnesses herein. It must produce the appraisals used on its application for federal urban renewal approval whether they were made by the experts it will call as witnesses in this litigation or by others.” It must be clearly and fully developed that the party for whom the appraisal
The claimants are awarded the sum of $15,205, for all damages direct and consequential plus fair rental value, with interest thereon from April 8,1965 to October 8,1965 and from March 15, 1966 to the date of entry of judgment herein.