Lead Opinion
This appeal raises a single question. In a case to determine the value of property taken by the United States under the power of eminent domain, is a written contract for the sale of the identical property executed shortly before the taking admissible in evidence as bearing on the market value of the property?
The trial court refused to receive into evidence such a contract offered by appellant-owner.
On August 25, 1941 the United States instituted proceedings to condemn certain parcels of land in the City of Philadelphia, among which was a tract of about 88 acres belonging to the appellant. A board of view was appointed, testimony was taken, and a report filed fixing the value of appellant’s land. The United States was dissatisfied with the viewers’ award and appealed therefrom. The case was tried in the district court before a jury which returned a verdict for the property owner in the amount of $64,162.50. This appeal by the owner followed.
The agreement offered was entered into on June 7, 1941 between the owner and the Northeast Park Realty Company for the sale of the property here involved for a total consideration of $82,768.75. The agreement of sale contained a plan for subdividing the land, which was unimproved and undeveloped, and called for periodic payments on account of the purchase price and periodic conveyances of various subdivided portions of the land as such payments were made. The total consideration was to be paid within twenty-five months of the execution of the agreement. The first payment by the buyer under the agreement was to have been made by July 7, 1941. On that date the parties agreed to extend the date of performance to July 25, 1941. On the latter date the parties met to make settlement and to make the first conveyance under the agreement. Counsel for the buyer arrived and said that he had received notice from the government that the land would be taken under the power of eminent domain and that his client should not proceed with the settlement.
Appellant urges that the trial court erred in holding that, under the law of Pennsylvania, evidence of the price at which a property has been sold is inadmissible in condemnation proceedings as proof of its value. He argues that Reinhold v. Ephrata Borough,
A careful consideration of the Pennsylvania authorities leads to the conclusion that such evidence is inadmissible under Pennsylvania law. While it is probably true that there is no Pennsylvania decision which squarely covers the present case, the results and reasoning of the most analogous cases are clearly hostile to the admission of evidence of the sale price of land taken by eminent domain. It has long been settled in Pennsylvania that evidence of the sale price of lands similar to the parcel condemned is inadmissible. Henkel v. Wabash Pittsburg Terminal R. R. Co.,
Similarly, in Schonhardt v. Pennsylvania R. R. Co.,
And in Friday v. Pennsylvania R. Co.,
We therefore accept the government’s contention that under the Pennsylvania concept of the market value of property in eminent domain proceedings, evidence of the price at which it was sold is not sufficiently relevant to be considered by the jury. This should be contrasted with the Pennsylvania concept of market value adopted in cases involving the proper assessment for purposes of taxation, in which it is recognized that “a previous sale of a property has a substantial bearing upon the question of market value.” Hickey’s Appeal,
The question is presented, however, whether the Pennsylvania concept of value for purposes of eminent domain governs in a condemnation proceeding brought by the United States against land in Pennsylvania. This question was recently answered by the United States Supreme Court in United States v. Miller,
In an earlier part of the same opinion, the Supreme Court set forth at length the standard by which the amount of compensation due an owner of land condemned by the United States is to be determined. On pages 373, 374 of 317 U.S., on page 279 of
“The Fifth Amendment of the Constitution provides that private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation. Such compensation means the full and perfect equivalent in money of the property taken. The ownex is to be put in as good position pecuniarily as he woxxld have occupied if his property had not been taken.
“It is conceivable that an owner’s indemnity should be measured in various ways depending upon the circumstances of each case and that no general formula should be used for the purpose. In an effort, however, to find some practical standard, the courts early adopted, and have retained, the concept of market value. The owner has been said to be entitled to the ‘value’, the ‘market value’, and the ‘fair market value’ of what is taken. The term ‘fair’ hardly adds anything to the phrase ‘market value’, which denotes what ‘it fairly may be believed that a purchaser in fair market conditions would have given’, or, more concisely, ‘market value fairly determined’.
“ * * * Where, for any reason, property has no market resort must be had to other data to ascertain its value; and, even in the ordinary case, assessment of market value involves the use of assumptions, which make it unlikely that the appraisal will reflect true value with nicety. It is usually said that market value is what a willing buyer would pay in cash to a willing seller. Where the property taken, and that in its vicinity, has not in fact been sold within recent times, or in significant amounts, the application of this concept involves, at best, a guess by informed persons.”
Under this concept of market value, set forth by the Supreme Court as the “practical standard” by which the constitutional requirement of just compensation to the owner of land taken by the United States for public use is determined, it would certainly appear that evidence of the sales price of the land in question is relevant and admissible. If the “owner is to be put in as good position pecuniarily as he would have occupied if his property had not been taken”, it is difficult to see how the evidence offered in the instant case could fail to have important bearing in determining what that position is. And if market value, as construed in condemnation proceedings by the United States, is “what a willing buyer would pay in cash to a willing seller,” evidence of what the property sold for in a bona fide sale is most significant. Indeed, substantially the same definition of market value has been adopted by the Pennsylvania Courts in tax', assessment cases,
We are, therefore, of the opinion that the evidence of the terms of the contract of sale for the property condemned in the present case should have been received in evidence. It is evidence to be considered in arriving at just compensation, affecting the appellant’s substantive right,
It was further argued by appellee that the case was tried on the theory that Pennsylvania law was to be followed, and that the appellant may, not on appeal rely on a different theory as to the controlling law. The record demonstrates that the case was unquestionably tried on the theory that Pennsylvania law was controlling and that all the authorities and arguments of the parties to the trial judge were made with respect only to the question of the admissibility of the proffered evidence under Pennsylvania law. Appellate courts of course have always remanded cases when the trial courts have applied the law of the wrong jurisdiction. Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Electric Mfg. Co.,
Appellee further contends that the evidence was properly rejected because it was for the purpose of “establishing a fair market value”, and appellant cannot now contend that “it should have been admitted simply as evidence of market value.” We agree that the contract of sale would not have been controlling on the question of market value but would have been merely evidence thereof. Cf. Olson v. United States,
But we do not agree that an offer of evidence to “establish” market value embodies the position that such evidence is, conclusive of that issue, and certainly the trial court was neither misled by the language of the offer, nor did it base its rejection of the evidence on any such narrow ground.
Finally, appellee argues that since market value has been defined by the Supreme Court as what a willing buyer would pay a willing seller “in cash” for the property (United States v. Miller, supra,
The judgment is reversed and the cause; is remanded.
Notes
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s concept of the market value of property in eminent domain proceedings should apparently also be contrasted with its concept in cases' fixing the fair market value of mortgaged premises which have been sold on foreclosure. In the recent case of Union National Bank v. Crump et al.,
Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co.’s Assessment,
The general condemnation act of August 1, 1888, 25 Stat. 357, 40 U.S.C.A. § 258, provides that in condemnation proceedings “the practice, pleadings, forms and modes of proceeding * * shall conform, as near as may be, to the practice, pleadings, forms and proceedings existing at the time in like causes in the coui'ts of record of the State within which such district court is held * * *."
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
The one question raised on this appeal is whether the trial court erred in rejecting, as evidence of the market value of the condemned property, the plaintiff’s offer of a written instrument said to be an agreement for an antecedent sale of the subject property. I think the trial court’s ruling accomplished the right result, but, for a different reason than that assigned by the court below.
Regardless of whether the law governing the admissibility of the evidence is the law of Pennsylvania (the situs of the condemned property),
Reference to the proffered writing (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 3) will disclose that, at most, it was no more than an option to the grantee to exploit the property by attempted sales thereof in lots according to a plan and schedule provided for in the agreement. While the agreement recited a consideration of $82,768.75, that sum represented, in reality, no more than the estimated aggregate to be derived by the owner from a sale by the optionee of all of the lots, if and when sold and paid for by the optionee at the unit price per lot fixed by the agreement. The agreement contained no promise or undertaking on the part of the optionee to pay the consideration or any part thereof except as it might sell lots from time to time and receive deeds therefor from the owner. No hand money was called for by the agreement nor was any paid by the optionee.
The undertaking of the optionee (a realty company) was that, within thirty days of the execution of the agreement, it or its nominee would pay to the owner $2,250, whereupon the owner would convey to the optionee or its nominee ten of the lots identified on the plan attached to the agreement as an exhibit. Within one hundred and ninety days of the execution of the agreement, the optionee or its nominee was to pay the owner an additional $2,250 and receive conveyances for ten more lots at the rate of $225 per lot which was the rate to be applied to the first eighty lots. The eighty-first lot was to be paid for at the price of $218.75; the next nineteen at $200 per lot; and the remainder of the lots (two hundred and forty-three) was to be paid for at the rate of $250 per lot. The agreement provided that the owner should be undér no duty to execute or deliver a conveyance for less than ten lots at any one time and, then only, upon receiving the respective allocated payments.
Moreover, the lots were blocked in series, the blocks being identified alphabetically, and the optionee was required to sell all of the lots in Block A before it could sell any lots in Block B or any succeeding block and, thereafter, likewise with respect to each alphabetically succeeding block. Of the total of three hundred and forty-three lots in the plan, the optionee needed sell only seventy-five in the first thirteen months to keep the agreement in force although all were to be sold within twenty-five months.
If the optionee failed to sell lots according to the time schedule of the agreement or abandoned the undertaking, there was no obligation upon it to pay the owner anything on account of the property except the respective amounts due for' the lots actually conveyed by the owner upon the optionee’s sale thereof. For the optionee’s failure to make the minimum payments for lots, in accordance with the schedule, the owner, at his option, could declare the agreement “insofar as not then executed” null and void and any interest of the optionee in the property not theretofore conveyed would thereupon cease and determine. No suit against the optionee for the contract price of the lots, if unsold, was maintainable and no damages for the optionee’s failure to sell all of the lots was either liquidated or stipulated. The agreement further expressly provided that it was not to be recorded.
The foregoing would seem to be sufficient to indicate that the agreement was far less than an agreement by the owner to sell the property in question for cash or to a responsible purchaser for a definite, certain and fixed consideration. The agreement
Of course, the credibility and weight of evidence is for the jury but, assuming that the jury accepted the agreement as verity and accorded it the fullest weight to which it could possibly be entitled, there would still remain the question as to the sufficiency of the evidence for the purpose for which it is offered. That is a question of law which it is the duty of the court to decide. Nor may it be answered by saying that the jury may give the evidence such weight as it thinks it merits. The jury may do that only if, first of all, the evidence is competent.
What standards, it may be asked, could the trial judge have possibly given the jury in order that it might appropriately discount the aggregate of the prices of all the lots if the optionee should fail to sell them all or any substantial part of them? Or, what discount of the aggregate prices to the owner for all the. lots could the jury be told it might make if it found that the optionee, in order to obtain for less than a shoestring the privilege of trying to sell the land in lots, allocated to the owner a prospective share in the speculative values anticipated from a sale of the lots? Such a purchaser, free from any liability to himself, might well agree to a prospective ultimate realization by the owner from a sale of the -lots several times what the latter could possibly obtain for the property, as a whole, from an outright sale thereof to a responsible buyer.
If matter of such character as the proffered writing in this case is to be deemed competent evidence of the market value of the subject property, it is not difficult to imagine the type of evidence with which condemners of private property for forecasted public uses will be met when they come to judicial determinations of the fair, reasonable and just compensation to which the owners of property are rightly entitled. Such owners are not entitled, however, to vague, uncertain and speculative values and, particularly not, to values which depend upon a special exploitation of the property as yet unexecuted and wholly undetermined as even a likely reality.
I should overrule the appellant’s assignment of error and affirm the judgment of the District Court.
See Act of August 1, 1888, 25 Stat. 357, 40 U.S.C.A. § 258.
Cf. United States v. Miller,
