These are exceptions taken by the defendant in an action of tort brought by the plaintiff to recover for damage to his automobile resulting from a collision at two intersecting streets.
There was no error in permitting the plaintiff to give his opinion as to the market value before and after the accident. *624 He had purchased the automobile for $866 and had operated it for nine months. He knew its condition and capabilities. He gave its fair market value as $800 before the accident and after the accident as $100. He never saw the automobile after the accident but he was shown good sized pictures of the damaged automobile while he was in the hospital. Those pictures are before us as exhibits. They appear to be clear and show extensive damage to the front of the vehicle. There was evidence that they fairly represented the damaged automobile. The plaintiff also learned from others what happened to his automobile and "What a couple of people told him helped his opinion.”
The defendant requested the auditor to strike out all this evidence of the plaintiff on the issue of damages. He excepted to the refusal of the judge to strike out this part of the auditor’s report and also to the denial of his request for a ruling that the jury disregard the auditor’s report in fixing the value of the plaintiff’s automobile after the accident as $100.
The market value of land or chattels may usually be given by their owners not because they are the owners but because, due to their ownership and possession, they have acquired such familiarity with the subject as to enable them to give an intelligent estimate of their value. Whether they are so qualified is a preliminary question for the decision of the trial judge.
Shea
v.
Hudson,
Exceptions overruled.
