The record in this case presents appeals from two judgments, each relating to separate property, recovered by the plaintiffs' intestate against the defendants. The same *396 questions are involved in both appeals and they may, for convenience, be considered and treated as one. They were the usual actions for injunctions against the operation of the railway and for damages, commenced in September, 1889. The complaint, in substance, avers that the plaintiff was in possession of the property under a lease made in 1869 with covenants of renewal and which was renewed in May, 1881, with the same or similar covenants.
One of the points urged in support of the appeal is that the plaintiff's present estate is derived from the lease to him in 1881, when the railway had been constructed and in full operation and, hence, he was not entitled to equitable relief. This point involves the further proposition that the estate which he had under the lease of 1869, with the covenants of renewal, had been surrendered and that the new lease was not a renewal of the old one. The element of intention was an important consideration in the determination of the question whether the lease of 1881 took the place of and secured to the plaintiff all the rights conferred by the lease of 1869, and the referee has found that the former was a continuation of the latter and that the plaintiff is entitled to the same rights as if he was the assignee of the original lease. We think that this conclusion was clearly correct. (Kearney v. Met. El. R. Co.,
This point has been so clearly answered, both upon principle and authority, in the learned opinion below that we will not attempt to add anything to the argument there made. It appeared that during the pendency of the action the lease of 1881 expired, and according to its terms a new lease was given to the plaintiff. On the trial this lease was offered in evidence and received under the defendants' objection and exception. There was no error in this ruling. The paper proved, or tended to prove, that the estate which the plaintiff had at the time of the commencement of the action had been continued and preserved to him. In other words, it was evidence to establish the title which the plaintiff had stated in the complaint. Though a new paper it was evidence of an old title. *397
On the trial both sides, without objection, gave proof of the rental and fee value of other property in the same locality, and before the proofs closed the plaintiff's counsel produced a paper and proved that it contained a correct statement of the rents which he had received for the building adjoining the one in suit. In the course of the trial evidence had been given as to these same rents without objection. The plaintiff's counsel offered this paper in evidence. It was objected to by the defendants' counsel as immaterial and irrelevant; that it does not relate to the property in suit; also, that the rents are already in evidence. The objection was overruled and the defendants excepted.
It is now urged that this ruling is in violation of the rule laid down by this court in the Jamieson Case (
These views would be quite sufficient to dispose of the appeal, and the discussion could properly end here except for the fact that the learned counsel for the plaintiffs has submitted quite an elaborate argument with numerous citations of authorities to show that the rule laid down in the Jamieson Case was a departure from correct principles and from the doctrines sanctioned by previous decisions of this court. In that case it was decided that in cases of this character it is not permissible to call witnesses who owned property in the vicinity of that involved in the suit, to show what their premises rented for before and after the construction of the railway, in order to affect the question of damages to the property there in question. The principle upon which the decision rests is that such a rule, if sanctioned, would introduce into the case collateral issues relating to each separate parcel of property. There is no general or well-defined principle of the law of evidence that enables a party to establish the value of some particular or specific thing by proof of the value of another thing of the same class or general character. It would scarcely be claimed that in a controversy concerning the value of a horse such value could be established by proof of the value of another horse that bore more or less resemblance, or possessed some or all of the qualities of the one in question, according to the varying notions of witnesses. A party upon whom the burden rests of proving the value of particular property, real or personal, must ordinarily confine the proof to the specific property *399
in controversy. Cases may doubtless be found where, in other jurisdictions and in special statutory proceedings for determining the value of real property, more or less support is given to the contention of the plaintiffs' counsel. But in most, if not all, of them it will be found that the inquiry was not governed by the rules of evidence that prevail at common law. There are many cases in which commissioners or other officers specially authorized to determine the value of real estate may act upon a personal view or examination of the property and generally upon other than the strict rules of evidence that have been established in courts of law and equity. Such cases have little if any bearing upon the question decided in the JamiesonCase. Our attention has also been called to cases in this court belonging to the same class of actions as this, where proof of the value of other and similar property, in the same locality, has been recognized as proper. (Cook v. N.Y. El. R.R. Co.,
It will be found, we think, upon careful examination that in most of these cases the court simply recognized a situation which the parties themselves had created by the general course of the trial, or by consent or acquiescence, and hence they are in no way in conflict with the decision in the case referred to. Evidence of this character has, it is well known, been given by both parties in this class of actions, and when we have found it in the record, generally without objection, we have treated it as the parties themselves treated it at the trial, and have in that way recognized it, when taken in connection with other proof, as entitled to consideration in order to support a finding or to answer some view of the case, taken for the first time in this court, contrary to the general course of the trial. This court does not refuse to recognize facts determined at the trial, though some part of the testimony tending to prove them may have been, in its nature, incompetent for *400
that purpose, and under a proper objection should have been excluded. (Flora v. Carbean,
The party complaining must raise the question as to the quality or competency of the proof before the fact is found or the question decided and not afterwards. In the other cases in this court cited by the learned counsel for the plaintiffs, proof of this character found in the record was not regarded, under all the circumstances, as sufficiently material to warrant a reversal. It was of no more importance as affecting the result than it appears to be in the case at bar. In the Jamieson Case the question was sharply raised at the proper time by a proper objection and exception, and the evidence thus received was substantially all that could be found in the record to sustain the finding. Our decision in that case did not, we think, introduce any new rule of evidence or modify any principle that had been directly sanctioned by prior decisions. It is not apparent how the practice which was there condemned, if sanctioned as a rule of evidence, can be of any great value in this class of actions. The extent of the investigation would be subject to no limits except such as might be prescribed by the discretion of the trial court, and even when it could be shown that the property was substantially similar as to locality and physical surroundings, yet different parcels of property are affected in their value by so many different causes, that in the end there must be left a wide field for conjecture and speculation. The scope of the inquiry would be enlarged beyond all necessary or proper limits and the mind of court and jury confused with a multitude of conflicting and irrelevant facts. There is no such inherent difficulty in proving the value of real estate at a given time, as to require a resort to such evidence. It may be proved by showing the amount of its income to the owner, the general course of values, by the opinions of witnesses competent to judge, or by that of experts having special knowledge on the subject and familiar with the causes which affect its rise or decline in the market. When the parties have given all proof on the subject which has long been *401 recognized as competent, for the purpose of ascertaining the value of property, it will generally be found that little, if anything, of any value, can be added by resorting to proof of the value of other property.
The judgments should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Judgments affirmed.