Broomall v. Pennsylvania Railroad

145 A. 703, 296 Pa. 132, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 489
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 14, 1929
DocketAppeal, 8
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 145 A. 703 (Broomall v. Pennsylvania Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Broomall v. Pennsylvania Railroad, 145 A. 703, 296 Pa. 132, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 489 (Pa. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Sadler,

The defendant instituted condemnation proceedings to take certain lands in Delaware County. The proceeding was submitted to viewers, who made an award. An appeal brought the matter to the court of common pleas, and an issue was framed at the request of plaintiff. The case was tried and presented at length, and after a careful and exhaustive charge the jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff for $11,885.65. Many witnesses were called by plaintiff and defendant, and in order that their ability to state an opinion as to value could be determined, questions were asked on cross-examination as to their knowledge of land values in the community. They were queried as to particular sales, and the prices obtained, so that the jury might determine their quali *136 fications as to the testimony of general selling price which they expressed. That this examination was intended and permitted solely to determine their power to appraise generally clearly appears in the record. This was the only reason for the inquiries made by both plaintiff and defendant, as is evident from the record, and is not disputed. The jury, which had been upon the ground, could not, of course, base its final decision upon specific prices obtained for like property, and no attempt was made to have them, do so. As said by Mr. Justice Frazer, in one of the most recent of the condemnation cases (Serals v. West Chester Boro. Sch. Disk, 292 Pa. 134) : “The proper test of the value of land taken under the right of eminent domain is not to be ascertained by proof of particular sales; but by the general selling price of land similarly situated.” This statement follows the rulings found in a long line of authorities which are referred to in that decision.

Quoting from Mr. Justice Kephart (Penna. Co. for Ins. on Lives v. Phila., 268 Pa. 559, 562): “Generally speaking, it is improper on cross-examination [it is wrong of course to ask in chief as to particular sales]; but if the witness states that he bases a value on a particular sale, he may then be asked on cross-examination the price paid in that sale, to test his good faith and the accuracy and extent of his knowledge...... The rejection [or admission] of such evidence is largely within the discretion of the trial court......; which this court will not disturb unless it is manifest the evidence should have been admitted [or rejected].” The question is the general selling price and the amount by which the taking has reducéd it, and the particular sales cannot enter into the case, except on cross-examination to test the weight of the evidence of the one who has testified as to the general market value. Here, both sides attacked the quality of the evidence given by the other in the way suggested with leave of court, and thus this question got *137 upon the record. But it is not as to the admission of such testimony that the present appeal is directed.

No special requests- for charge were made, and the questions involved were submitted in a charge which elaborately discussed the law and the facts. The verdict was not satisfactory to the plaintiff, and he filed fifteen exceptions, directed largely to the refusal to receive certain evidence, the court’s misconception of the true measure of damages for a taking, the instructions as to compensation allowable for delay in payment, as well as the general presentation of the case, claimed to be unfair to plaintiff, and these matters are again pressed in the brief filed here1 by the appellee. All of the errors alleged were held by the trial judge to be without foundation except the one directed to a phrase in the charge, repeated here, which led it to award a new trial, from which order this appeal was taken.

The first question which arises is the right to a review in such a case. Ordinarily, an appeal, where a new trial has been awarded, is not allowed. The earlier decisions, sustaining this proposition, are collected in Fertax v. Spiegelman, 292 Pa. 139. An exception is however recognized, within which we think this case falls, and that is in the instance where the court below declares it would have refused to grant a new trial “but for the reasons distinctly set forth, which, in its opinion, led to the grant of the motion made”: Class & Nachod Brewing Co. v. Giacobello, 277 Pa. 530. The court below here was avowedly of the opinion that no merit appeared in any of the fifteen reasons assigned, except the one which was the basis of the present controversy, — a supplemental reason based on an excerpt from the charge. It believed that, from the use of the phrase referred to, the verdict might have been based on the prices obtained at particular sales, this knowledge having been elicited on cross-examination by both parties, though the jury had been expressly directed that the decrease in the general market value alone should control its deliberation.

*138 The phrase from one paragraph of the charge relied on reads as follows: “In doing that it is only fair that you should take into consideration, in so far as it has been testified to, all the prices which were paid for other lands in the community when sales were made. It seems from the testimony, so far as I can recollect, that there were only about eight sales during a period, — you will have to remember whether it was from 1920 to 1926 or 1923 to 1926, or whatever it was, because the court is a little hazy on that subject. I think there were only eight sales.” It must be noted that this statement was made in connection with, and immediately followed, the statement: “Now, the value to be found of this land and buildings, or the damages or verdict which you allow to the plaintiff, must be an actual value which you find this property had immediately before the taking or at the time of the taking and unaffected by the order of the commission. Now, that actual value I would say is a fair market value and a fair market value is the price or sum which the land would have brought at that date after full and fair advertisement at either public or private sale; that is the value that you should arrive at.” Taking the two clauses together, the one last referred to preceding the other, we can reach no other conclusion than that the jury was made to fully understand its duty, and that the particular sales were to be considered only in determining the general market price of lands in the community.

The proper measure of damages, though complained of by appellee, had been set forth, and the clause in question was preceded by still another, which read: “In determining which witness you are to MIoav, as I said to you before, you must determine from their manner on the witness stand, from what they testified to, from the knowledge they apparently had, from the examination that was made of them as to values in this vicinity, and the value of this tract. You must determine that for yourself.” And the express meaning of the words, now *139

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Bluebook (online)
145 A. 703, 296 Pa. 132, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broomall-v-pennsylvania-railroad-pa-1929.