Epstein v. Boston Housing Authority

58 N.E.2d 135, 317 Mass. 297, 1944 Mass. LEXIS 861
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by82 cases

This text of 58 N.E.2d 135 (Epstein v. Boston Housing Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Epstein v. Boston Housing Authority, 58 N.E.2d 135, 317 Mass. 297, 1944 Mass. LEXIS 861 (Mass. 1944).

Opinion

Lummus, J.

This is a petition for the assessment of damages resulting from the taking by the respondent by eminent' domain of three houses and the contiguous lots of land on which they were situated, owned by the petitioners, in Boston. See St. 1938, c. 484, inserting in G. L. c. 121 new sections 26L, 26R, 26S and 26T; Allydonn Realty Corp. v. Holyoke Housing Authority, 304 Mass. 288; Johnson-Foster Co. v. D’Amore Construction Co. 314 Mass. 416.

The assessed value of the property taken, for the three years preceding the taking, was $7,000. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 79, § 35. Expert witnesses called by the several parties appraised the property as high as $11,500 and as low as $5,900. On June 25, 1942, the jury returned a verdict for the petitioners in the sum of $6,720, which included interest at four per cent per annum from May 20, 1939, the date of the taking. Consequently, the jury must have found the “value” (G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 79, § 12), which means market value (Greenspan v. County of Norfolk, 264 Mass. 9, 12; Maher v. Commonwealth, 291 Mass. 343, 348), to be less than $6,000. The exceptions of the petitioners present a single question of evidence.

An expert witness called by the respondent, having testified to a market value of $5,900, gave as a reason for his opinion his knowledge of the price obtained for five houses similar to those of the petitioners located on one parcel of land “around the corner in the next block in 1937.” The only material objection originally made to the admission of a question calling for the price was that the seller was a cooperative bank which had foreclosed a mortgage upon the property, “and it is almost common knowledge that property the banks have held is not sold for fair market value; they are only interested in getting out the amount of their mortgage.” As to this, we are aware of no such “common knowledge.” That assertion of objecting counsel remained unproved.

Counsel for the petitioners then examined the witness before the judge admitted the price in evidence. The witness testified that he thought the commissioner of banks had ordered “certain banks to liquidate their real estate [299]*299holdings,” but he thought “the banks are naughty boys and have not lived up to it.” He testified that he did not know whether the cooperative bank in question, the Volunteer Co-operative Bank, had been so ordered by the commissioner of banks, but if it had been ordered “to sell it quick” that fact would affect his opinion of the price as an indication of value.1 He testified that, from his knowledge of the cooperative bank in question, he did not think its policy was to sell out for whatever it could get, but he did not know.

Counsel for the petitioners then objected again to the admission of the question calling for the price, saying that “it¡is an essential element of the admissibility of a sale in the locality that it be a sale without duress or compulsion on the open market.” No evidence !on that subject was introduced or offered except as herein stated. The judge, over the exception of the petitioners, permitted the witness to testify that the price received by the cooperative bank for the five houses and the land was $8,000. That might by inference indicate a value for the property of the petitioners of $4,800, but the jury evidently did not draw that inference. Yet the price admitted in evidence tended to lower the appraisal contended for by the petitioners.

Value or market value “means the highest price which a hypothetical willing buyer would pay to a hypothetical willing seller in an assumed free and open market.” Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation v. Worcester County Trust Co. 305 Mass. 460, 462. “A non-compulsory sale between a willing seller and buyer is ordinarily regarded as a good test or criterion to aid the jury in determining the value of the land in controversy. The opinion of the buying public so expressed in a free market is what usually determines value.” Suburban Land Co. Inc. v. Arlington, 219 [300]*300Mass. 539, 541. “It long has been settled that in cases of this nature evidence is admissible of sales of land in the vicinity, similar in essentials to the land in question, and reasonably near to the taking in point of time.” McCabe v. Chelsea, 265 Mass. 494, 496. Lyman v. Boston, 164 Mass. 99, 104, 105. Iris v. Hingham, 303 Mass. 401, 408, 409. The price received upon a sale to a municipality or corporation possessing the power of eminent domain is not necessarily excluded, for the element of compulsion may be very small or nonexistent, and the price may furnish a useful index of value. O’Malley v. Commonwealth, 182 Mass. 196, 198, and cases cited. But a “price so fixed by compromise, when there can be no other purchaser, and the seller has no option to refuse to sell, and can only elect between the acceptance of the price offered and the delay, uncertainty, and trouble of legal proceedings for an assessment, is not a reasonable or fair test of market value,” and “is in no sense a sale in the market.” Cobb v. Boston, 112 Mass. 181, 183, 184. Sawyer v. Boston, 144 Mass. 470, 471. Wright v. Commonwealth, 286 Mass. 371, 374. See also Howe v. Howard, 158 Mass. 278. The question is whether either party to the sale was under such compulsion that the price is not a useful criterion of value. That question, like other questions of fact preliminary to the admission of evidence, is for the presiding judge. His decision of it, unless so wrong as to constitute error of law, cannot be disturbed on exceptions. Iris v. Hingham, 303 Mass. 401, 409. Bartley v. Phillips, ante, 35.

Doubtless the burden of proof that the price was- fixed by fair bargaining or bidding, and not by some form of compulsion preventing the normal operation of the seif interest of buyer and seller, is on the party offering the price as evidence of value. Burley v. Old Colony Railroad, 219 Mass. 483, 485. Wright v. Commonwealth, 286 Mass. 371, 374. It "does not follow, however, that the party offering the evidence must begin by proving that there was no form of compulsion, either suggested or conceivable, such as duress, fraud, or imperative need for immediate cash at any cost, that would preclude a free market. Free bargaining or [301]*301bidding is normal and customary in business transactions, and compulsion is both abnormal and unusual.

The propriety of an inference, or even a technical presumption, that the condition of a person or thing, or the conduct of a person, is normal and customary, has often been recognized. Payne v. R. H. White Co. 314 Mass. 63 (condition of human skin). Moroni v. Brawders, ante, 48 (conduct of labor union and its officers). Ryan v. DiPaolo, 313 Mass. 492, 494 (individual performance of statutory duty). Baxter v. Abbott, 7 Gray, 71, 83. Commonwealth v. Clark, 292 Mass. 409, 411, 415 (sanity of person; also, voluntary character of confession). Hobart-Farrell Plumbing & Heating Co. v. Klayman, 302 Mass. 508 (due delivery of mail). Anderson v. Billerica, 309 Mass. 516, 518. Commonwealth v. Torrealba, 316 Mass. 24, 30 (performance of routine duty). Smith v. Porter, 10 Gray, 66. Pierce v. Tiernan,

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58 N.E.2d 135, 317 Mass. 297, 1944 Mass. LEXIS 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/epstein-v-boston-housing-authority-mass-1944.