Garella v. Redevelopment Authority

196 A.2d 344, 413 Pa. 181, 1964 Pa. LEXIS 643
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 8, 1964
DocketAppeals, 107, 108 and 109
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 196 A.2d 344 (Garella v. Redevelopment Authority) 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
Garella v. Redevelopment Authority, 196 A.2d 344, 413 Pa. 181, 1964 Pa. LEXIS 643 (Pa. 1964).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

Theodore A. Tsuris (Tsuris) owned certain property located on North Duquesne Avenue, Duquesne City, Allegheny County, upon which property, inter alia, was a three-story brick building, a portion of the floor of said building being leased for a ten year term commencing May 1, 1957 to Frank Garella (Garella). The leased premises, rented at $170 monthly, were used by Garella — a liquor licensee — for restaurant purposes.

*183 By two resolutions — February 26, 1959 and September 28, 1959- — the Redevelopment Authority of Allegheny County (Authority) condemned Tsuris’ entire property. Subsequent to the condemnation, viewers, after hearing, filed a report awarding $72,000 to Tsuris and $6,400 to Garella. From that award, all three parties — -Tsuris, Garella and the Authority — appealed to the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County. Three separate actions were filed in that court: Garella (lessee) v. the Authority (3677 July Term, 1961), Tsuris (owner) v. the Authority (3722 July Term, 1961) and Tsuris and Garella (owner and lessee) v. the Authority (3681 July Term, 1961). The three cases were consolidated for trial and, after a trial before a judge and jury, three separate verdicts were rendered, the overall effect of said three verdicts being that the jury awarded to Tsuris, the owner, damages plus detention allowance totalling $75,075 and no damages to Garella, the lessee. 1

In all three actions, Garella moved for a new trial. The Court en banc, by a three-one vote with Weiss, J., dissenting without opinion, dismissed Garella’s motions and directed the entry of judgments on the verdicts. From each judgment, Garella has appealed.

In Garella’s appeal from the judgment entered in Tsuris v. Authority, Tsuris has filed a motion to quash the appeal assigning three reasons: (a) since *184 neither Tsuris nor the Authority has appealed, the judgment is final and unappealable; (b) since the Authority has not taken an appeal, it has elected to treat Tsuris’ claim as a unit and not triable with G-arella’s claim under the Act of 1937 2 (c) Garella lacks standing to appeal. In large measure, Tsuris relies upon Arnold v. Allegheny County, 332 Pa. 227, 2 A. 2d 763. In Arnold, the owner and the lessee in separate actions claimed damages from the county in condemnation proceedings; the two cases were tried together under the 1937 Act, supra, and the jury fixed the total amount of damages at $29,750 and awarded $27,250 to the owner and $2,500 to the tenant. The county appealed only from the judgment entered on the verdict in favor of the owner seeking to argue on that appeal two questions: (a) whether the county could first show the value of the entire property “before and after” and the total damage before apportioning the total damages?; (b) whether, the Act of 1937, supra, required initial proof and determination of total damages before such damages could be apportioned? 3 This Court held that, since the claim of the lessee had become final by the unappealed judgment, there remained on the record only the claim of the owner against the county and, therefore, the Act of 1937, supra, was no longer applicable and, by permitting the lessee’s judgment to become final by not appealing therefrom, the county had elected to treat the owner’s claim as a unit not triable under the Act of 1937, supra. We quashed that appeal.

*185 Both Garella and the Authority oppose the present motion to quash the one appeal. At first blush, it would appear that the motion to quash should be granted since Garella was neither a party of record nor an intervenor in the action. However, an examination of the record reveals a unique situation which differentiates the case at bar from Arnold and contraindicates Arnold’s apposition herein.. While there are separate suits by the owner and the lessee, respectively, against the Authority, there is also a third suit wherein both the owner and lessee are not only joined as plaintiffs but their separate claims are presented in a joint action. In this joint suit of the owner and lessee against the Authority the jury returned what might be termed the “master” verdict in which the jury disposed of both claims. In the suit of the owner against the Authority, the jury specifically provided that that verdict — the only other verdict making an award against the Authority — was “to be satisfied upon payment of verdict at 3681 July Term, 1961 [i.e., the joint suit of the owner and lessee]”. The verdicts in the separate suits of the owner (3722 July Term, 1961) and of the tenant (3677 July Term, 1961) simply reiterated the conclusion reached by the jury in the joint suit of both the owner and lessee against the Authority (3681 July Term, 1961). All three suits were tried together and between all three suits there existed a relative dependence so that, strictly, it cannot be said that the Authority, by not appealing, elected to treat the two claims as separate units. In our view, the rationale of Arnold is presently inapposite on the unique facts of the instant record. Tsuris’ motion to quash must be denied.

These appeals present two main issues: (a) whether the trial court committed error in allowing the condemning Authority’s counsel to cross-examine the owner’s expert witnesses as to whether, in arriving at their *186 valuation figures, they considered the value of all the interests, including the lessee’s interest, in the property; (b) the propriety of the trial court’s instructions to the jury on the application of the Act of 1937, supra, to a condemnation proceeding which involved the multiple interests of the owner-lessor and his lessee.

At trial, the owner called several real estate experts who gave, upon direct examination, their opinions as to the fair market value of Tsuris’ interest in the property at the time of the taking. The witnesses were asked upon cross-examination by counsel for the Authority whether the value which they had given upon direct examination included all interests in the property. Over objection, the trial court permitted such questioning and, in so doing, no error was committed.

The Authority was entitled to ascertain exactly what was included in the opinions as to value expressed by the owner’s witnesses and the jury was entitled to know whether the valuations given by such witnesses include only the owner’s interest or the interests of both the owner and the lessee. To prove the fair market value of property as a whole evidence as to the reasonable rental value thereof is admissible and such evidence may then be used by experts as a factor in determining their opinions as to reasonable value of the real estate as a whole: Harris v. Railroad Co., 141 Pa. 242, 253, 21 A. 590; Davis v. Penna. R. R., 215 Pa. 581, 585, 64 A. 774; see Orgel, Valuation under Eminent Domain, (2nd ed.), Vol. 1, §176, p. 699.

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Related

In re Condemnation by the Commonwealth
422 A.2d 711 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1980)
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253 Cal. App. 2d 870 (California Court of Appeal, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 A.2d 344, 413 Pa. 181, 1964 Pa. LEXIS 643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garella-v-redevelopment-authority-pa-1964.