Greenfield v. Philadelphia

127 A. 768, 282 Pa. 344, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 626
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 7, 1925
DocketAppeal, 28
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 127 A. 768 (Greenfield v. Philadelphia) 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
Greenfield v. Philadelphia, 127 A. 768, 282 Pa. 344, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 626 (Pa. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Schaefer,

In a proceeding to assess damages for the taking of five feet of plaintiff’s property at the southwest corner of 15th and Chestnut streets in the City of Philadelphia for the purpose of widening the latter thoroughfare, the jury in the common pleas rendered a verdict for the defendant, upon which judgment was entered, and plaintiff has appealed.

On March 31, 1884, the City of Philadelphia passed an ordinance widening from fifty to sixty feet that portion of Chestnut Street extending from the Delaware River to the Schuylkill River, the ordinance providing that thereafter it should not be lawful for an owner to erect a new building or to rebuild or alter the front of *348 any then existing one without making it recede so as to conform to the new lines of the street.

Plaintiff acquired title to the property in question on March 6,1922, and proceeded to erect thereon a twenty-one story office building, which, within less than a year, he sold to a trust company. In constructing the building, he was compelled under the terms of the ordinance to recede five feet from the former building line and this five feet was appropriated by the city.

When plaintiff was called as a witness in the case, he did not testify in chief as to the value of the property, but, on cross-examination, he was asked the price he had paid for it. Objection was made to the inquiry, which the court overruled. This ruling is assigned as error, appellant contending that it was not proper, first, because he had not testified in direct examination to the value of the property, second, because the purchase was made more than a year before the appropriation, it being alleged that, in the meanwhile, the character of the neighborhood had changed and values greatly increased, and, third, because the purchase included another lot in the rear of the property, on the opposite side of a narrow street. The last reason could be dismissed with the statement that the price of the smaller lot was brought out by his own counsel in redirect examination; this circumstance, however, has no effect on the ruling we are to make.

A party to litigation who offers himself as a witness does so generally as to all relevant matters. Whether or not he has testified in chief to facts or circumstances which the opposite party desires to bring out, he may be cross-examined as to them, provided they are relevant, are not, strictly speaking, matters of defense, and are not of such a nature that in the judgment of the trial court it would be confusing to the jury to intro-' duce them at that particular time and for that reason should be postponed until defendant is putting in his testimony. It is but reasonble that a plaintiff should *349 not be permitted to withhold from the jury a fact vital to a proper understanding and determination of his case and one which he should disclose (Albrecht v. Erie City, 265 Pa. 453; Smith v. Phila. Traction Co., 202 Pa. 54), or one which would qualify or destroy the effect of the testimony in chief: Quigley v. Thompson, 211 Pa. 107. A plaintiff is on the other hand entitled to present his case in orderly fashion according to his own plan and a defendant should not be allowed to upset his plan by cross-examination as to matters which, while relevant and helpful to defendant, would be apt, if introduced at that particular time, to confuse the minds of the jury. As to such matters defendant should be compelled to wait until he puts in his defense. On this point, as on others having to do with the range of cross-examination, much must be left to the sound discretion of the trial judge: Littieri v. Freda, 241 Pa. 21. The cross-examination of a plaintiff who offers himself as a witness cannot be carried to an extent which would allow the defendant to put in a defense based upon facts of a character different from those which had been testified to in chief, for, as to such defense, he must wait until the plaintiff has rested, at which time he can call him as for cross-examination and question him as to any relevant fact (Malone v. Dougherty, 79 Pa. 46, 51; Boyd v. Conshohocken Worsted Mills, 149 Pa. 363, 372); but the defendant on such cross-examination is not limited strictly to those facts which have been brought out on direct examination; he may ask any questions which are directed toward showing that the plaintiff has not presented all the facts which he should present in advancing his side of the case, and any questions which are intended to show just what the plaintiff’s case actually is.

To say that a party to litigation may be cross-examined as to all relevant matters follows as a logical conclusion from the fact that if a party has not been called as a witness in his own behalf he may be put upon *350 the stand by his opponent and be compelled to testify as under cross-examination: Act of Mqy 23,1887, P. L. 158, as amended by section 1 of the Act of March 30, 1911, P. L. 35; Dinger v. Friedman, 279 Pa. 8; Brubaker v. Taylor, 76 Pa. 83; Kirkpatrick & Lyons v. Bonsall, 72 Pa. 155. This provision of the law is a wise one and aids the administration of justice. The effect of holding that a plaintiff in a case such as this, — where the method of computing the damages is by comparison of the two factors, what the property was worth immediately before the appropriation and what it is worth immediately after and as affected by the taking, — cannot be asked the price he paid for the property in question but a short time before it was alleged to be damaged, would be to negative the statute and the long-established rule of law out of which it grew and to do away with this most salutary practice looking toward the establishment of facts which are within the knowledge of the parties immediately concerned.

The cross-examination here permitted follows in principle that which was allowed in Albrecht v. Erie City, 265 Pa. 453. There it was held, where the plaintiff was seeking to recover damages from a municipality for personal injuries resulting from a fall on a sidewalk, that it was reversible error to refuse to permit cross-examination of him for the purpose of developing the fact that he had been guilty of contributory negligence. In that proceeding the plaintiff was required to make out a case clear of contributory negligence, here to show as the minuend of his problem of damages the value of his property before the appropriation. We said in that case, “on his direct examination he [plaintiff] could not withhold any evidence, tending to show that he had contributed to the accident by his own lack of care under the circumstances. Whatever, as to this, he failed to disclose, or was not developed on direct examination, it was the right of the defendant to elicit on cross-examination. He could keep nothing back within his own knowl *351 edge that barred his right to recover. If he did so, either voluntarily or by the failure of his counsel to develop it on direct examination, the defendant’s right was to call it forth on cross-examination, not as a matter of defense, but as a part of the plaintiff’s case, for the consideration of the court and jury, relieving the defendant from making any defense.” Plaintiff in the case in hand could not conceal a most material fact, possibly known only to him, what he had so recently paid for the property, and leave the jury in the dark as to this most important circumstance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 A. 768, 282 Pa. 344, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenfield-v-philadelphia-pa-1925.