Hoffman v. Philadelphia

104 A. 674, 261 Pa. 473, 1918 Pa. LEXIS 769
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 3, 1918
DocketAppeal, No. 322
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 104 A. 674 (Hoffman 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
Hoffman v. Philadelphia, 104 A. 674, 261 Pa. 473, 1918 Pa. LEXIS 769 (Pa. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Brown,

The proceeding in the court below was an issue for the ascertainment of damages sustained by the plaintiff in the taking of his land by the City of Philadelphia for park purposes. On his appeal from the judgment on the verdict in his favor his sole complaint is that the trial judge erred in instructing the jury as to his right to compensation for delay in paying him his damages. The six assignments of error raise no other question. In his opinion refusing a new trial the learned trial judge comments on certain facts as having been sufficient to warrant a finding that the claim of the plaintiff- was so excessive and unconscionable as to justify the defendant in refusing payment of it. This comment was inadvertently made, for the facts to which reference was thus made were not before the jury. Whether the instructions complained of were erroneous depended entirely upon what the facts were upon which the jury were to pass on plaintiff’s claim to compensation for the delay in paying him for the damages he sustained, and we proceed to state them. The land was taken in 1910, and there was, of course, a finding by a jury of view in the first instance of the amount of damage the plaintiff had sustained. The issue in the Common Pleas followed an appeal from that finding, but it did not appear on the trial below whether the claimant or the city had appealed. In 1917 — nearly seven years after the land had been taken — plaintiff’s claim for damages was submitted to a jury in this issue. There was absolutely nothing before them- to have justified a finding that, during this long delay, he had ever refused to name an amount he was willing to accept as compensation, or had ever made an unreasonable or exorbitant demand for the same, and the law did not presume such action on his part. He was not called as a witness in the case, and there was, therefore, nothing from him to indicate what sum he had claimed. True, his witnesses differed from those called by the city in their estimate of the damages sustained, [475]*475but this was no ground for finding that the plaintiff’s claim had been so excessive and unconscionable as to have justified the defendant in withholding payment from him. The case as presented to the jury on the question of his right to compensation for the delay in paying him cast the burden upon the city of showing the facts excusing its delay in paying him. But it did not assume that burden, and as there was absolutely nothing in the evidence to show that the plaintiff had stubbornly refused to come to an agreement with the city as to what it should pay him, or that he was responsible in any way for the delay in paying him, he was entitled to compensation for the delay, and the jury should have been unqualifiedly so instructed: Wayne v. Pennsylvania Railroad Company, 231 Pa. 512; Hoffman v. City of Philadelphia, 250 Pa. 1.

While the learned trial judge followed, in some portions of his charge, what has been distinctly ruled by the two foregoing cases, in other portions of it he departed from them and gave a license to the jury to find, in utter absence of anything to justify the finding, that the delay on the part of the city in paying was right and proper. In the extract from the charge which is the subject of the second assignment of error, the instruction was “whether there has been a right and proper delay depends upon what you believe to be the facts of the case”; and, in the answer to the second and third points presented by the plaintiff, the further instruction as to compensation for delay was, “But in fact he may not be so entitled. If he has disappointed the law and stubbornly refused to name an amount which he would be willing to accept as compensation, or in the same spirit has been extortionate in his demands and has named a sum exorbitant and unreasonable, a jury might well find that he has himself unjustifiably provoked the delay and deny him all damages therefor.” These erroneous instructions were not cured by others that were correct, for the jury may have found, under the license given [476]*476them, that the plaintiff had himself to blame for not getting his damages promptly from the city. Such license ought not to' have been given them; on the other hand the instructions asked for by plaintiff’s second and third points should have been unqualifiedly given.

The second and fourth assignments of error are sustained, and the judgment is reversed with a venire facias de novo.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 A. 674, 261 Pa. 473, 1918 Pa. LEXIS 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-v-philadelphia-pa-1918.