Knight v. Allegheny County

92 A.2d 225, 371 Pa. 484
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 10, 1952
DocketAppeal, 157
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 92 A.2d 225 (Knight v. Allegheny County) 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
Knight v. Allegheny County, 92 A.2d 225, 371 Pa. 484 (Pa. 1952).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Horace Stern,

The refusal in this case of the court below to grant a new trial to defendant must be reversed. The trial judge’s charge to the jury did not serve, by reason of faults both of commission and omission, to bring about a proper determination of the issue involved.

Plaintiffs, prior to the condemnation of their property, were the owners of a lot fronting 40 feet on the northerly side of West Fifth Avenue in the City of McKeesport, extending back a distance of 72 feet to an alley, and having erected thereon a garage and an old double house containing five rooms and bath on each side, with a semi-finished attic. The house is of frame construction; the side walls are covered with tin and the front and rear walls with brick; a brick porch, 5 to 8 feet in width, ran along the entire front. In connection with the widening of the avenue as part of the construction of the Dravosburg Bridge and its approaches ten feet were taken from the front of the property, thereby eliminating the entire porch and somewhat over four feet from the front of the house itself. The Board of Viewers awarded $8,200 as compensation for these damages. Plaintiffs appealed from this award to the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County. At the trial in that court three witnesses testified on their behalf, — Messrs. Brown and Hershberger, real estate experts, who estimated the damages, the one at $18,000 and the other at $17,000, — these valuations being based on the assumption that the property could not, by any construction, be adjusted to the new condition but that the whole house would have to be moved back on the lot, — and Mr. Shack, a contractor and house mover, who testified it would cost $18,275 so to move it; this figure was adopted by these other two witnesses in' their, estimates. Three wit *486 nesses testified on behalf of the County of Allegheny,— Mr. Jordan, an engineer engaged in construction work, who testified that it would be possible to build a new front on the property and make a satisfactory rearrangement of the rooms, Mr. Fees, a building contractor, who testified similarly and that the cost of the Avork would be $3,980, and Mr. Fahnestock, a real estate expert, who, on the basis of this same theory, estimated the damages at $5,200, representing the difference between the fair market value of the property before and after such reconstruction was made. While the discrepancy between the figures thus presented by. the two sets of witnesses would seem at first blush to be exceedingly large, the difference is obviously accounted for by the fact that plaintiffs’ witnesses insisted that the house, to have any remaining value at all, would have to be moved back on the lot, an operation which incidentally necessitated the demolition of the garage located at the rear of the property, whereas the witnesses for defendant claimed that a new front could be built with comparatively little resulting depreciation in value. The jury apparently did not resolve the determinative issue thus raised, but instead rendered a verdict of $12,000 together with compensation of $1,380 for delay in payment, or a total of $13,-380, the $12,000 obviously representing the halfway mark between the estimates given by plaintiffs’ and defendant’s witnesses respectively.

When we read the charge of the learned trial judge the reason for th,e jury’s action becomes quite apparent. The court belittled .the testimony of the experts,' telling the jury that;:CiYoú and I know each .side can get all the experts, they need t>y p.aying them”,:.and that he was “always skeptical” about their, “great records”,— in. other words, about their reputations-.and experience, in- their, respective, occupations. . H©: said that “These *487 gentlemen are supposed to give you light, help you out”, but he proceeded to tell of another valuation proceeding in which he was the judge and where they had “a great array of witnesses” who “were supposed to give me light”, but there was a difference in their estimates of §500,000, “so you know how much help I was given. I had to reach up in the clouds and just grab a figure and make a guess. That’s all that was done in that case.” This was followed by the statement : “You have to make the guess here, not me. You have to say what the damage was. If these gentlemen have given you any light on this situation, I am very glad, but I can’t see where they gave you great light when one said $6,000 and the other says $18,000. They have left quite a wide margin for you to guess on.” What in effect, therefore, the court told the jury was that he had judicially decided a similar case by making a “guess”, and they were invited to do the same here. * It need scarcely be said that juries are not to “guess” but to weigh the testimony intelligently and decide the issue in accordance with the law and the evidence. After indicating to the jury that the court did not think much ■weight need be given to the testimony of the expert witnesses, the court told them that they were “not bound to set aside your common sense in this matter. You have a right to use that and say what you think is the fair market value of this property immediately before and immediately after.” It is difficult to see how the exercise merely of the “common sense” of laymen could be relied upon to determine the value of a piece of real estate, and, since the only evidence as to *488 values was that given by the experts, and since their testimony was severely disparaged by the court, the jury were thereby left with practically nothing upon which to base a finding.

The court also committed error in ridiculing the law. The jury were instructed: “You know these real estate gentlemen. They say they have taken into consideration the market value of other properties in the neighborhood. That may be the law and it may be common sense and right. I think it is the bunk, and I am going to tell you why.” The court then proceeded by way of “illustration” to say that a price paid for a property many years ago might not represent its present value; moreover, “The man may have been very hard pressed. He may sell the property at the lowest value, or he may sell it above its value because somebody has made him an offer and he thinks he has a good deal and he takes it. So I don’t pay too much attention to that. That is only my opinion as to selling prices in the community.” To tell the jury that the court regards law applicable to the case as “bunk” was clearly to invite them to disregard it.

In referring to the expert witnesses, the court said: “I know Mr. Brown; I know Mr. Hershberger; I know Mr. Fahnestock. They are good friends of mine”. While the court then proceeded to deprecate the sincerity and reliability of all expert testimony, it would nevertheless seem indiscreet for the court to have referred to some of the witnesses as being his “good friends”, and thus perhaps giving them, however unintentionally, greater prestige in the eyes of the jury than that to which the others were entitled. It was also infelicitous on the court’s part to state to the jury that “Mr. Brown says this property is damaged to the extent of |18,000. I want you all to remember that. I am going to ask the foreman particularly to remember those

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Related

Frontage, Inc. v. Allegheny County
162 A.2d 1 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1960)
Young v. Upper Yoder Township School District
118 A.2d 440 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1955)
Avins v. Commonwealth
108 A.2d 788 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
92 A.2d 225, 371 Pa. 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-allegheny-county-pa-1952.