Laureldale Cemetery Co. v. Reading Co.

154 A. 372, 303 Pa. 315, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 409
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 27, 1931
DocketAppeal, 33
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 154 A. 372 (Laureldale Cemetery Co. v. Reading Co.) 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
Laureldale Cemetery Co. v. Reading Co., 154 A. 372, 303 Pa. 315, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 409 (Pa. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

The question before us for decision is this: When 8*4 unused acres of a total cemetery plot of 117 acres are taken by a railroad company under eminent domain proceedings, what is the proper measure of damages? Appellant claims that the proper measure is the value of the land for sepulture purposes. The court below found the proper measure to be the difference in the market value of appellant’s premises before and as unaffected by the taking and the market value of appellant’s premises after and as affected by the taking. The case was tried on this theory, and a verdict was rendered for the cemetery company for $39,906.16. The plaintiff appealed.

The appellant is a cemetery company organized in 1923. It acquired shortly thereafter three tracts of land separated only by highways and a railroad, total *320 ing about 117 acres located five miles from the center of Reading. It paid about $500 an acre for this land.

On April 21, 1927, the appellee adopted a resolution appropriating a right-of-way for railroad purposes, varying in width from 95 to 190 feet across the northern half of this cemetery plot. Up to that date the cemetery company had expended $92,000 in developing the cemetery. Twelve hundred lots had been sold and 417 interments made. The development, sale and interments had1 been confined to the southern half of the property. No interments had been made nearer than 600 feet to the land appropriated. The appropriation takes about 8% acres of the 117 acres of the cemetery plot. The appellant objects to the application in this case of the ordinary measure of damages, i. e., the difference in market value, and claims that this measure would not secure to the appellant its constitutional “just compensation.” The appellant’s idea of just compensation is revealed in the testimony and offer of testimony by LeVan Bollinger, president of the appellant company. The court refused to let him give his estimate of the value of the land taken because this estimate was based on these factors, to wit: (a) $1.27 a square foot for which sepulture rights were then being sold; (b) estimate of increase in this sale price during future years; (c) the number of square feet of land available for sepulture purposes in the entire tract; (d) 30 years’ estimate of the time in which all lots for sepulture would be sold in this tract. He then arrived at a figure designated “discounted value.” This designation was used by appellee’s attorney in cross-examination, but was apparently accepted by the witness Bollinger. From this value he deducted a gross sum for the cost of future development and'also the statutory 10% for perpetual care. He made no allowance for sales commissions, for advertising or for overhead. Neither did he take into consideration the value of land in the immediate neighborhood. Counsel for appellant aptly describes Bollinger’s method *321 of assessing value as follows: “The present worth of each year’s sales during the established life of the cemetery were then added together. From this figure Mr. Bollinger deducted a lump sum which represented the cost of developing the entire cemetery according to the universal experience of cemeteries and the experience of the Laureldale Cemetery Company with its own cemetery.” The court did not permit the witness to tell what the resulting figure would be, as it was based on conjectural factors. The exclusion of this testimony is the subject .of the first assignment of error.

It was conceded at the argument that if appellant’s measure had been adopted, the resulting figure would be $26,000 an acre. As the land cost about $500 an acre three or four years previously, this prima facie looked like real estate alchemy, A study of the processes by which this result was reached confirms this prima facie impression.

It is the settled law of Pennsylvania that the proper measure of damages for lands taken under eminent domain is the difference between the market value of the land before and after the appropriation: Pittsburgh & Western R. R. Co. v. Patterson, 107 Pa. 461; Hall et al. v. D., L. & W. R. R., 262 Pa. 292. Appellant contends that it presents a case that calls for an exception to this rule. What is there so exceptional about the land appropriated as to justify the creation and application of a new measure of value to it?

The only thing exceptional about this land is, first, that it has been selected as part of a cemetery site; and, second, it is claimed for it that as a cemetery site it possesses exceptional advantages. If these or similar features make any land appropriated under eminent domain an exception to the established rule for measuring damages, the quantity of appropriated land which will hereafter be equally entitled to exceptional value measuring will soon make the application of the old rule the exception. Every owner of acreage which is likely *322 to be appropriated under eminent domain will be tempted to designate Ms land as an airport, a public golf course, an amusement park, a fox farm or a peach orchard, or something else distinctive, and by so using a portion of it give all of it the status claimed. Future values of the entire tract based on anticipated profits would be conjectured, and the present worth of this future value would become the measure of damages for any of the land taken. The owner of the “airport” or the “golf course” could with plausibility equal to appellant’s make the argument that there is no other site within a given area so well adapted for the projected purpose as his own particular holding. Any owner of acreage might set out young peach trees on a portion of his tract, leaving the remainder of the tract unused, and if a small segment of the remainder be appropriated he could demand exceptional damages because, according to his claim, the land so taken was especially adapted by reason of soil, location, accessibility to market, etc., to raising and selling peaches at a profit, and he could further aver that the remainder of the land would ultimately be planted and great profits result therefrom.

The obvious implications in the acceptance of appellant’s formula lead to the instinctive rejection of it, and this rejection soon finds support in reason. If the land taken was actually yielding profits, as was the toll bridge and its franchises in the case emphasized in appellant’s paper book, Montgomery Co. v. Bridge Co., 110 Pa. 54, then its value before being appropriated would bear a close relationship to its net income capitalized, as is the case with all property permanently devoted to a business to which it is adapted. As Justice Paxson said in that case: “Their [i. e., the bridge franchises, etc.] value depends upon their productiveness. If they yield no money return over expenditures, they would possess little if any present value....... The income from the bridge was a necessary and proper subject of inquiry before the jury.” Justice Paxson fur *323 ther said: “Tlie use referred to is the only one for which the bridge is capable.” In the case before ns, the plot of land actually taken had no present “productiveness.” It was a current liability rather than an asset, because money would have to be expended upon it before it could be sold and used for sepulture.

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Bluebook (online)
154 A. 372, 303 Pa. 315, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laureldale-cemetery-co-v-reading-co-pa-1931.