Lorain St. Ry. Co. v. Sinning

6 Ohio Cir. Dec. 753, 17 Ohio C.C. 649
CourtLorain Circuit Court
DecidedMay 3, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio Cir. Dec. 753 (Lorain St. Ry. Co. v. Sinning) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lorain Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lorain St. Ry. Co. v. Sinning, 6 Ohio Cir. Dec. 753, 17 Ohio C.C. 649 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

MARVIN, J.

No. 317 is a case pending1 here upon a petition filed by the Lorain Street Railway company against Catharine Sinning to reverse the judgment of the court of common pleas and of the probate court of this county. This action was originally brought in the probate court of this county by the Lorain Street Railway company to appropriate and have damages assessed for the appropriation of certain lands owned by the defendant, to be used for the purpose of an electric railway.

And after the statutory proceedings were had, preliminary to the assessment of the damages by the probate court, a jury was called and the question of the damages to be assessed after the appropriation, tried to that jury in that court. That action proceeded to a verdict, the jury found a certain amount as the value of the property appropriated, and a certain amount as the damages to the adjacent property of the defendant, Sinning, and judgment was entered upon such verdict; that was affirmed by the court of common pleas, in a proceeding in error in that court, and it is to reverse these judgments that this case is prosecuted here.

[755]*755It is complained on the part of the plaintiff in error that the probate’court erred in the admission of certain testimony, and attention is called to the fourth page of the bill of exceptions as the first place in which there is such error. Charles Sinning was upon the witness stand, the husband of the defendant, and he was asked this question; I ought, however, to say that prior to the question which I am about to read, he had testified as to what the land of Catharine Sinning was worth per acre as he believed, and then was asked, with a view to getting his judgment as to what should'.be deducted by reason of the construction of the street railroad: “How much would it be worth per acre after the improvement, that is to say how much would this land of Catharine Sinning’s, upon which you have given a value as it now is, be worth per acre after the improvement?” To this question objection was made by the plaintiff, which was overruled. The ground of the objection was, that to permit him to answer that question was to get to the jury an estimate of the damages without any deduction on account of any benefits, and that this might be a case in which there should be, in considering the damage to the property not taken, but adjacent to that taken, certain deductions on account of benefits. Hater on I shall say something which I do not now deem necessary to say as to this question.

It seems to us that whatever the fact may be as to this being a case in which there may be deductions on account of benefits, that is to say, deductions from the amount to be assessed for injury to the premises not taken on account of benefits to such premises, that it would be proper to ask this question. The general rule is, that no deductions from the damages to be assessed for the injury to the premises not taken are to be made on account of any benefits, and until it affirmatively appears that a given case comes within some exception to that rule, it is proper to ask questions upon the assumption that the case is within the general rule, allowing no deductions for benefits. With this understanding of the law, we find no error in the ruling of the court, permitting the question to be answered.

Hater on in the trial, Hewis D. Boynton was upon the stand as a witness for the defendant Sinning, and having qualified and testified as to what he considered the land of Mrs. Sinning to be worth before the improvement, he was asked by counsel for the defendant this question: “Now, Mr. Boynton, after this railroad is constructed through there, at an angle of seventy-one feet from a right angle, trolley wire for propelling the cars, strip sixty-six feet in width, what would be the fair market value of the farm then per acre ?” He was permitted to answer. The next question asked of him was : “What value would you place upon the land to be taken?” Objection was made to both of these questions. We think the first question was entirely proper. We are unable to understand what serious objection could be made to it. Certainly the land owner was entitled to have, from a witness who was qualified to answer, his judgment as to what the premises adjacent to those to be taken were worth, both before and after' the appropriation of the strip to be taken.

The second question, “What value would you place upon the land to be taken,” was not answered, and hence, whatever may be said as to the propriety of asking the question, neither party was prejudiced by its being asked, but, objection having been made to that question, this question was immediately asked of the witness: “What is the fair market value of the land sought to' be taken ?” This question he was permitted to answer. We see no reason why he ought not to have been permitted to answer. He seems to have properly qualified as to a knowledge of the value of such lands, and, having thus qualified, it was entirely proper that he should be permitted to state what the fair market value of this land sought to be taken was.

Hater on, Thomas Negus was upon the stand as a witness for the defendant, Sinning He had been, examined by counsel for Sinning, and cross-examined by counsel for the railway company, and was now undergoing a redirect examination by counsel for Sinning. In his direct examination he had been asked as to [756]*756his knowledge of sales of land in the vicinity, and had given his estimate of the value of the land appropriated, and of the value of the adjoining land of Sinning, both before and after the building of the proposed railroad. Then, upon cross-examination, he had been asked if he had heard of land in that vicinity being sold for forty dollars an acre, and whether he knew of land thereabouts having been sold for one hundred dollars an acre, and then, upon his redirect examination he was asked this question: “You were asked what you have heard about the market value of lands; had you heard of the company buying three acres of Mr. Carlin for nine hundred dollars?” This question was objected to by counsel for the railway company, the objection was overruled, and an exception taken. Now, it is urged as against this ruling, that the fact that there had been a cross-examination in which the witness had been asked if he knew that lands thereabouts had been sold for one hundred dollars an acre and for forty dollars an acre, did not justify the asking of this question, upon redirect examination, while, on the other hand, it is urged that this question was but a fair redirect examination. We are cited by counsel for the defendant in error to the case of Shattuck v. Sloneham, Branch R. R., found in the 6th Allen, beginning at page 115, and also to the last volume of Rice on Evidence, p. 604.

The case in 6th Allen, we think, is not near enough like this case to afford us very much light. The citation from Rice is a discussion of what the purpose and office of the re-examination of a witness is, but we do not think that this last authority named justifies this question, and yet we are not satisfied that there was such error in allowing it to be answered as would justify a reversal on that ground.

It was treading'very close' upon dangerous ground, if not clear up to the danger line, but we have decided that the case should not be reversed because of that.

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6 Ohio Cir. Dec. 753, 17 Ohio C.C. 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lorain-st-ry-co-v-sinning-ohcirctlorain-1895.