Muzi v. Commonwealth

138 N.E.2d 578, 335 Mass. 101, 1956 Mass. LEXIS 583
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 138 N.E.2d 578 (Muzi v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Muzi v. Commonwealth, 138 N.E.2d 578, 335 Mass. 101, 1956 Mass. LEXIS 583 (Mass. 1956).

Opinion

Whittemore, J.

The petitioner excepted to the refusal of the trial* judge to permit two real estate appraisers to *102 testify to their opinions of the value of the petitioner’s real estate in Needham before and after the taking of some of it, on August 5, 1953, for the purposes of the location of the new limited access highway known as Route 128. An appraiser for the respondent was permitted to testify to bis opinion subject to the petitioner’s objection and exception. The petitioner also excepted to the exclusion of testimony offered to support the qualifications of one of the appraisers.

The petitioner’s real estate was located at the junction of the former location of Route 128 and Highland Avenue, and consisted of about 825,000 square feet óf land of which some 249,405 square feet were zoned for manufacturing, 280,517 square feet were zoned for business, and 295,211 square feet were zoned for residences. There was located on the land zoned for manufacturing a large garage and showroom with “gasoline pumps, etc.,” and a large parking space, and on the land zoned for residences there were three houses and outbuildings with them. The greater part of the land taken was in either the manufacturing zone or the business zone.

Each of the three experts was qualified in general as an appraiser of industrial, business or residential real estate through years of experience in buying and selling properties in and about Boston and greater Boston and appraising for court or other purposes. The experience of each with Needham real estate and Route 128 values was as follows: Beck, the petitioner’s witness, within a month had testified in court as to the fair value of property in Needham; during the past year or two he bad appraised in Needham for mortgage purposes twenty-nine properties; he had made appraisals along Route 128 for court cases not yet heard; “in connection with his work [of] appraising various properties out through Needham and the Needham area, he . . . [had] familiarized himself with the sales of other properties” and was “familiar with the sales of properties ... in Ded-ham and Needham.” Donovan, the petitioner’s witness, had made appraisals of property in Needham in 1948-1949 *103 but none within the past two years except that of the petitioner’s property; “he visited Needham when he made the appraisal of the Moxie Company” (date not stated) whose offices are “on Route #128 just the other side of the railroad tracks from the . . . [[petitioner’s] property”; in connection with his work of appraisals and sales of property in surrounding towns bordering upon Needham he checked the real estate sales and market in Needham; a law firm had sought his advice in 1950 as to the proper rent of Maloney Motors across the street from the petitioner’s property and he made a brief survey of the real estate market in Needham at that time; in 1953 he had been given a listing, for sale, of the property in the industrial development “diagonally across from the Muzi property” and, at the nearest point, approximately 600 feet from it. The trial judge excluded, subject to the petitioner’s exception, Donovan’s proffered testimony, shown cn offer of proof, that in connection with that listing he checked sales and became familiar with the real estate market in Needham. Casey, the respondent’s witness, had made appraisals on Route 128 from the northern end to Westwood, and in connection with takings by the Commonwealth, in the town of Need-ham; he recalled by name five properties on Route 128 (without identification that they were in Needham) which he had appraised “in connection with the taking”; he had “appraised other properties, but cannot remember the names”; he had made a survey of the land taken by the State through the towns of Needham, Dedham and West-wood; he was when testifying the owner of 10,000 square feet of residential property in Needham and in 1953 he purchased on the thoroughfare parallel to Highland Avenue about 16,000 square feet of land, and removed a large embankment of sand and gravel and moved a house on the lot and sold it; he had within six months purchased land in. Westwood, very close to Needham, close to Route 128 off Route 1A — a single lot of land, a house lot. On cross-examination, after bis opinion of values was admitted, he testified that “he was interested in the purchase of a block *104 in the center of Needham occupied by a department store and other stores . . . and investigated the rentals and amount of business the department store did . . . [and] the assessed value of the property and gave an opinion to the prospective buyer . . . [but] did not make the sale.”

There was no basis for excluding the evidence that Donovan in 1953 checked sales and became familiar with the real estate market in Needham in order to handle property, listed with him for sale, which was on Route 128 near to the petitioner’s property. For present purposes therefore we consider Donovan’s qualifications to include this experience.

The land taken was predominantly business and industrial in character. Two hundred three thousand eight hundred sixty square feet of the taken land were zoned for manufacturing, 92,450 square feet were zoned for business, and 40,836 square feet were zoned for residences. Casey testified that there was a particularly active real estate market in Needham in 1953 for industrial and business property, that the heavy industrial development in Needham was underway in 1953, and that prior to the taking there had been a number of sales in the industrial development across the street from the Muzi property and the Muzi property was like that property in that it had formerly been a sand and gravel pit and he took into consideration the sales in the industrial development property in arriving at his opinion of value.

Viewed in the light of the character of the land taken there are significant similarities in the important qualifications of the three witnesses and the differences are relatively unimportant. As stated all were well qualified in general experience. Casey may have done more appraising of land located on Route 128, but each had done such appraising. Each had made appraisals in Needham and had checked properties and values there. Neither Casey nor Beck testified expressly that the sites they had appraised on Route 128 were industrial or business sites. Donovan had appraised such sites and in Needham. Casey’s personal par *105 ticipation in sales of residential property in Needham would not have been likely to give him significantly more knowledge of business and industrial values on Route 128 than did Beck’s many appraisals there, even if these appraisals by Beck were all of residential properties as they may have been. The fact that Donovan had not taken part in any sales of residential properties in Needham is not in the circumstances a valid distinction between his qualifications and Casey’s.

The particular town in which business or industrial land on a main automobile route is located may be of much less importance in determining its value than is the fact of adjacency to such a highway. The Muzi land was so located prior to the taking.

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Bluebook (online)
138 N.E.2d 578, 335 Mass. 101, 1956 Mass. LEXIS 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muzi-v-commonwealth-mass-1956.