Ringwood Co. v. North Jersey District Water Supply Commission

143 A. 369, 105 N.J.L. 165, 1928 N.J. LEXIS 310
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedOctober 15, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 143 A. 369 (Ringwood Co. v. North Jersey District Water Supply Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ringwood Co. v. North Jersey District Water Supply Commission, 143 A. 369, 105 N.J.L. 165, 1928 N.J. LEXIS 310 (N.J. 1928).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Black, J.

This is a condemnation case, on appeal from the Passaic Circuit Court. The controversy involves two thousand three hundred and fifty-four acres of land. The land lies in the Wanaque valley, along the Wanaque river, in Passaic county, New Jersey. It was condemned as a part of the site for the Wanaque reservoir, now under construction. The trial of the case was before Judge Newton H. Porter and a struck jury. It resulted in a verdict for the landowner, the appellant, for $711,267.45. Both sides appealed from the award made by the condemnation commissioners to the Passaic Circuit Court. The grounds of appeal in this court are sixty-one in number.

The record is voluminous. It consists of two thousand two hundred and twenty-eight printed pages. The grounds of appeal are, however, grouped and argued under twelve heads in the appellant’s brief.

At the outset the appellant complains that by the rulings of the trial court, “the jury was compelled to determine the *167 value of two thousand three hundred and fifty-four acres of land condemned for water supply purposes without having heard a single word of testimony concerning its market value for that purpose.” “The jury was deprived of hearing a single word of testimony concerning the value of the property by reason of its containing beds of sand, and gravel having a superficial area of four hundred and fifty acres.” The rulings of the trial court and the charge to the jury were in harmony with the cases of Currie v. Waverly, &c., Railroad Co., 52 N. J. L. 381; In re Morris, &c., Dredging Co., 96 Id. 248, in this court, and the case of Ross v. Commissioners of the Palisades Interstate Park, 90 Id. 461; in the Supreme Court. But, it is alleged, a misapplication of the rules stated in those cases was made by the trial judge to classes of testimony and to specific questions; hence, the alleged trial errors.

These criticisms are the subject of the fifth and ninth points in the appellant’s brief. The first are the subject of the eighteenth, nineteenth, twentieth, twenty-ninth and thirtieth grounds of appeal. The second falls under numbers thirty-five to fifty-five of the grounds of appeal.

As to the first, the specific ruling that was made to which an exception was taken, was to a question put to the witness Mr. Cornelius C. Yermeule, a distinguished expert hydraulic and water supply engineer; that question was: Number nineteen, “What in jnur opinion was the market value of the property being taken on the 19th of March, 1925, in the state and condition in which it then was?” The same ruling was applied to like questions put to two other witnesses, Eobert E. Horton and Clyde L. Potts, water supply engineers, called as witnesses numbers twenty-nine and thirty. The basis of the ruling was, that it did not appear that the witnesses knew anything about the value of the lands from a money standpoint. It was not shown that they had any knowledge as to the market value of the lands. They had neither made sales or purchases of other similar lands in the neighborhood of this land, nor had they knowledge of such sales by others. This ruling was not error, under a long line of cases in our *168 reports, which are collected in the case of Ross v. Commissioners of the Palisades Interstate Park, supra; under these decisions, what are the requisite qualifications for a witness to testify as an expert on the value of land must be left very much to the discretion of the trial judge; his decision is conclusive unless clearly shown to be erroneous in matter of law. Mr. Yermeule was permitted fully, specifically and at length to set forth the natural advantages of the land ■ — -its freedom from population and its availability for water supply development. The character of the supply there capable of being developed — as to demand and proximity to demand, all these and kindred matters were fully brought out in his testimony, along the lines sanctioned by this court in the case of Currie v. Waverly, &c., Railroad Co., supra. He was permitted to show all the circumstances and elements which might give to the land a commercial value of its own in the immediate present or in reasonable anticipation in the near future. These witnesses did not qualify as experts on land values. We find no reversible error at this point.

Now, as to the second point; witnesses testified specifically and at length, as to the existence on the land under condemnation of large deposits of sand and gravel; then, a series ' of twenty questions were asked of these witnesses, which were overruled by the trial judge and exceptions noted, numbers thirty-five to fifty-five. The following are fairly illustrative of this series of questions overruled:

• “What would you say that the property was worth ?”
“Are these lands so located as to be useful in the establishment and carrying on a gravel and sand .business ?”
“What are the royalties usually payable?”
“What is that sand in the Ringwood gravel lands worth per cubic yard, as it stands in the property,” attempting to compare the percentage of gravel in these lands with lands on Long Island.
“Can or cannot the production of gravel on these beds be accomplished at costs no greater than the production of gravel on Long Island ?”
*169 “What in your opinion is the value per acre of the sand and gravel lands on the four hundred and fifty acres ?”
“What in your opinion is the value of the sand and gravel on the lands at Bingwood?”

The test is, What is the market value of the land condemned for any commercial value of its own in the immediate present, or in reasonable anticipation in the near future? Answers to these questions could not aid the jury in determining this test question. The location, quantity and quality of the sand and gravel were permitted to go to the jury.

These questions are for the most part collateral and contingent, and involve the calculation of costs and profits to such an extent as to fall directly within the ban of this court, in the cases of In re Morris, &c., Dredging Co., supra; Manda v. Orange, 82 N. J. L. 686; or within the case of Ross v. Commissioners of the Palisades Interstate Park, supra. Valuing land taken under condemnation, underlaid with stone, the stone should not be valued separately and apart from the land, but it may be shown to what extent the land is enhanced in value by the stone. The stone is a component part of the land. So, here the sand and gravel. Manda v. Delaware, &c., Railroad Co., 89 N. J. L. 327, 329.

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Bluebook (online)
143 A. 369, 105 N.J.L. 165, 1928 N.J. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ringwood-co-v-north-jersey-district-water-supply-commission-nj-1928.