Swank v. Carnegie Natural Gas Co.

5 Pa. Super. 371, 1897 Pa. Super. LEXIS 256
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 23, 1897
DocketAppeal, No. 79
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Pa. Super. 371 (Swank v. Carnegie Natural Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swank v. Carnegie Natural Gas Co., 5 Pa. Super. 371, 1897 Pa. Super. LEXIS 256 (Pa. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinions

Opinion by

Willard, J.,

When property is taken by a corporation in the exercise of the right of eminent domain under the Act of May 29,1885, P. L. 29, the owner of the property taken is entitled to damages proper to be paid to him for the easement appropriated by the company. The just compensation to which he is entitled is the surplus of damages over the special benefits: Fisher v. Gas Co., 138 Pa. 301. On a trial to ascertain the true measure of damages for the easement appropriated, the jury must rely to a very great extent upon the opinions of competent witnesses who have knowledge superior to that possessed by the jury of the subject-matter in controversy.

The single assignment of error in this case raises the question whether H. M. Clements, a witness for the plaintiff in the court [374]*374below, was competent to aid the jury on the question of damages sustained by the appellee by the taking of and injury to his land by the appellant. In Galbraith v. The Philadelphia Company, 2 Pa. Superior Ct. 359, we based our judgment upon numerous decisions of our Supreme Court and with care cited them in support of the opinion delivered in that case. We there decided that a witness to be competent must have actual personal knowledge of the facts affecting the subject-matter, a knowledge of the market value of the land, the extent and condition of its improvements, its quantity and productive qualities, knowledge of the extent of the injury in the particular case, and opportunity to learn the value of the property.

The witness, Clements, lived twelve miles from the property, but he testified that he knew the value of farms in the vicinity, not by actual sales but from information derived from people living in the vicinity as to the value, and from the witness’ general knowledge as a farmer of the value of lands in the neighborhood. He had a right to qualify himself by inquiry as to values in the neighborhood as the witness Sprogle did in Struthers v. R. R. Co., 174 Pa. 291, and the knowledge of the land.before the taking qualified him to give an opinion. He was qualified as to his general knowledge of the value of farm lands in the vicinity and lived no further from the premises in question than the witness Struble in Curtin v. R. R. Co., 135 Pa. 20, or the witness Sprogle in Struthers v. R. R. Co., supra. The testimony of Sprogle was held competent, not as expert testimony, but as the testimony of a witness competent to give an opinion on the question of damages, from his knowledge of the property. The opinion of Mr. Justice Williams on the competency of the witness is not without significance; the case was reversed and the opinion of the learned justice was a clear indication of the competency of the witness to the court below on another trial which was awarded.

It also appears that the witness, Clements, went upon the ground at the time of the view and made a minute examination of the premises, expecting to be a witness at that time before the viewers. He not only examined the construction of the. pipe line through the premises and the apparent effect thereof, but he examined the character of the soil, the effect of the entry of carts upon the meadows and wheat fields, also the effect of [375]*375the wagon tracks in rendering the clay soil lumpy when-plowed and the general effect of the entry upon the land in question.

It matters not that the witness obtained information at the time of the view, expecting to be a witness. In Galbraith v. Philadelphia Company, supra, we held that the information obtained by the witness Montgomery, while a viewer, did not affect his competency when called as a witness on appeal in the common pleas, and we might have added, on the authority of Gorgas v. R. R. Co., 144 Pa. 1, that the examination made by him as a viewer strengthened his testimony as a witness. The question is, Did the witness have knowledge qualifying him to speak intelligently of the subject under investigation?

We do not think it to the discredit of the witness that he had been called upon before to testify in other cases as to the effect of laying pipe lines through farm lands. The greater his experience, the more familiar would he naturally be with the subject under consideration and concerning which he was called upon to speak.

From a careful examination of the testimony of the witness,, we think he had personal knowledge of the property affected and knew its market value; that he had examined carefully and knew the condition and extent of its improvements and the productive qualities of the land, the extent of the injury caused by the taking and entry upon it with carts and wagons, and that the witness had ample opportunity to arrive at a correct valuation of the property.

In arriving at these conclusions we have examined carefully the entire testimony of the witness and find that he was a farmer well acquainted with the farms in the vicinity where he had lived for sixteen years; that he knew the Swank farm and the country all through the section where it was located; that as a dealer in stock, making frequent trips through the country his facilities for knowing the value of farms in-the neighborhood were superior to those of the ordinary farmer; it also appears that he had inquired and knew the prices at which property had been sold in the neighborhood, and that previous to the trial he had examined the property minutely as to its character and value in order to 'qualify himself to speak intelligently concerning the same. In Gorgas v. R. R. Co., supra, a witness testified that he had not seen the land in question for seventeen years [376]*376and had not lived in that section of the country during that time. At the time he testified he lived twenty miles from the premises and had no personal knowledge of the market value of farms in the neighborhood, but had general knowledge and knew it to be good limestone land; that he acted as a viewer appointed by the court. He was objected to as incompetent. The objection was overruled and he testified that the damage to the property was $2,000. On appeal to the Supreme Court the admission of the testimony of the witness was assigned for error. In overruling the assignment Chief Justice Paxson said: “Nor do we think it was error to admit the testimony of Thomas R. Burgner. It is true he lived several miles away, but he knew the property and had passed along it on the road occasionally; moreover, he had acted as a viewer appointed by the court. He was not asked to give his opinion as a viewer, but from his observation while acting as such. That a viewer, in such cases, is a competent witness, was ruled in Dorlan v. R. R. Co. 46 Pa. 520.” In Struthers v. R. R. Co., supra, the witness Sprogle testified that he had no special knowledge of the property until after the railroad was constructed; that he then went and examined it and made inquiry as to sales in the neighborhood, and that what he found out about the sales was ascertained within two or three weeks of the trial; that he had been on the land and examined it in the preceding December, but had never been on it at any other time. Pie was permitted to testify as to its value, and Mr. Justice Williams, in his opinion, said as to the competency of the witness : “ He knew enough about the subject to be entitled to be heard as any other witness might be,” but not as an expert. “ His evidence should have gone with that of other witnesses who spoke as witnesses simply; or in the language of the learned judge found in the bill of exceptions, ‘ I think he can testify as far as his testimony goes.’ ”

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Related

Dorian v. East Brandywine & Waynesburg Railroad
46 Pa. 520 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1864)
Curtin v. Nittany V. R.
19 A. 740 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1890)
Fisher v. Baden Gas Co.
22 A. 29 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1890)
Struthers v. Philadelphia & Delaware County Railroad
34 A. 443 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1896)
Galbraith v. Philadelphia Co.
2 Pa. Super. 359 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1896)
Gorgas v. Phila. R.
22 A. 715 (Cumberland County Court of Common Pleas, 1891)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Pa. Super. 371, 1897 Pa. Super. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swank-v-carnegie-natural-gas-co-pasuperct-1897.