Young v. Upper Yoder Township School District

118 A.2d 440, 383 Pa. 320, 1955 Pa. LEXIS 357
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 30, 1955
DocketAppeal, 123
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 118 A.2d 440 (Young v. Upper Yoder Township School District) 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
Young v. Upper Yoder Township School District, 118 A.2d 440, 383 Pa. 320, 1955 Pa. LEXIS 357 (Pa. 1955).

Opinion

Opinion

Per Curiam,

The judgment entered in this case is affirmed on the following excerpts from the opinion of Judge.Griffith in the Court below :

“This is a motion for new trial made by the defendant after a verdict for the plaintiffs in the sum of $33,750.00 awarded by a jury and tried before the Honorable John H. McCann, President Judge, now deceased.
“On June 2nd, 1952, the defendant School District condemned 6.426 acres of the plaintiffs’ land for school purposes. The land so condemned was a portion of a tract containing 12.92 acres purchased by the plaintiffs on January 23rd, 1943, of which they had remaining at the time of the condemnation approximately 11 acres. The Viewers appointed by the Court of Quarter Sessions awarded the plaintiffs $13,500.00, and the present proceeding followed the plaintiffs’ appeal from the Viewers’ award. In 1941 the plaintiffs acquired a tract containing 20.673 acres, in 1943 the tract containing 12.92 acres, which is the subject of this proceeding, and *322 in 1947 a tract containing 9.381 acres, or a total of 42.974 acres of land in Upper Yoder Township, together with certain rights of ingress, egress and regress to public highways. Title was originally acquired by plaintiffs in the name of the Home Construction Company, which was wholly owned by them, but was later reconveyed to the plaintiffs without consideration.
“The plaintiffs erected and disposed of 29 dwellings and also 17 lots of vacant land upon 10 of which dwellings had been erected by the purchasers prior to June, 1952, when the portion of the land with which we are concerned was condemned.
“After the Jury viewed the premises the case came on for trial and the testimony as to value was as follows :
Before After
Condemnation Condemnation
P. C. Albert Young $68,640.00 $25,110.00
Dell Comiskey $67,850.00 $22,920.00
George Minno $81,469.00 $36,529.00
E. A. Hower $63,050.00 $21,070.00
“The foregoing witnesses all testified on behalf of the plaintiffs. The defendant’s witnesses testified as to value as follows:
Before After
Condemnation Condemnation
E. Raphael Cherry $17,600.00 $8,000.00
William R. Beam $11,000.00 $5,000.00
Robert E. Miller $15,400.00 $8,400.00
Mark Cauffiel $17,500.00 $7,500.00
“The defendant assigned 22 reasons in support of its motion for a new trial.
“We shall first consider defendant’s reason 13 and 6(c). These reasons suggest that the trial judge abused his discretion in excluding evidence concerning the cost of acquisition of the condemned land of the plain *323 tiffs and in excluding from evidence the deed by which title was acquired.
“It appears that plaintiffs acquired title to 12.92 acres for a consideration of $3,000.00 on January 23rd, 1943, and that at the time of condemnation on June 2nd, 1952, or approximately 9% years later, they still owned approximately 11 of the original 12.92 acres. The plaintiffs placed a valuation of $68,640.00 on these 11 acres, and the defendant believes that the action of the trial judge in excluding evidence of the cost of acquisition was an abuse of discretion by reason of the great disparity between the price the plaintiffs paid for the land and the value they claimed it was worth at the time of condemnation.
“In United States vs. Certain Parcels of Land, 144 P. 2d 626, 155 A.L.R. 253, the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, in 1944, took the view that, although under the federal concept of market value the plaintiff could offer the sale price of the condemned property in evidence, yet the Pennsylvania rule would exclude such evidence on the basis of market value in condemnation proceedings being not the price for which one person may have bought or sold his property but the judgment of the community as to value. However that may be, it is clear especially since Berger v. Public Parking Authority of Pittsburgh, 380 Pa. 19, that generally, whether for the purpose of testing his credibility or to establish value or both, an owner may be asked on cross-examination what he paid for the property and the price at which he offered to sell it if purchase or sale was hot too remote. See also Brown’s ‘Pennsylvania Evidence’ 66. This is the rule elsewhere. 18 Am. Jur. Eminent Domain, Sec. 351, page 994; 20 Am. Jur. Evidence, Sec. 374, page 340. In the Berger case the sale was made 3 years and 7 months prior to the condemnation. In that case the majority of *324 the court thought that the cross-examination of the plaintiff on his agreement to sell in July of 1947 for $36,000.00 ‘was particularly allowable . . . because West Brown, a real estate expert for the owners, testified that ... in 1948 . . . his appraisal was $75,000.00 . . . and that his appraisal was the same in 1951 (when the land was condemned) as it was in 1948,’ thus discrediting this witness’ testimony as to his 1951 valuation, since his 1948 valuation was obviously inflated as compared to the selling price in 1947, just one year before and hence clearly not too remote.
“In the present case the trial judge refused to permit cross-examination of the plaintiff as to the purchase price on the ground that the purchase was too remote, since it occurred approximately 9 1/2 years before the condemnation and since the character of the' neighborhood had been greatly changed in the meantime. In spite of the great disparity between the purchase price of $3,000.00 in 1943 and plaintiffs’ valuation of the 11 acres remaining of the 12.92 acres in 1952 in the sum of $68,640.00, we think the trial judge did not abuse his discretion in refusing to permit such cross-examination.
“As was said in Thompson v. American Steel & Wire Co., 317 Pa. 7, 11, ‘His (the trial judge’s) conclusion or decision on such points will not be interfered with on appeal save for manifest abuse of power.’
“The defendant’s reasons for a new trial numbered 1, 2, 3 and 4, are directed against the alleged excessive amount of the verdict.
“While we have come to the conclusion that the verdict of $33,750.00 was excessive, we do not believe that it must be corrected by the unqualified award of a new trial. Nor, for the reasons given above, do we think that the admission of evidence of the plaintiffs’ acquisition price is the proper method to correct it.
*325 “The plaintiffs’ witnesses testified that the damage caused by the condemnation was between $41,980.00 and $44,940.00. The defendant’s witnesses testified that the damage sustained was between $6,000.00 and $10,000.00.

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Bluebook (online)
118 A.2d 440, 383 Pa. 320, 1955 Pa. LEXIS 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-upper-yoder-township-school-district-pa-1955.