Court Opinion

ID: 6278303
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 16:07:51.443566+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:00:07.849469
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Porter, J.,
This action of trespass was brought to recover damages for injury to an island, owned by the plaintiff, alleged to have resulted from the wrongful act of the defendant company in depositing large quantities of culm and coal dirt in the Susquehanna river, which culm and dirt was by the current of the river deposited upon the said island and rendered the land useless for agricultural purposes. The plaintiff recovered a judgment in the court below and the defendant appeals.
*416The first seven specifications of error refer to the admission of the testimony of the witnesses produced by plaintiff for the purpose of establishing the value of the land before the injury occurred, and the effect upon that value of the deposit upon it of the culm and coal dust.. The contention of the appellant is that these witnesses did not have such knowledge as would enable them to estimate the market value of this island for agricultural purposes before and after the injury. Alter careful consideration of the testimony to which these specifications of error refer we are convinced that the contention of the appellant is not well founded. Each one of the witnesses had for many years been familiar with the property in question, its area and the uses to which it might reasonably be applied, the extent and condition of its improvement, and the fertility of the land, as indicated by the crops actually grown upon it. Each of these witnesses was the owner of or interested in land in the neighborhood, and testified that he knew the market value of such land. It is true they knew of very few sales, but it clearly appeared that there had been • very few- sales, and such sales as had occurred these witnesses knew of and considered in testifying as to the market value of the land. The market value of land is not a question of science and skill upon which only an expert can give an opinion, yet the trial judge should see to it that every witness called , to prove value has a proper foundation of knowledge to make his opinion of some real worth before admitting it as evidence. This property happened to be an island over which no public road fan. All of the witnesses had been upon the island at some time although some of them had not visited it very frequently. Each of the witnesses very frequently used a public road along the bank of the river, near the island and from which it was entirely visible. The testimony clearly established that this island was valuable only for agricultural purposes, that it was very productive, and easily accessible. The value *417of property of this character is not to be determined by quotations on the exchange. The only way in which such value can be proved is by the testimony of parties familiar with the land, the means of access thereto, the prices at which lands in the neighborhood, upon the main shore, are held and sold. If the value of land which happens to be an island cannot be established by the testimony of witnesses having knowledge of all these facts, then there was no way in which this plaintiff could establish the value of this island, for the ownership had been in her own family for many years. The witnesses had the requisite knowledge and experience to warrant the court below in permitting them to testify as to the value of the land: Smith v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co., 205 Pa. 645; Rea v. The Pittsburg Railroad Co., 229 Pa. 106. The first seven specifications of error are dismissed.
We would not be warranted in holding that the remark of counsel for appellee of which complaint is made in the third specification, and the refusal of the court to withdraw a juror because thereof, was, in the circumstances, reversible error. The remark was not made in an address to the jury, and seems to have been an incident of one of those unseemly exchanges of compliments between counsel which sometimes occur in the examination of a witness. The language brought upon the record is a part only of a sentence, and the alertness of counsel for the defendant was successful in preventing counsel for plaintiff from stating what it was that he could not refrain from doing. We are left entirely in the dark as to which one of the primary human instincts was at that moment dominating the learned counsel for the appellee. The .force of the remark having been thus broken, the offender promptly rebuked by- the court, and the jury immediately instructed that they were not to be influenced by the remark, we are not satisfied that the interests of justice require us to sustain this specification of error: Brown v. City of *418Scranton, 231 Pa. 593; Miller v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co., 231 Pa. 627.
The ninth and tenth specifications of error refer to the manner in which the court instructed the jury as to the propriety of allowing to the plaintiff compensation for delay in payment of any damages which her land might have sustained. The language of the court in its general charge, and the point submitted by plaintiff which was affirmed were certainly objectionable. If it did not clearly appear from the manner in which the jury returned their verdict, that the instruction did no harm, these specifications of error ought to be sustained. The jury returned the following special verdict: “We, the jurors in the case .... -find the island damaged to the amount of $1,500, and the West End Coal Company’s proportion of this damage to be $500.” This, it is to be noted was not a general finding of damages in favor of the plaintiff. The verdict is a finding of the specific fact that the island was damaged to a specific amount, and that the defendant company was responsible for one-third of that specific damage. We are, therefore, of opinion that the error worked no injury to the defendant company’s cause.
The judgment is affirmed.