Court Opinion

ID: 5544740
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-10 18:56:36.671694+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:34:53.701771
License: Public Domain

Pryor, J.
To prove the fact and the amount of damage to her property from defendants’ railway plaintiff called one Waterlow as a real-estate expert, and propounded to him these inquiries: “How many thousand dollars do you say that elevated railroad, in respect to injuries to light and noise, have damaged that lot?” Defendants objected to the question as “incompetent and improper.” Thereupon the court modified it, and to the question as modified defendants objected on the same grounds. The court overruled the objection, and the witness, answering the question as first propounded, said: “To the par [fee?] value of the lot it would be about 26 to 25 per cent.” Again: “Please state your estimate of the injury from the elevated railroad to the light, and also to the building on the lot, in dollars and cents, confining your estimate to the injuries from the road in respect of noise and the impairment of light?” To this question defendants objected on the grounds above stated, and also on the ground that “it is incompetent for the witness to give his opinion upon the amount of damage;” but the objection was overruled, exception duly taken, and the. witness answered: “Taking all the elements of the railroad together—I cannot suggest light and noise alone; I should say, dirt and cinders and gases— the depreciation of the rental value would be about 33^- per cent., in combination.” Upon the opinion in McGay's Case, 16 N. Y. Supp. 155, (herewith decided,) this evidence was clearly incompetent, and its admission adequate ground of reversal. Again, to the same witness, plaintiff propounded this inquiry: “Have you formed an opinion as to whether Sixth avenue, near Twenty-Third street, would have been a better street, with higher values, supposing that elevated railroad had never come there, or the reverse?” To this question defendants objected that it was “incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial; also as speculative and conjectural, and not a proper subject for opinion.” The objection was overruled, defendants duly excepted, and the witness answered, “It would have improved materially for the better without the elevated road in all ways, ” etc. Upon the opinion in Wallach v. Railway Co., 16 N. Y. Supp. 156, (herewith decided,) and the adjudication in Roberts’ Case, (N. Y. App.) 28 N. E. Rep. 486, and Gray's Case, Id. 498, this evidence was incompetent, because purely conjectural and speculative, and its admission sufficient ground for reversal. Waiving consideration of other points presented by appellants, for the errors specified the judgment must be reversed, and a new trial had, costs to abide the event. All concur.