In re the Board of Recreation Commissioners
In re the Board of Recreation Commissioners
Opinion of the Court
There are five grounds of appeal. One is that the verdict was against the weight of evidence. This is not a subject of appellate review in a civil case. Another is that certain testimony of one Buescher was erroneously admitted. There was no exception to the ruling, and hence it is not now reviewable.
The other three grounds may be discussed together, as they relate to the admission of three separate photographs in evidence, to each of which there .was objection, overruled and exception taken. These photographs showed a condition of certain land not part of that sought to be taken, in fact several hundred feet from the nearest corner of the tract in question, and seem to have been admitted on the theory, for which there was some support in the testimony, that the tract under condemnation was part of a large bog
We think there was error in the admission of these photographs. Conceding for present purposes, but not deciding, that photographs of the general conditions existing on adjacent land (which the jury were not permitted by the court to view directly) may be evidential, these pictures were not offered to show general conditions, but avowedly to show a special condition at a particular spot, due, in part, to alleged artificial interference not contemplated as to the lands in question. These lands in question are desired not as building lots fronting on streets, but as a public playground, fairly comparable with the unpiled back yards, and the cost of fitting them for house buildings was therefore quite irrelevant and misleading to the jury. If the lands required expensive piling for building purposes and none for open air
There was another objection to the admission of these pictures. They showed conditions not on the property to be taken, but on other property, which, while claimed to be due to natural tendencies of the terrain, may well have been due in large part, if not principally, to faulty engineering and construction. Where it is sought to gauge the value of lands by alleged similar conditions on other lands, the parallelism should be clear and complete; otherwise, the test fails and the admission of such evidence is erroneous. Hepburn v. Water Supply Commission, 2 N. J. Adv. R. 1644.
The judgment of the Circuit Court will be reversed, and the cause remanded to the end that a venire de novo issue.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF THE BOARD OF RECREATION COMMISSIONERS OF WEST NEW YORK FOR THE TAKING OF LANDS OF DIECKMANN
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published