
    Simpson v. Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission, Appellant.
    
      Argued January 9, 1956.
    Before Stern, C. J., Stearns, Jones, Bell, Chidsey, Musmanno and Arnold, JJ.
    
      Thomas C. Gawthrop, with him Harry O. Pepper, Edward Springer, Deputy Attorney General and Herbert B. Gohen, Attorney General, for appellant.
    
      Joseph Neff Ewing, with him Joseph Neff Ewing, Jr., for appellees.
    March 13, 1956:
   Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

•This appeal grows out of the condemnation by the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission of a portion of-the plaintiffs’ farm in Uwchlan Township, Chester County^ for use in the'construction, operation and maintenance of .the Turnpike’s eastern extension highway. On’ petition - of the -plaintiffs the court below .appointed viewers who, after a view ■ and hearing, awarded ■ the., plaintiffs $15,500 damages. -The Commission appealed" the award to the court below where, upon trial’of the issue, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plain-', tiffs of $14,600 including damages for delay in pay-, ment. The defendant moved for a new trial assigning, in support of its motion, several alleged trial errors. The learned court below overruled the motion, and the defendant thereupon took this appeal.

From the original record, now on file in this court, it plainly appears that judgment had not been entered on the verdict when the appeal was taken nor, for that matter, at any time thereafter. Consequently, the appeal is premature. An appeal does not lie from the refusal of a new trial but from the judgment enteréd: subsequent to the court’s disposition of after-verdict, motions. Accordingly, any litigant, feeling aggrieved by a trial court’s refusal of his motion for a new trial, should himself, if necessary, cause a judgment to be entered on the undisturbed verdict in order that he might properly perfect an appeal. The verdict fee which he would be required to pay would, if he should ultimately prevail, be taxed to his credit as part of the costs. As the instant appeal is obviously abortive, we cannot do otherwise than dismiss it.

Fortunately for the defendant, dismissal of the present appeal will not deprive it of anything that it might otherwise have enjoyed. Since a judgment could yet be entered on the verdict, a competent appeal could then be taken. The time for an appeal runs from the date of the entry of judgment. But, a further appeal is unnecessary in the circumstances and would serve only to delay further the. plaintiffs’ receipt of the damages due them. The lack of merit in the defendant’s contentions is patent. ' In the opinion accompanying the order denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial, the learned court below cogently and thoroughly disposed of all. of the defendant’s various contentions.

The reputed offering price, allegedly made by the husband (but promptly repudiated by the wife) for the jointly owned property some years prior to the condemnation, was properly excluded when offered by the defendant. Likewise, the testimony, which the defendant sought to inject into the case, as to the sale price of a piece of the remaining land several years after the condemnation was manifestly incompetent. Berger v. Public Parking Authority of Pittsburgh, 380 Pa. 19, 109 A. 2d 709, which the Commission cites, is not authority for any such post-appropriation proposition. For further answer to the argument that the Turnpike Commission enjoys the Commonwealth’s immunity from liability for interest and, consequently, is not answerable in damages for delay in payment in a condemnation proceeding, see Gitlin v. Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission, 384 Pa. 326, 121 A. 2d 79. As the learned court below correctly recognized in the instant case, “even if the Commission be deemed to be the Commonwealth, which we do not grant, the case of Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Company v. Commonwealth, 352 Pa. 143, is authority to the effect that such damages [i.e., for delay in payment] may 'be recovered against it.”

Appeal dismissed.  