Opinion by
Porter, J.,This proceeding originated in a petition by the plaintiff *127for the appointment of viewers, under the Act of May 24, 1878, P. L. 129, to assess the damages to his property alleged to have resulted from a change in the grade of Fourth street, in the borough of Reynoldsville, upon which said property abutted. The viewers having been appointed made a report awarding damages to the plaintiff, and from that report the borough appealed. The jury trial upon that appeal resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff, from which we have this appeal. Counsel for the borough, at the trial in the court below, made an oral admission that whatever change had been made in the grade of the street was made under the authority of the borough council. But the ordinance in pursuance of which the work was done was not offered in evidence. Under an agreement of counsel representing both parties, the printing of the petition for the appointment of viewers, the ordinance authorizing the paving of the street and the other documents out of which this issue arose have been omitted from the paper-book of the appellant. This leaves us entirely in the dark as to whether, in grading and paving the street in question, the borough proceeded under the provisions of the Act of April 23, 1889, P. L. 44, and the Act of May 19, 1897, P. L. 79, or exercised the authority conferred by the Act of May 16, 1891, P. L. 75. The case as here presented only shows that the borough had graded, paved and curbed the cart-way of the street, leaving the sidewalk unchanged, and that the plaintiff had elected to have the question of the damage to his property, if any, resulting from the change of grade determined in this separate and distinct proceeding, under the provisions of the act of 1878.
The property of the plaintiff alleged to have been damaged consists of a lot at the corner of Grant and Fourth streets, fronting sixty feet on the former street and extending back along Fourth street 150 feet. On the Grant street front of the lot there was erected a dwelling house and on the rear, fronting on Fourth street, a livery stable. The borough, in 1903, graded, paved and curbed the *128cartway of Fourth street. The grading resulted in changes of only a few inches from what had formerly been the natural surface of the cartway of the street, the new grade being a few inches lower than the old upon that part of the street opposite the rear part of plaintiff’s property, where the livery stable fronted upon the street, and the street opposite the other portions of plaintiff’s property was paved at substantially the old grade, some parts thereof being raised a few inches. The plaintiff contended at the trial that his property was injured by the reduction of the grade of the cartway of the street in front of the entrance to his livery stable; that was the only element of damage to the property which he attempted to establish by evidence. The evidence clearly established that the livery stable always had been above the grade of the old sidewalk and, also, that the sidewalk had been higher than the grade of the old cartway. The only effect of the grading of the cartway upon the part of plaintiff’s lot on which the livery stable stood was to add a few inches to the height at which it had always stood above the grade. If the plaintiff was entitled to recover in this proceeding, the amount of his recovery was to be determined by the depreciation, resulting from the grading, in the market value of his entire property, considered as a whole, and not by the effect upon a mere fraction of the lot. The plaintiff was called as a witness in his own behalf and, while he testified that his property was damaged by the grading, his entire testimony clearly revealed that his estimate was not based on the market value of the property considered as a whole, but that it was founded entirely upon the specific cost of changing the whole surface of that part of the property on which the livery stable stood, taking out the plank flooring, removing the earth to the new level of the street, and substituting a pavement for the floor, thus producing a condition which never had existed. His testimony clearly disclosed that the livery stable always had stood upon ground which was higher than the street and that the only effect of the grading, as *129to that part of the property, was to add a few inches to the previously easting elevation above the street. When a lot is situated above or below the grade of an adjoining street and the municipality lowers or raises the grade of such street, leaving the lot above or below the new grade, as it was with regard to the old, and merely adding to the previously existing elevation or depression of the lot, the fact of such additional elevation or depression, as affecting the value of the property after the change, may be shown, but not the specific cost of changing the whole surface of the property by cutting it down or lifting it up to the new grade: Mead v. Pittsburg, 194 Pa. 392; Bond v. Philadelphia, 218 Pa. 475; Edsall v. Jersey Shore Borough, 220 Pa. 591. The testimony of the plaintiff having revealed that his estimate of the damage to his property was based upon this false foundation, the motion of the defendant to strike out his testimony ought to have prevailed, and the first specification of error is sustained.
The borough was not in this case attempting to impose an assessment for special benefits, resulting from the grade of the street, upon the property of the plaintiff. The latter was the actor and was seeking to recover from the borough damages for injuries which he asserted his property had sustained. There had been in this case no taking of plaintiff’s property. The injury, if any, was purely consequential. If the plaintiff was entitled to recover, the actual loss which he had suffered was the measure of the compensation to which he was entitled. The amount of that loss could only be determined by considering the effect of the change of grade upon the property, as well the advantages as the disadvantages therefrom resulting. The fact must not be lost sight of, that in this case the plaintiff has elected to proceed under the act of 1878, and to have the question between him and the borough determined in a distinct proceeding, from which all other parties are excluded. No property benefited can be assessed to pay damages which this plaintiff alleges he has sustained. The loss which this plaintiff *130has sustained,, if any, may be measured with exact justice by the depreciation in the value of his property resulting from the improvement. The learned judge of the court below seems to have recognized the principle that in estimating the damage sustained by plaintiff it was proper to consider the benefits which accrued to the property from the improvement upon which it directly abutted, but fell into error in the application of the principle, when he charged the jury as follows: "Undoubtedly an improvement such as this, as I said before, is a benefit to every owner of property abutting upon the street improved; and so far as general benefits are concerned, or such benefits as are common to all the residents along the street, they are not to be taken into account and charged up against him as an offset to any damage which he may have sustained by reason of the change of grade. But if there- was any special benefit derived by Mr. Burns through the paving of this street, any special advantage — some advantage that was peculiar to his property and that was not enjoyed or might not have been enjoyed by other persons along the street — such special advantages might be and should be set off against any damages which may have been occasioned him by reason of the change of grade.” And in the conclusion of that portion of the charge which is the subject of the seventh specification of error, the learned judge said, after reviewing the evidence at length: “And I cannot see that you can charge it up against Mr. Burns, under the evidence in this case, as any special advantage that he derived over and above anybody else by reason of the paving of this street.” This practically withdrew from the jury the consideration of any question of the advantages accruing to the plaintiff’s property by reason of the fact that it directly abutted upon the improvement. The view which the learned judge manifestly impressed upon the jury was that the benefits to the property which they were authorized to consider were such as accrued to that property alone, and did not accrue to any other property *131abutting upon the improvement. The defendant submitted a written request for instructions to the jury: “If the grading and other improvement made by the defendant borough on Fourth street increased the value of the plaintiff’s property as much as or more than the cost to him to repair it, or to adjust himself to the changed state of things, he is not damaged and should not recover,” which point the court refused. These instructions were clearly erroneous and, in disposing of the specifications of error which refer to them, we find the language of the Supreme Court in Aswell v. Scranton, 175 Pa. 173, peculiarly appropriate. "The effect of the charge was to open the way for the jury to reach a conclusion that we uniformly said they must not adopt, viz: that the advantage derived from an improvement to justify the jury in considering it must be something unlike and above the advantages derived by any other person. The last case upon this subject, as I now recollect, is Mahaffey v. Beech Creek R. R. Co., 163 Pa. 158, in which our Brother Fell, delivering the opinion of the court, said: ‘The plaintiff’s property was not the only property taken, and presumably not the only property which received special advantages. Against the demand of each claimant it was for the jury to consider the advantages special to his property.’ So it may be well said as to this improvement on Tenth street. The plaintiff’s was not the only property affected. Each piece of property along the two squares over which the grade was established, and the street made, was.probably made more accessible and more valuable. The amount of benefit conferred was dependent on the extent to which access to the property had been improved, but against the demand of each claimant for damages were to bé put the advantages special to his property in improved accessibility or otherwise. If every property along the street was made more accessible, then every property along the street was specially benefited, and the amount of that benefit-should be set off against the damages, if any, inflicted by the. improvement as *132made. It is the actual loss suffered for which the lot owner should be compensated. That loss may be measured with exact justice by the depreciation in value of his property resulting from the improvement complained of. If his property is injured that others may be benefited, his loss should be made good; but if the grading or other improvement increases the value of his property as much as or more than it may cost him to repair, or to adjust himself to the changed state of things, he is not a loser and ought not to recover.” The fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh specifications of error are sustained. The theory upon which the learned judge of the court below tried the cause led him to exclude an offer of evidence by the borough to show the effect of the improvement upon the market value of the property, not upon the ground of the incompetency of the witness, but that the evidence was inadmissible. This testimony ought to have been admitted and the third specification of error is sustained.
Whether the plaintiff was entitled to compensation for the detention of payment of any damages to which he might be entitled depended upon whether that detention was caused by his grossly excessive and unreasonable demands, which it was the duty of the officers of the borough to resist, or was the result of the improper action of the borough: Philadelphia Ball Club v. Philadelphia, 192 Pa. 632. The eighth specification of error is sustained.
The judgment is reversed and a new venire awarded.