Ahmad Suleiman and Ghadeer Badaineh v. Texas Department of Transportation and J.D. Abrams, L.P.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 17, 2010
Docket01-09-00099-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Ahmad Suleiman and Ghadeer Badaineh v. Texas Department of Transportation and J.D. Abrams, L.P. (Ahmad Suleiman and Ghadeer Badaineh v. Texas Department of Transportation and J.D. Abrams, L.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ahmad Suleiman and Ghadeer Badaineh v. Texas Department of Transportation and J.D. Abrams, L.P., (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion issued June 17, 2010.

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-09-00099-CV

———————————

Ahmad Suleiman and Ghadeer Bataineh, Appellants

V.

The Texas Department of Public Transportation, Appellee

On Appeal from the 412th District Court

Brazoria County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 36997

MEMORANDUM  OPINION

          Appellants, Ahmad Suleiman and Ghadeer Bataineh, appeal from a final judgment, rendered after a jury trial, that awarded them damages for a partial taking of their property by appellee, the Texas Department of Transportation (“TxDOT”).  In two issues, appellants contend that (1) the evidence was factually insufficient to support the amount of damages awarded under their inverse condemnation claim and (2) the trial court erred in granting TxDOT’s jurisdictional plea on their claims against TxDOT based on trespass, in which they sought certain consequential damages.  We affirm.

BACKGROUND

          Appellants are husband and wife.  In 2005, TxDOT was expanding State Highway 35.  As part of that expansion project, TxDOT needed to widen the intersection of Highways 35 and 36.  Appellants’ residence was at this intersection.  J.D. Abrams, L.P. (“Abrams”) was TxDOT’s contractor for the construction.

          The dispute underlying this case concerned the size of TxDOT’s right of way along the highways and at the edge of appellants’ property.  TxDOT contended that a perimeter fence around appellants’ home lay in that right of way; appellants contended that their fence lay outside TxDOT’s right of way, i.e., that the right of way was not as deep as TxDOT contended.  TxDOT had right-of-way maps dating back to the 1930s to support its claim, although it could not locate deeds to support those maps; appellants had a deed to support their claim and could show that some of the ground monuments mentioned in that deed appeared on their property. 

          In May 2005, Abrams employees approached Suleiman to advise that part of his fence was in TxDOT’s right of way and that he needed to remove this portion, or they would do so.  In response, Suleiman produced his deed, showing that he owned the disputed property.  On May 31, 2005, as appellants were preparing to depart on a summer-long trip to Jordan, Abrams employees advised Suleiman that this portion of his fence would be removed, and they in fact removed it.  In August 2005, Suleiman and his sons returned, but his wife and daughters remained in Jordan.  Although appellants admitted at trial that they had already intended for their eldest daughter to stay in Jordan to study for a year, they contended that they decided to leave Bataineh and their remaining daughters in Jordan for an entire year, as well, because they felt that the construction made the property unsafe without a fence.  Before the four female family members returned from Jordan the following summer, Suleiman had the fence replaced at his own expense.

          At the end of August 2005, TxDOT decided to condemn the land, explaining through its trial witnesses that it did so because it could find no deed to underlie its right-of-way claim.  Appellants sued TxDOT in the 412th District Court of Brazoria County for inverse condemnation and trespass, including Abrams as a defendant for the trespass claim.  TxDOT later sued for condemnation in the County Court at Law No. 2 of Brazoria County.  The parties eventually agreed to transfer the condemnation case to the district court and to consolidate the suits.  Additionally, they agreed to allow TxDOT to continue with the construction pending these suits’ resolution by its depositing $80,000 into the court’s registry.

          TxDOT filed a plea to the jurisdiction on appellants’ claims for trespass and on any claim for inverse condemnation that sought damages for emotional distress or the costs of the family’s living overseas for a year.  The trial court granted that plea before trial.

          The remaining claims were tried to a jury, although appellants nonsuited Abrams part way through TxDOT’s case in chief.  TxDOT did not contest its liability to pay for the taken property or the fence, although it contested their value.  The jury returned a verdict awarding appellants $125,810.75 in total damages for the taking, including the costs to replace the entire fence and to rebuild part of a damaged canopy, and the trial court rendered judgment accordingly, along with awarding title of the relevant portion of appellants’ property to TxDOT. 

FACTUAL SUFFICIENCY

          In their first issue, appellants contend that there was factually insufficient evidence to support the jury’s answer to Jury Question No. 2, which asked for the damages to the remainder of the Suleiman property due to TxDOT’s partial taking.

A.      The Charge

          The question to which appellants object must be considered in light of the whole charge, which contained only two questions. 

          Jury Question No. 1 provided:

What do you find to be the market value of the Suleiman property taken by TxDOT, as of March 15, 2006, considered as severed land?

The jury answered: “$112,263.75.”

          Jury Question No. 2 then provided:

          In answering Question No.

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Ahmad Suleiman and Ghadeer Badaineh v. Texas Department of Transportation and J.D. Abrams, L.P., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ahmad-suleiman-and-ghadeer-badaineh-v-texas-depart-texapp-2010.