Arkansas Oklahoma Gas Corp. v. Boggs

159 S.W.3d 808, 86 Ark. App. 66, 2004 Ark. App. LEXIS 307
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 21, 2004
DocketCA 03-956
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 159 S.W.3d 808 (Arkansas Oklahoma Gas Corp. v. Boggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arkansas Oklahoma Gas Corp. v. Boggs, 159 S.W.3d 808, 86 Ark. App. 66, 2004 Ark. App. LEXIS 307 (Ark. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

John B. Robbins, Judge.

Appellant Arkansas Oklahoma Gas udge. appeals the judgment of the Scott County Circuit Court awarding appellees Glenn and Ina Boggs $13,735 plus interest for their land in a condemnation case tried to a jury. AOG argues that the trial judge abused his discretion by refusing to strike the testimony of two witnesses on behalf of appellees regarding the value of the land. The two witnesses were Mr. Boggs and their expert, Mr. Powell. We find no abuse of discretion in allowing their testimony, and therefore, we affirm.

To explain more fully, Mr. and Mrs. Boggs own approximately 200 acres of land just north ofWaldron, Arkansas, adjacent to and east of Highway 71. AOG sought to condemn a thirty-foot-wide permanent easement on the property for a gas pipeline and also a fifty-foot by fifty-foot easement for the purpose of erecting a metering substation. The total acreage to be taken totaled 1.33 acres, and it was located nearest the highway. AOG filed a complaint for this condemnation on July 7, 2000. Mr. and Mrs. Boggs answered the complaint and asked for a jury trial to establish their just compensation for the taking. All parties agreed that the approximately 180 acres farthest away from the highway were not materially affected by the taking. The litigation focused upon the just compensation for the 1.33 acres being taken, and severance damages to the remainder of appellees’ property.

Mr. Boggs testified that the highest and best use of his land prior to the taking was for development. Mr. Boggs said he purchased this particular 200-acre tract in 1989 for $100,000. Mr. Boggs said that he cleaned up the property, fertilized the land, and grew good grass. He said that there were three creeks on the property and that there were no drainage or flooding problems. The land was currently used to keep and graze cattle; there was a barn on it. Mr. Boggs believed that he could have sold his land to a developer, who could use the land close to the highway for residences or mini-farms. Mr. Boggs thought that the entire 200 acres was worth $200,000 without AOG on the land. Mr. Boggs stated that he had actually received calls from interested buyers pertaining to the land close to the highway. Mr. Boggs valued his acreage nearest the highway at $4000 per acre prior to the taking, such that just compensation for the 1.33 acres taken was $5320.

Mr. Boggs further stated that the 4.54 acres immediately outside the taking were decreased in value due to their proximity to the substation, which was marked with “no smoking” and “danger/warning” signs. Given the change on his land, Mr. Boggs believed that the land along the highway was now only useful as pasture, with a commensurate value of about $1000 per acre. This, according to Mr. Boggs, caused him to lose $13,620 of value with regard to that 4.54 acres. Therefore, Mr. Boggs believed that the total loss to his 200-acre parcel due to AOG’s taking was $18,940. Upon cross-examination by appellant’s counsel, Mr. Boggs declined to guess into how many small parcels the front land could be divided. Instead, Mr. Boggs answered that he would “sell the whole thing to a developer.” Mr. Boggs agreed with appellant’s counsel that each of the 200 acres was not worth $4000, but he maintained that the land close to the highway was more valuable for selling. Mr. Boggs then explained again that he would sell the whole 200 acres, and that the whole 200 acres was harmed to the extent of $18,940, which was about $5000 more than his expert believed the damage to be.

AOG’s counsel then moved to strike Mr. Boggs’ testimony on value because he was conjuring up a “mythical subdivision” for purposes of valuation instead of considering the whole tract of land. Appellees’ counsel responded that Mr. Boggs only talked in terms of dividing and plotting the front land in response to AOG’s counsel asking such questions. The judge took the motion under advisement, pending the expert testimony.

Appellees called Mr. Kenneth “Pete” Powell as an expert with twenty-seven years of experience selling real estate in Scott County. Powell worked as an appraiser, received a broker’s license in 1984, and had been involved in 700 to 800 real estate transactions since 1984. Powell opined that the Boggs’ land, like any land along Highway 71, was the most valuable land in the county. Powell said that the Boggs’ land was particularly valuable because it was north of Waldron, nearer to Fort Smith and Greenwood. Powell explained that this land was more valuable because a developer would not have to build his own roads and because advertising from the property would be visible on the well-traveled road. Powell had experience with persons interested in developing such land for residential and commercial use, and Powell himself had developed some property. Powell said he had received calls from persons in Fort Smith who were interested in residential land in that area, and Powell was aware that commercial use was existent just north of the Boggs’ land.

Powell opined that prior to the taking, the majority of the land to the “back” was worth around $600-$900 per acre, and the “front” 21.3 acres was worth $5000 per acre. Powell gave the entire 200 acres an approximate value of $200,000 before AOG entered onto the land. Powell stated that he reached these figures by comparing the only recent local sales he could find along Highway 71 of two smaller tracts: one eight-acre parcel closer to town and used for commercial purposes sold for $8000 per acre, and one twenty-acre parcel farther from town with open field and scrub timber sold for $2500 per acre. After the taking, Powell opined that the Boggs’ twenty acres surrounding the taken land was harmed about seven percent, or $350 per acre. Powell justified this reduction in value because he noted that a lot of residential buyers are fearful of gas lines, particularly where warning signs are erected that say “no smoking” or “danger.” Adding these figures, plus an $85 rental fee for temporary occupation by AOG, Powell assessed the just compensation for the taking at a total of $13,735.

AOG’s counsel moved to strike Powell’s testimony regarding the small eight-acre commercial tract because it was not a comparable property, and he moved to strike Powell’s testimony regarding actual taking and severance damages because Powell’s opinion was “based upon chopping it up and mythical subdivision.”

Out of the presence of the jury, the judge took up the motions to strike that had been held in abeyance. AOG cited to Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co. v. Cates, 10 Ark. App. 426, 664 S.W.2d 897 (1984), in support of its position that both witnesses had improperly used an imaginary subdivision to increase the money to justly compensate Mr. and Mrs. Boggs. The judge agreed with AOG that it was improper for a landowner to speculate what a subdivision might bring and that the law required contemplation of the whole property for valuation purposes. However, the judge found that the testimony of both Mr. Boggs and Mr. Powell considered the total value, before and after the taking, both opining that the 200 acres were worth $200,000 before but presently at or around $180,000. The judge found that there was no “after development testimony” in this case that would justify striking either opinion. The judge specifically found that this scenario did not come within the parameters of the Cates decision.

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.W.3d 808, 86 Ark. App. 66, 2004 Ark. App. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arkansas-oklahoma-gas-corp-v-boggs-arkctapp-2004.