Arkansas State Highway Commission v. Roberts

441 S.W.2d 808, 246 Ark. 1216
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 2, 1969
Docket5-4934
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 441 S.W.2d 808 (Arkansas State Highway Commission v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arkansas State Highway Commission v. Roberts, 441 S.W.2d 808, 246 Ark. 1216 (Ark. 1969).

Opinion

G-eoroe Rose Smith, Justice.

This is a condemnation ease by winch the highway department is taking, as a right-of-way and interchange for Interstate 40, a 9.63 acre tract in Conway, owned by Circuit Judge Roberts and his wife. No severance damages are involved, the taking being total. Four expert witnesses and Judge Roberts himself testified. For the landowners, the witness Baines valued the land at $108,000, the witness Pearce at $105,750, and Judge Roberts at $129,750. For the commission the witness Adams valued the land at $27,000, and the witness Lieblong at $24,200. The verdict urns for $125,000. For reversal the commission questions the admissibility and substantiality of the landowners’ evidence.

Borne description of the property and its location is essential lo an understanding of the case. On the date of the taking, June 6, 1966, the Roberts tract, approximately square, lay about a mile north of the Conway central business district. The tract was bounded on the south by IT. S. Highway 65. At the back of the property, away from the highway, it sloped upward steeply to a ridge 60 feet higher than the front of the tract. The improvements consisted of a four-room house, a barn, and three stock ponds, but no witness attributed any value to the improvements in arriving at an estimate of just compensation for the land.

H. S. Highways 64 and 65 are of critical importance throughout all the testimony. The two routes run northward together from downtown Conway to a point about a quarter of a mile southwest of the Roberts tract. At that point there is a “ Y” by which No. 65 diverges in an easterly direction and No. 64 diverges in a westerly direction.

At the beginning of the trial the landowners were allowed to introduce two composite aerial photographs showing''tile land in its setting with relation to the city and the two highways. Counsel for the commission had no objection to the photographs, but they did object, unsuccessfully, to the introduction of a plastic overlay for each picture, showing the proposed location of Interstate 40 after its construction. The overlays were readily separable from the photographs and should have been excluded. They had no possible relevancy to the value of the land on the date of the taking and could only divert the jury’s attention to the higher values that might be expected to flow from the construction of the interstate route. Needless to say, one who offers evidence has the burden of showing its admissibility. Wigmore, Evidence, § 18 (3d ed., 1940). Even in their briefs in this court counsel for the landowners have offered no sound basis for the introduction of the overlays, their argument, being in effect that the evidence was not- prejudicial. The error, however, must be considered to have been prejudicial unless the absence of prejudice is shown. Equitable Discount Corp. v. Trotter, 223 Ark. 270, 344 S.W. 2d 334 (1961). In view of the size of the award — which was the only issue for flic jury — it certainly cannot be said that the absence of prejudice affirmatively appears.

The main issue, however, is the substantiality of the landowners’ testimony. That issue is singularly uncomplicated in this case, because all the witnesses used only one method of evaluation — that of comparable sales —in reaching their conclusions. Nichols points out that the four factors generally considered in the determination of market value are sales, cost, income, and use. Nichols, Eminent Domain, § 12.1 (3d ed., 1962). We have considered all four factors in cases too numerous to mention. Comparable sales, cost (or reproduction cost) less depreciation, and capitalization of income are methods of evaluation recognized universally by the authorities. See especially Sill Corp. v. United States, 10th Cir., 343 F. 2d 411 (1965). The highest and best use of the properly is an added element of value that in many instances is not inherent in the method of evaluation being used and that may therefore be considered along with it.

In the. case at bar the improvements on the -tract were of such relatively slight value and presumably were rented for so little that no witness used either the method of cost less depreciation or the method of capitalization of income. Barnes, testifying for the landowners, mentioned a number of nebulous considerations such as the proposed develo]uncut of the Arkansas River, the rate of population increase, and similar matters that obviously would be reflected in comparable sales and in the year-lo-vear tendency toward rising prices that was’ ''also brought out by the testimony. Neither Barnes nor any other witness assigned definite weight to such vague considera! ions.

Thus the substantiality of the landowners’ evidence rests, when objectively considered, on the comparability of the sales upon which they relied for their conclusions. In the study of that vital issue two points must be kept in mind:

First, a sale must be comparable even to be admissible in evidence. City of Little Rock v. Sawyer, 228 Ark. 516, 309 S.W. 2d 30 (1958). We described comparability in this paragraph in Ark. State Highway Commn. v. Wifkowski, 236 Ark. 66, 364 S.W. 2d 309 (1963):

There can be no fixed definition of similarity or comparability. Similarity does not mean identical, however it. does require some reasonable resemblance. See Nichols, Eminent Domain, Vol. 5 § 21.31, p. 439. There are certain criteria of similarity-which can be utilized to establish a reasonable resemblance. Important factors of similarity to be considered are location, size and sale price; conditions surrounding the sale of the property, such as the date and character of the sale; business and residential advantages or disadvantages; unimproved, improved or developed land. None or any combination of these criteria were sufficiently shown, “connected up” or “tied in” as between the. Caldwell and Witkowski tracts to establish a reasonable resemblance. In the case at bar the jury could only speculate in applying the evidence in question to the market value of the subject property.

Secondly, although an expert witness may state his opinion on direct examination without first detailing the. facts on which it is based, his testimony is not substantial evidence if he is unable to give a sound and reasonable factual basis for his conclusions. Ark. State Highway Commn. v. Johns, 236 Ark. 585, 367 S.W. 2d 436 (1963). With those points in mind wc turn to the evidence in the case at bar.

Barnes, the first witness called, gave the most comprehensive testimony for the landowners. He described the land as having a 660-foot frontage on Highway 65 and about an equal depth. The tract was zoned for commercial use to a depth of 200 feet from the highway with the rest being zoned for residential use. In valuing the entire tract at $108,000, Barnes valued the commercial strip at $100 a front foot, making a total of $66,000, and the rest at 15 cents a square foot, or $42,000 in round numbers. Converting his figures to acreage, Barnes stated that he valued the commercial strip at $21,780 an acre and the rest at $6,534 an acre.

On cross examination Barnes explained that he had checked about 250 sales and selected those that he thought be comparable to the Roberts tract. It appears from ilie record that five of the sales were outlined on a blackboard and referred to repeatedly by the landowners’ expert witnesses.

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441 S.W.2d 808, 246 Ark. 1216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arkansas-state-highway-commission-v-roberts-ark-1969.