City of Austin v. Flink

443 S.W.2d 397, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2497
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 28, 1969
DocketNo. 11676
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 443 S.W.2d 397 (City of Austin v. Flink) 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
City of Austin v. Flink, 443 S.W.2d 397, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2497 (Tex. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

HUGHES, Justice.

This is a suit brought by the City of Austin against John B. Flink, Tina Flink, Carl E. Flink, Marjorie Flink, Alice and Charles H. Montgomery to condemn the fee title to 126.88 acres of land in Travis County for use for parks, playfields, camp grounds, golf courses, piers, wharves, a water reservoir and an addition to an electric generating system. The whole undertaking is commonly referred to as the Decker Lake Pro-ect.

Trial was to a jury and, upon its verdict, judgment was rendered for appellees for the sum of $69,647.00 ($548.00 plus per acre).

It was stipulated that all steps required to condemn this property were taken and that the only issue to be tried was the market value of the property on March 30, 1966.

Appellant has grouped its first eight points for briefing. These eight points complain of the admission in evidence testimony relating to eight specific sales of property as comparable sales. We will state the substance of the testimony concerning each sale about which complaint is made.

Wattinger to Zale and Kruger

Witness John B. Flink: The date of this sale was 6-19-64. Size of tract, 146.5 acres; sales price $700.00 per acre.

Mr. Flink testified that the property was very comparable to his own; that the terrain is rolling as was his own; that the property was wedge shaped; that it lies on Highway 290, and that he took this into consideration; that it lies in the junction of U.S. 290 and a road in the Gregg community; that it is in the general area of his land.

Regarding his own property, Mr. Flink further testified that it was about three miles from the Austin City limits, the larger of two Decker Creeks came “catercorner” through his place which was a rolling tract of land in the sense that it was hilly and that the creek was dry except when it rained.

Witness McDonald

The overall property is similar in topography to the Flink land, the fall of the [400]*400land and shape. It had considerable highway frontage. When asked about the effect of highway frontage on value, the witness testified about two similar property sales where the land with little or no highway frontage sold for more than one with a great deal of highway frontage.

Witness Wilson

The land was triangular in shape, gently rolling, fronts on Highway 290, but this does not influence values, nor does the fact that land is in or outside a water district affect value very much. One tract outside a water district sold for more than a tract inside. This land is pasture land, unimproved and generally has the same description as the Flink land.

Cedar to Farrell to Coffield

Date of sale 12-1-65. Acreage 125.24. Price, $800.00 per acre.

Witness Flink

This sale was free and open; that this property was comparable to his own land and was about 1½ miles distant. It has railway frontage while his does not; that this property had no water line running in front of it. This sale was made after the City had publicly announced the Decker Project on December 22, 1964. Regarding this, Mr. Flink testified that he inquired of Mr. Cedar whether the announcement of the lake had anything to do with the sale of the property and he said he did not feel it had any bearing at all on it, because from his place he could not see the lake.

The witness testified concerning this tract: It has a great deal of similarity with the Flink tract in many respects. It may not lay quite as well as the Flink land lays so far as future development is concerned, but it is a nice piece of real estate.

The witness testified that this land was unimproved and that it lay outside the water district.

Davis to Smith

Witness Flink. Date of sale 10-17-67. Acreage not shown. Price per acre $650.00.

The witness testified that this tract was about one mile northeast of his property; that the topography was similar; that its value was not enhanced by the lake project.

Smith to Montandon

This was a re-sale of the property sold by Davis to Smith, the date being. 11-9-67 and the price per acre being $850.00. Mr. Montandon told the witness that the lake had no bearing on the purchase. The witness testified that the sale was a free and open market transaction.

Browning to Ross

Date of sale 5-29-67. Acreage 89.60, price per acre $760.00.

The witness testified that this acreage was due north of his property and borders on U.S. 290 and had some frontage on Decker Lane; that the topographical features of the property were very similar to his property; that the planned use of the property was residential; that it was a free and open sale with no trades.

This witness testified: That he did not think the lake had a big influence on property values. The town was coming that way and the influence of the highway, the overall accessibility, the roads have been widened and paved since 1964, and the general development in the east and northeast sections of Austin have put values up on that property; people are clamoring for ground.

[401]*401 Greinert to Keels to Coffield

Date of sale 7-6-65. Acreage 90, price per acre $1,000.00.

The witness testified that this property had a few feet frontage on U.S. 290 and had railway frontage on the southeast; that it was comparable and similar to his own land; that the sale was an open market transaction.

This witness gave additional testimony that the railway trackage did not affect the value of the property under the circumstances.

This witness testified this tract was sold to Coffield 7-6-65; that the property was in the water district; that it was gently sloping pasture land, part having been in cultivation; that the sale was free and open.

Sandstrom to Marshall

Date of sale 4-6-66. Acreage 37.89, price per acre $1,610.00.

The witness testified that this tract was rectangular and was similar in topography to his own; and about three miles distant; that the sale was free and open.

This witness testified that this land was about three miles closer to Austin and this would influence its value more than the land of Mr. Flink; that the land was level bottom and is in the water district.

Johnson to Mueller

Date of sale 2-23-66. Acreage 5, price per acre $1,600.00.

This witness testified the topography of this tract was similar to his own; that the sale was free and open; that it was made for investment purposes.

This witness testified this tract “was not on what you would call a real through road.”

Some of the above testimony was objected to and some was not. We will not distinguish between that objected to and that not objected to for the reason that we are of the opinion that it was all admissible.

The principal objections to testimony as to the sales above listed were that there was not sufficient similarity between the property the subject of these sales and the property being taken and that sales made after the project had been publicly announced by the City and after the actual taking of the Flink property were factually or necessarily enhanced in value by the project.

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Related

Bottinelli v. Robinson
594 S.W.2d 112 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1979)
City of Austin v. Flink
454 S.W.2d 389 (Texas Supreme Court, 1970)
City of Austin v. Bergstrom
448 S.W.2d 246 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
443 S.W.2d 397, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-austin-v-flink-texapp-1969.