Commonwealth, Department of Highways v. Tyree

365 S.W.2d 472, 1963 Ky. LEXIS 222
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 1, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by129 cases

This text of 365 S.W.2d 472 (Commonwealth, Department of Highways v. Tyree) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth, Department of Highways v. Tyree, 365 S.W.2d 472, 1963 Ky. LEXIS 222 (Ky. 1963).

Opinion

CULLEN, Commissioner.

The appellees owned a plot 60 feet deep fronting 242 feet on the main highway near *475 the center of the City of Olive Hill. On it were a 40-year-old hotel building, a modern bus depot, and a dilapidated brick building the ground floor of which had at one time been used for store purposes and the upper floor of which had been rented as an apartment. For the purpose of widening the highway the Commonwealth condemned a strip 25 feet deep along the entire frontage of the plot. This necessitated the demolition of all three buildings. The jury in circuit court awarded $75,000 damages and judgment was entered accordingly, from which the Commonwealth appeals.

The main contention of the appellant is that the testimony of the witnesses for the landowners had no probative value and therefore the verdict is not supported by the evidence. The Commonwealth’s witnesses had estimated the damages at $49,-632. The estimates of the witnesses for the landowners ranged from $95,000 to $195,000. If the testimony of the latter witnesses were eliminated as having no probative value there would of course be no evidence to sustain the $75,000 verdict.

The problem of determining the probative worth of opinion evidence of property values is a most difficult one. Property values ordinarily are not susceptible of exact measurement, so opinions must be resorted to. It is almost inevitable that opinions of different witnesses will vary and the range between the high and the low may be substantial. If the high and low estimates both have full probative value the jury necessarily must have the discretion to choose either of them or any amount between them. On the other hand, if one of the estimates has no probative value it can be given no evidentiary weight. The difficult question is whether an estimate can have limited probative value, not sufficient to sustain an award for the full amount of the estimate, but sufficient to sustain an award for some lesser, reasonable amount.

Evidence of probative value is evidence having the fitness to induce conviction in the minds of reasonable men. Wadkins’ Adm’x v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co., Ky., 298 S.W.2d 7. It appears to us that evidence of property values may in some circumstances have fitness to induce conviction up to a certain point but not beyond. One situation in which this could be true is where the elements, factors or computations employed by the witness do not reasonably, rationally or logically produce the value estimated by the witness, but could support a lower value. Another situation is where the estimate of value by the witness is so extravagant as to be contrary to common knowledge. In the latter situation the evidence may be considered to have the quality of conviction up to the point where it passes the bounds of credibility to reasonable men.

(There is a clear distinction between opinion evidence of property values and testimony as to a specific determinable fact. In the latter case the testimony of a witness concerning the fact must either be accepted in toto or rejected in toto, because the fact either existed or did not exist.)

It seems that some of the difficulty in the instant case, and in a number of the other condemnation cases that have reached this court, lies in a failure to distinguish clearly between competency or relevancy of evidence and its probative value. Such a distinction is essential in relation to the necessity to make objections during the trial and the availability of grounds of review in the appellate court.

As concerns competency, one requirement is that the witness have a knowledge of property values generally and a knowledge of the particular property involved. Kentucky Utilities Co. v. Barnett, Ky., 252 S.W.2d 12. This requirement is loosened somewhat as to the owner of the property involved, in that mere ownership ordinarily is held to be a sufficient qualification. See Barron v. Phelps, Ky., 238 S.W.2d 1016. In very few instances is there *476 any issue of lack of qualification, but where there is one we think it is incumbent on the opposing counsel to object to the testimony on the ground that the witness is incompetent. If no objection is made the testimony is entitled to be considered by the jury to the extent that it has probative value, and the appellate court cannot reverse on the ground that the verdict was based on the testimony of an incompetent witness.

We think that a question of relevancy is presented in connection with the testimony of a witness who in making his estimate of values relies upon an irrelevant measure of value or an element of value that legally is noncompensable. The question here is a tricky one, because it may involve testimony’s becoming irrelevant after it first was relevant. This is so because a witness may give his estimates of before and after values without stating what factors he considered. (This will be discussed more fully at a later point in this opinion.) Such estimates are acceptable evidence. But if on cross-examination the factors he considered are elicited from him, and one or more of those factors is invalid in that it involves an irrelevant measure of value or a legally noncom-pensable element of value, it would seem that his testimony should be subject to a motion to strike because it is based upon irrelevant factors. (Examples of irrelevant measures of value might be the price paid by the state in condemning another piece of property, or the sale price of a non-comparable other piece of property; examples of noncompensable elements might be loss of profits or diversion of traffic.) In this situation it must be considered that the initial estimates of value were prima facie valid on the assumption that the witness considered only relevant factors, but when it is shown that actually he used irrelevant factors his estimates become invalid. It might be, however, that in some instances where the witness has attributed a specific value to the irrelevant factor, that value could be eliminated from his estimate by a requested admonition, in-which event the remaining estimate would be acceptable evidence.

Of course if the witness initially states irrelevant factors as the basis for his estimate of values (without waiting for cross-examination) his testimony is subject to immediate objection or motion to strike.

As concerns the efficacy of objections as distinguished from motions to strike, it would seem that if a witness has stated his estimate of values and then (or later on cross-examination) states the factors he considered, one of which is an irrelevant factor (such as the price paid for a non-comparable other piece of property), nothing is accomplished by merely objecting to his being permitted to testify to that factor, because his estimate of value still stands before the jury and they will have no satisfactory basis on which to discount his estimate by reason of the improper factor.

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Bluebook (online)
365 S.W.2d 472, 1963 Ky. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-department-of-highways-v-tyree-kyctapphigh-1963.