County of San Diego v. Bressi

184 Cal. App. 3d 112, 229 Cal. Rptr. 44, 1986 Cal. App. LEXIS 1897
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 7, 1986
DocketD001698
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 184 Cal. App. 3d 112 (County of San Diego v. Bressi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of San Diego v. Bressi, 184 Cal. App. 3d 112, 229 Cal. Rptr. 44, 1986 Cal. App. LEXIS 1897 (Cal. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

Opinion

WIENER, J.

The County of San Diego (County) filed this eminent domain action against Mary E. Bressi to acquire avigation easements off the east end of Palomar Airport in Carlsbad, California. 1 The jury awarded Bressi $52,158 to compensate her for the value of the easements plus $27,500 in severance damages. The court granted Bressi’s new trial motion on grounds the jury award was inadequate, the verdict was not supported by the evidence, and the court erred in admitting evidence of nonbinding promises and plans of the County of San Diego.

The County appeals from the new trial order asserting there is no factual or legal basis for the court’s findings. Bressi cross-appeals from the judgment and from the new trial order to the extent the order permits the County to introduce evidence on retrial of “what will be the likely future development *116 of the airport.” We first review the County’s appeal and decide there is sufficient evidence to support the court’s ruling. We then examine the evidentiary questions in Bressi’s cross-appeal and conclude the County may not introduce evidence which in any way limits the scope of the taking as defined by the County in the resolution of necessity. We therefore modify the new trial order to more accurately reflect the views expressed in this opinion. Except as modified we affirm the order and dismiss Bressi’s protective cross-appeal from the judgment.

The County’s Appeal

I

Bressi owns two parcels of land at the intersection of Palomar Airport Road and El Camino Real in Carlsbad: a 571-acre parcel at the southeast corner and a . 8-acre parcel at the northeast corner. Although most of the Bressi ranch is zoned for large-tract agricultural or residential use and has been used for agricultural purposes since 1942, 12 acres at the intersection are currently zoned for commercial use. The intersection is located about 2,000 feet east of, and in almost direct alignment with, the runway at Palomar Airport.

The County seeks avigation easements 40 to 70 feet above the . 8-acre parcel and an 8.5-acre portion of the 571-acre parcel. The County’s complaint alleges the resolution of necessity, specifying the rights and choses in action included in the taking:

“Together with the continuing right to cause or allow in all the airspace above the surface of Grantor’s [Bressi’s] property such noise, vibrations, fumes, dust, fuel particles, and other effects as may be caused by or result from the operation of aircraft; it being understood and agreed that Grantee [County] intends to maintain and develop adjacent airport in such manner that said airport and the easement granted herein will be used at all times and by every type of aircraft which is now in existence or which may be developed in the future for both commercial and noncommercial flights; and Grantor, for Grantor and the successors in interest and assigns of Grantor, does hereby fully waive and release any right or cause of action which they or any of them now have or may have in the future against Grantee, its successors and assigns, on account of or arising out of such noise, vibrations, fumes, dust, fuel particles, and other effects heretofore and hereafter caused by the operation of aircraft in said airspace.
*117 “The term ‘aircraft’ is defined for the purposes of this deed as any contrivance now known or hereafter invented, designed, or used for navigation or flight in air or space.
“. . . [T]he aforesaid covenants and agreements shall run with the land.” (Italics supplied.)

The case was tried from January 19 to February 15, 1984. Using comparable sales, Thomas L. Roberts, Bressi’s appraiser, determined that the property’s total worth at its highest and best use was comprised of three zones of value: a 10-acre zone at the intersection of Palomar Airport Road and El Camino Real valued at $5 per square foot ($217,800 an acre); a 55-acre frontage area along Palomar Airport Road valued at $38,500 an acre; and a 506-acre mixed-use area valued at $22,000 an acre. In Roberts’ judgment, the avigation easement reduces the value of the commercial corner by 50 percent because it precludes people-intensive land uses, a conclusion based in part upon analysis of noise, crash hazards, and land-use restrictions excerpted from the comprehensive land use plan for Palomar Airport. For similar reasons and because flights will render the highest portions of the property virtually undevelopable, he found that the taking of the easement will damage the frontage areas and the remaining commercial zone by 50-70 percent and the more distant mixed-use area by 10-25 percent, causing severance damages totalling $2,742,826. Finally, he determined that the sliver parcel, valued initially at $3 per square foot net of street dedications, was reduced in value by 75 percent through taking of the easement, and he thus valued the easement over that parcel at $35,480.

David D. Westcott, on behalf of the County, likewise determined that the Bressi property in its highest and best use was appropriately divided into three zones of value: a 184-acre planned industrial zone along Palomar Airport Road valued from comparable sales at $50,000 an acre, a 343-acre residential area valued at $23,000 an acre, and 44 acres of open space valued at $1,000 an acre. He did not consider the corner of the property at El Camino Real and Palomar Airport Road, where the easement was being taken, any more valuable than the other Palomar Airport frontage, notwithstanding the corner’s present commercial zoning and the commercial use of other corners in the area, because the City of Carlsbad would ultimately control the development of that corner and would reportedly prevent commercial development on it by denying it street access. In Westcott’s opinion, the easement will have no actual effect upon the Bressi property or its development and will simply impose a “slight cloud” on its title; he thus assigned it a nominal value of 10 percent on the 8.5 acres it covers, giving it a value of $42,965. For similar reasons, he concluded the easement over the .8 acre parcel was worth $500 and the rest of the property would suffer no severance damages.

*118 The jury returned a special verdict which valued the avigation easement in the .8-acre parcel at $600, the avigation easement in the 8.5-acre parcel at $51,558, and awarded severance damages of $27,500. The valuation testimony and jury findings may be summarized as follows:

.8-Acre 8.5-Acre Severance Parcel Parcel Damages Totals Bressi: $35,480 $886,337 $2,789,026 $3,710,843 County: 500 42,965 None 43,500 Jury Award: 600 51,558 27,500 79,658

In granting the new trial order, the court outlined specific reasons for its conclusion there were inadequate damages and insufficient evidence to support the jury award:

“The Court after weighing the evidence felt that the evidence clearly demonstrated that the highest and best use of the 8.5 acre corner parcel of the Bressi property was commercial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 Cal. App. 3d 112, 229 Cal. Rptr. 44, 1986 Cal. App. LEXIS 1897, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-san-diego-v-bressi-calctapp-1986.