Davidson v. County of Harris

454 S.W.2d 830, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2708
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 21, 1970
Docket15607
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 454 S.W.2d 830 (Davidson v. County of Harris) 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
Davidson v. County of Harris, 454 S.W.2d 830, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2708 (Tex. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

PEDEN, Justice.

Eminent domain proceeding. Dr. Eli Davidson appeals from jury’s award to him of $18,630. for the taking of his lot by Harris County on January 12, 1968.

The south side of the appellant’s tract, roughly 60 feet wide, fronted on the shore of Clear Lake. Its north side was not quite parallel to its south side. The lot extended approximately 240 feet north from the lake, and its north end met the dead-end of Kirby Road about 350 feet south of the intersection of Kirby and NASA Road No. 1. A strip five feet wide along the west side of the lot was not taken, *831 but it was uncontroverted that its value was destroyed by the taking of the rest of the lot.

Appellant’s first point of error complains that the trial court erred in forbidding him from cross-examining a witness named Dominey regarding sales of property adjoining the subject property although such sales were contained in a report from which he had testified.

The appellant called two witnesses to testify as to the value of his land. Mr. H. H. Fairhart, a real estate broker, testified that he had investigated sales of land in the vicinity of the subject property and had found only one recent sale that he would “consider anywhere close to being comparable.” It did not adjoin the subject property. It was a lot containing 17,000 square feet of land, it had 28 feet of water frontage and 75 feet of levee frontage and sold for $35,000., so he valued the 12,223.64 square feet he said were taken from Dr. Davidson’s lot at $2.25 per square foot before the taking and the remaining 1163 square feet at $2. per square foot, for a total of $30,120. He testified that the tract on the east side of the subject property was sold in 1963 and the tract on its west side was sold in 1967 but that those sales were not comparable because those tracts were larger and small tracts bring a better price per square foot. He said that only those two tracts adjoined the appellant’s land, that his lot could be used for commercial purposes and that values in the area had increased over the last ten years.

Dr. Davidson’s other value witness was Mr. Ralph Yarbrough. He is in the construction business, does speculative building and has bought and sold a lot of property in Harris County. He valued the part of the subject property taken at approximately $37,000. or $38,000., and said its highest and best use was for a high-rise apartment building. He said his valuation was made at a time when he wanted to buy the lot. He was not asked and did not testify as to the sales prices of any other lots.

Mr. Jerry Dominey was the only witness who testified for Harris County. He was shown to have, been actively engaged as a real estate appraiser for about sixteen years.

That part of his testimony with which this appeal is concerned was his use of a written report when testifying as to comparable sales. He testified that he had located and checked out twenty or twenty-five sales in the area but concluded that only about four of them were comparable to the subject property after considering their road frontage, access, water frontage, size, shape and time of sale. He said he valued both the part taken and the remainder at 80 cents per square foot, that 13,199 square feet were taken and the remainder was 1,163 square feet so he valued the total of 14,362 square feet at $11,489. before the taking, and Dr. Davidson was damaged in that amount.

On cross-examination appellant’s counsel asked to see “this report you’ve been testifying from.” After the witness had admitted that the report contained information about sales that he had not testified about, including sales of tracts on both sides of the subject lot, the trial judge ruled that appellant’s counsel could see those parts of the report that the witness had used to refresh his recollection. Appellant’s counsel then asked that the report be examined by the court to determine whether it contained a record of other sales about which the witness could be questioned to test his judgment as to comparability and the trustworthiness of his testimony. The trial judge made pencilled notations on the report and stated that they indicated which portions of it he was making available for appellant’s counsel to see. They included the four sales about which Mr. Dominey had testified. The court also made available to counsel from the report a map of the area showing those four tracts plus six others. Each of the ten tracts was numbered and distinctively colored. They were the only tracts other than the subject tract mentioned in the Dominey report.

*832 Appellant moved for a mistrial based on opposing counsel’s offer to introduce the entire report in evidence. The motion was overruled. The trial court instructed the jury to disregard the offer.

Mr. Dominey was then asked on cross-examination if he had testified to some other sales at the hearing before the special commissioners. He replied that he had referred to sales made in 1963 and that he would be happy to use both of them but that the appellee’s attorney said they were too old.

In response to a request by appellant’s counsel, the trial judge then ruled that he could cross-examine the witness as to any sales he had testified about before the commissioners, but counsel asked no questions in response to this ruling. The only questions he thereafter asked Mr. Dominey regarding sales concerned the same four which the witness had already described plus the one sale Mr. Fairhart had referred to.

The record shows that the trial judge clarified his earlier ruling by stating: “The only question before the court is whether or not you are entitled to see anything in this report which the witness did not refer to or use to refresh his memory during his examination.”

Appellant’s position in urging his first point is that the witness mentioned that he was familiar with a seven or eight acre tract next to the subject property but did not mention anything about its market value or recent sale, and it developed that he had listed the tract as sale #8 in his report. That the report shows that the tract was sold on October 16, 1963 at a rate of $1.35 per square foot, and this is more than the jury’s finding as to the value of the subject property. The appellant asserts that the trial court refused to permit him to discuss sale #8 and precluded him from going into any matters in the report not testified to by the witness in his direct examination, and this prejudicially restricted the cross-examination and the appellant’s ability to bring this sale to the jury. Further, that this ruling kept the appellant from showing the fact that the witness had found the sale and had reported it but had not testified about it to the jury.

We hold that the trial court’s ruling did not have the effect of which the appellant complains. We find nothing in the record to substantiate appellant’s contention that the trial judge refused to permit him to question Mr. Dominey about sale #8. The tract involved in sale #8 was one of the ten shown on the map which the trial judge expressly allowed appellant to see, and “$1.35” was clearly marked on it. Under the court’s ruling counsel was not permitted to see what Dominey had said to the County about the ten sales listed in the report, but counsel was shown a map giving their locations and he was not prohibited from asking the witness, if he so desired, about any sales.

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Bluebook (online)
454 S.W.2d 830, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidson-v-county-of-harris-texapp-1970.