Helmick Family Farm v. Commissioner of Highways

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedAugust 29, 2019
Docket180691
StatusPublished

This text of Helmick Family Farm v. Commissioner of Highways (Helmick Family Farm v. Commissioner of Highways) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Helmick Family Farm v. Commissioner of Highways, (Va. 2019).

Opinion

PRESENT: All the Justices

HELMICK FAMILY FARM, LLC OPINION BY v. Record No. 180691 JUSTICE STEPHEN R. McCULLOUGH August 29, 2019 COMMISSIONER OF HIGHWAYS

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CULPEPER COUNTY Susan L. Whitlock, Judge

Condemnation commissioners awarded $22,592 in compensation to the Helmick Family

Farm, LLC (“Helmick”) for a taking of slightly more than two acres of land, along with some

easements. Helmick appeals, contending that it was erroneously prevented from presenting

evidence of the reasonable probability of a rezoning and, moreover, that the jury received

incorrect instructions. Helmick also argues that the testimony of its representative was

improperly restricted. Exclusion of this evidence, Helmick contends, prevented the

commissioners from considering probative evidence concerning the land’s fair market value.

For the reasons noted below, we reverse the decision of the trial court.

BACKGROUND

Prior to the take, Helmick Family Farm consisted of approximately 168 acres. It is

located in Culpeper County. The land is zoned A1 or Agricultural. The land is essentially

vacant. As of the date of the take, it was being used for cattle grazing, and for growing hay.

There are some businesses nearby, such as auto repair facilities and a mulch processing plant, as

well as more vacant land. The farm has some road frontage, about 2,000 linear feet on Poor

Farm Road, as well as a “pipestem” that leads to Greens Corner Road.

In order to build a diamond interchange at the intersection of Route 29 and Greens

Corner Road, the Commissioner of Highways (“Commissioner”) filed a Certificate of Take on August 20, 2014, for a portion of the farm. The Commissioner took 2.155 acres in fee simple

with a .198-acre permanent drainage easement, a .318-acre temporary construction easement,

and a .078-acre utility easement. Helmick refused the Commissioner’s offer of $20,281, so the

Commissioner filed a petition in condemnation in the Circuit Court of Culpeper County.

Helmick planned to introduce testimony from Charles F. Carter, who was previously

employed by Culpeper County as the County Planner, a position later renamed Planning

Director, to manage the activities of the Office of Planning and Zoning. He currently is the

owner of Carter Planning Group, a consulting firm that provides land planning services to public

and private clients. In his written report, Carter opined that the parcels taken by the

Commissioner had been for many years “planned for commercial/industrial development.” He

acknowledged the current zoning of the property was Agricultural. No application for rezoning

was pending at the time of the take. Carter’s report indicated that “the subject property would be

rezoned from A-1 (Agricultural) to LI (Light Industry) if application was made by the

landowners.” He also would have testified that “[b]ased on the intended commercial/industrial

use of the subject property and its association with the adjacent LI and CS parcels, the

appropriate zoning designation of the . . . parcel is LI (Light Industry).” Carter would have

testified that the Board of Supervisors had approved nearly every application for such rezonings

between 2006 and 2015.

Helmick obtained an appraisal from Charles T. Dennis. Dennis reviewed the

characteristics of the property. He noted its designation as Commercial property in the County’s

Comprehensive Plan. The property is also within the Urban Services boundary. Dennis’ report

details his conversations with the County’s planning staff, the fact that nearby properties are

devoted to commercial services, its proximity to U.S. Routes 15 and 29 and State Route 666, and

2 its proximity to water and sewer services. Dennis concluded that “the highest and best use of the

land would be to rezone the 31.5 acres planned for commercial to LI or another commercial

zoning district, and hold the remaining 136.9457 acres for investment purposes.” He

acknowledged that the Helmick property “will need to be rezoned prior to being used for

commercial purposes” and that the rezoning process “can be time consuming.” Although Dennis

used land zoned Light Industrial, Heavy Industrial, or Commercial Service as comparable sales,

rather than land zoned Agricultural, he acknowledged in his report that the need to rezone the

Helmick land renders it “inferior to the comparable sales that are all zoned industrial or

commercial.” Therefore, he applied a discount factor to adjust the price of those sales

downward. The price of land per acre for comparable sales ranged from $65,000 to $176,906

per acre. Dennis concluded that the Helmick Farm land was worth $130,000 per acre, a value of

$280,150, and that the easements and other improvements make the take worth a total of

$321,000.

Prior to trial, the Commissioner filed a motion in limine to exclude all evidence

concerning “a hypothetical rezoning of the subject property from Agricultural (A-1) to Light

Industrial or Commercial before the take on August 20, 2014.” The court agreed, reasoning that

such evidence is too speculative and remote. The court ruled that “all testimony and evidence

regarding hypothetical rezoning of the subject property is excluded from trial.” Accordingly, the

court held that Carter “is prohibited and excluded from testifying as to various facts about the

area surrounding the property or about the reasonable probability of rezoning the subject

property at the time of the take.” The trial court further held that Dennis could not testify

regarding the comparable sales he used in his appraisal. The trial court also excluded Dennis’

3 “opinion of the highest and best use of the property, regarding the comparable sales he used to

come up with his value of the take, and the methodology” he employed.

At the trial, Walter Robinson, the appraiser who testified on behalf of the Commissioner,

estimated the value of the land to be $22,464. He opined that the highest and best use of the land

is for it to continue as farmland. In reaching his opinion, he relied on sales of property zoned for

agricultural use. He acknowledged that none of the comparable sales he used to value the

property were designated as Commercial on the County’s Land Use Map of its Comprehensive

Plan and that none of these sales were within the County’s Urban Services Area.

The Culpeper Comprehensive Plan is a document that is prepared every three to five

years that serves as a general guide for what possible future development might be for a property

or for the County. According to its introduction, “[i]t identifies those areas planned for future

growth and the anticipated land use associated with such growth.” It is not binding. As

Robinson put it, the Comprehensive Plan represents “the best available information that the

county wants to give about how they want to see parts of the county develop.” Robinson

acknowledged that the Comprehensive Plan designation for a property can influence its value.

The Comprehensive Plan does not cover the entirety of the Helmick farm, but designates a

portion of the Helmick farm as “Commercial,” including the portion taken by the Commissioner.

The County also produced a future land use map, itself part of the Comprehensive Plan, that

designates the Helmick property as commercial.

The court permitted Melvin Helmick, the general manager of Helmick Family Farm, to

testify. Mr.

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