Holcombe v. City of Houston

351 S.W.2d 69, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2686
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 9, 1961
Docket13497
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 351 S.W.2d 69 (Holcombe v. City of Houston) 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
Holcombe v. City of Houston, 351 S.W.2d 69, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2686 (Tex. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

*70 BELL, Chief Justice.

This is a condemnation case. The appel-lee condemned 4.002 acres of land belonging to Oscar F. Holcombe and the jury found the value of the land taken to be $95,700 on June 1, 1951. The trial court also awarded interest on this amount from January 1, 1953 to October 15, 1954. This represents an award of $23,913 per acre or 56 cents per square foot. Mr. Holcombe was dissatisfied with the amount awarded by the jury and has appealed.

Appellant has assigned 13 Points of Error. However, they really present these basic questions:

1. Did the court err in allowing Mr. Sturman to testify as to the price at which he sold certain tracts of land? The objections to his testimony in connection with each tract were that the tract" was not suffi- ■ ciently comparable to the tract condemned; that the tract sold was too distant from the tract condemned, and that the sale was too remote in point of time. This testimony was offered as substantive evidence indicative of the value of Mr. Holcombe’s tract. Mr. Sturman himself made such sales. He did not use them, as is usually the case, merely as a basis for his testifying as an expert as to the value of Mr. Holcombe’s tract and he did not express an opinion as to the value of the condemned tract.

2. Did the court err in allowing the expert witness Ringer to testify as to the sales price of various tracts of land? Mr. Ringer testified as to the sales price of numerous tracts of land, including those testified about by Mr. Sturman. However, testimony concerning the sales price of such tracts was not admitted as substantive or original evidence but was admitted only as being one of the factors considered by the expert witness in arriving at his opinion as to the value of the tract condemned. Here too the objections as to each tract were that the tract was not sufficiently comparable to Mr. Holcombe’s tract; that the tract was too distant from the tract condemned, and that the sale was too remote in point of time.

3.Was the verdict of the jury so against the overwhelming weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be clearly wrong?

The property condemned was a strip about 1,500 feet long running in a northwesterly-southeasterly direction on the easterly side of and abutting Winkler Drive. It was about 175 feet wide at its northerly end where it touched Pine Gully and tapered gradually so that it was 50 feet wide near its southerly end. The north 30 feet was encumbered by a drainage easement. Its width at the south line of the easement was 173 feet. From this point to a distance south of 548 feet it tapered from a width of 173 feet to 152 feet. From this point to a point 282 feet south the depth decreased from 152 feet to 103 feet. From this point to a point 210 feet south the depth decreased from 103 feet to 61 feet. For the next 200 feet the depth decreased from 61 feet to 50 feet and in the last 200 feet the depth decreased from 50 feet to a point. The tract fronted on Winkler Drive, which was a well traveled street and was unrestricted. On the east the tract is bounded by the easterly one-half of the abandoned right of way of the Houston-Galveston Interurban. Such, right of way is 1,448.87 feet long by 50 feet wide.

To the north of the subject tract across Pine Gully on either side of Winkler Drive were numerous tracts of vacant, unrestricted acreage. However, to the south, east and west -of the subject tract were developed residential subdivisions. Immediately across Winkler from the tract were eight unrestricted lots. A Serv-All Store was located on some of them. The subdivision to the east and southeast had access to the tract only by going south to Park Place Boulevard and back north on Winkler. The intersection of the last named streets would be about %th of a mile southeast of the tract condemned.

' The above two paragraphs pretty well describe the nature and immediate sur *71 roundings of the ' subject tract. There seems to he little, if any, dispute that the tract was suitable as business of commercial property, certainly as to a major portion of it.

Now let us notice the character of the neighborhood which may be considered as being in a like environment as the subject tract, though such neighborhood does not join or is not immediately associated with the subject tract.

The subject tract on Winkler Drive is about 7½ miles southeast of downtown Houston. On June 1, 1951, which was before the completion of the Freeway, probably the most accessible route to southeast Houston and its outskirts was to travel from downtown on Leeland Avenue to Telephone Road, thence on Telephone Road to a point about 2 miles northwest of the subject tract. At such point Telephone Road continued in a southeasterly direction. At the above point Winkler Drive branched off from Telephone Road and continued about 3,600 feet in a direction a little east of south where it gradually curved to a southeasterly direction. It continued past the subject tract until it intersected with Park Place Boulevard, about 2,100 feet southeast of the subject tract. The subject tract would be about a mile and a third from the intersection of Telephone Road and Winkler Drive. About 2,000 feet northwest of this intersection Telephone Road crosses Griggs Road, a street which runs in a northeast-southwest direction. From its intersection with Winkler Drive, Telephone Road continues southeast about 4,000 feet, where it intersects Park Place Boulevard, thence on to the City of Alvin. Park Place Boulevard runs east to Winkler Drive. The distance between Telephone Road and Wink-ler Drive along Park Place Boulevard is approximately 6,000 feet. (We should here explain that our distances are what we consider to be fairly accurate measurements based on calculations made from appellant’s Exhibit 5, which the record shows to be a map with a scale of 400 feet to the inch). Northeast of the intersection of Telephone Road and Griggs Road about 1,200 feet the Houston-Galveston Interurban right of way proceeds in a direction just south of east and north of Winkler Drive. The distance of the right of way north of Winkler is from about 1,200 feet on the west at Telephone Road to where it abuts the subject property. To the north of the right of way from Griggs Road to Woodridge Street, which is a distance of about 4,000 feet, is a large residential area known as Pecan Park. Woodridge is the only access street from Pecan Park to Winkler Drive across the right of way.

Telephone Road and Winkler were both well traveled, though Telephone was more heavily traveled than Winkler, particularly at the location of appellant’s tract.

Within the area we have outlined, that is, Griggs Road on the northwest, the right of way on the north, northeast and southeast, Park Place Boulevard on the south and Telephone Road on the southwest, were several fairly well developed residential subdivisions. They were all in some stage of settlement at all material times though they were more thickly settled in June, 1951 than in 1946 and 1947. Greenway Addition was just across Winkler from the subject tract to the west and southwest. Adjoining Greenway on the southwest was Lum Terrace. South of Lum Terrace and the southwest part of Greenway was Santa Rosa. South of Greenway was Park Place Terrace and part of Park Place. North of Lum Terrace was Sturman Park. Green-way and Park Place southeast of Winkler were the larger of these residential subdivisions.

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351 S.W.2d 69, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holcombe-v-city-of-houston-texapp-1961.