In Re Appropriation for Hwy. Purposes of Land of Seas

238 N.E.2d 818, 15 Ohio App. 2d 55, 44 Ohio Op. 2d 109, 1968 Ohio App. LEXIS 342
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 3, 1968
Docket1220
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 238 N.E.2d 818 (In Re Appropriation for Hwy. Purposes of Land of Seas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Appropriation for Hwy. Purposes of Land of Seas, 238 N.E.2d 818, 15 Ohio App. 2d 55, 44 Ohio Op. 2d 109, 1968 Ohio App. LEXIS 342 (Ohio Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

BrowN, J.

This is an appeal in a highway appropriation case by the Director of Highways from a final judgment entered on a jury verdict for the property owners, L. Ray Seas and Hazel Seas, representing an award for approximately one-tenth of an acre of land taken and for damages to the residue of the Seas realty in connection with the widening of U. S. Route 30 South, which ran in an east and west direction, and making it a limited access highway where the Seas realty fronted on the south side of U. S. Route 30 South. This was approximately one-half mile east of the city limits of Marion, Ohio, and located in Marion Township, Marion County, Ohio.

The Seas parcel of realty affected by this condemnation proceeding had approximately 102 feet of frontage on the south side of U. S. Route 30 and, on its east side, approximately 250 feet of frontage on Wheeler Drive. The Seas realty was almost rectangular in shape. Wheeler Drive was less traveled than U. S. Route 30 South, had access to U. S. Route 30 South, and would continue to have *57 such access after completion of the U. S. Route 30 South highway improvement. However, the highway improvement caused U. S. Route 30 South to become a limited access highway where the Seas realty fronted, but would continue to permit access from the Seas realty on the east side to Wheeler Drive.

The Marion Township zoning regulations placed the Seas realty in the commercial zone as it did for all realty extending 1,000 feet in depth on both the north and south side of U. S. Route 30 South, starting from the easterly corporate limits of the city of Marion and continuing easterly beyond the Seas realty.

The Director of Highways, appellant herein, claims for the first assignment of error that the trial court committed reversible error in permitting expert witnesses for the landowner to testify on direct examination concerning the sale price of comparable real properties over objections timely made by the state.

The author of the text on the topic “Eminent Domain” in 19 Ohio Jurisprudence 2d 584, Section 163, states as a proposition of law prevailing in Ohio that a witness on real estate values, after being qualified as an expert, may state in his direct examination that he is acquainted with the values of real estate in the vicinity of the property in litigation and knows the sale price of specific parcels of similar quality and location, but that evidence of sales prices of such comparable properties is inadmissible on direct examination of one’s own real estate expert, although such evidence is permitted on cross-examination. 19 Ohio Jurisprudence 2d 585. However, a careful examination and analysis of the Ohio cases footnoted, and hereinafter discussed, in claimed support of this proposition of law do not sustain the proposition stated in this text.

In W. M. Southern Realty co. v. Schmidt, 3 Ohio App. 70, a witness called for plaintiff was asked on cross-examination the sales price of a comparable property. The defendant objected, and the objection was sustained. The Court of Appeals, oblivious that this was an abortive attempt on cross-examination to obtain the sales price of a *58 comparable property, stated, as obiter dicta, that tbis was an effort on direct examination to prove tbe selling price of another lot in tbe neighborhood, and that tbe weight of authority is against the introduction of such evidence. W. M. Southern Realty Co. v. Schmidt, 3 Ohio App. 70, at page 75.

In Muccino v. Baltimore & Ohio Rd. Co., 33 Ohio App. 102, at pages 104, 107, the trial court’s rulings were affirmed in excluding on direct and cross-examination testimony of the sale prices of a claimed comparable sale (the Botzum property) for the reason that the Botzum property was not an actual bona fide sale because the purchaser was not financially responsible, and also because the Botzum property was dissimilar to the property sought to be appropriated. The Court of Appeals, therefore, was expressing obiter dicta when it stated it is better practice to exclude such evidence on direct examination. Muccino v. Baltimore & Ohio Rd. Co., 33 Ohio App. 102, at page 105.

In DeRose v. Cleveland, 14 Ohio Law Abs. 176, paragraph three of the headnotes, and at page 178, the Court of Appeals considered the claimed prejudicial error to plaintiff in excluding evidence of specific sales of similar property in the vicinity of the appropriated property on cross-examination. In deciding this question the Court of Appeals held that the testimony of the sale price of such comparable property was admissible on cross-examination, but expressed obiter dicta in paragraph two of the headnote that such testimony was inadmissible on direct examination.

In Morison v. Cleveland, 32 C. D. 215, 17 C. C. (N. S.) 427, the court held that on cross-examination a witness, properly qualified, may testify as to sales prices of comparable sales, but it is not permissible to incorporate the sales price of comparable properties in the question propounded to the witness.

Cleveland Terminal & Valley Ry. Co. v. Gorsuch, 18 C. D. 468, 8 C. C. (N. S.) 297, affirmed 76 Ohio St. 609 (criticized in Muccino v. Baltimore & Ohio Rd. Co., 33 Ohio App. 102, at page 107), held that on direct examination from *59 a witness, properly qualified, could be elicited evidence as to general selling price of lots in the neighborhood within a comparatively short time. Trustees of Cincinnati Southern Ry. Co. v. Garrard, 7 W. L. B. 272, 8 Dec. Rep. 389, and Cincinnati v. Neff, 20 W. L. B. 8, 10 Dec. Rep. 292, two Hamilton County Common Pleas Court decisions, involve proper jury instructions in appropriation cases, but do not consider the question of admissibility of evidence on direct examination.

Logic and justice, and the important objective in any judicial forum to obtain a full exploration of the truth, require us to reject any text writer’s conclusion and the foregoing expressions of obiter dicta that evidence of sales prices of comparable realty is inadmissible on direct examination of a properly qualified witness.

Instead, we adopt and apply the rule that evidence of sales prices of other comparable real property in the vicinity of the condemned property is admissible on direct examination of one’s own real estate expert as substantive proof of the value of the property under condemnation, where the conditions with respect to the other land and to the sale thereof are similar to those involved in the property under condemnation. Redfield v. Iowa State Highway Commission, 251 Iowa 332, 99 N. W. 2d 413, 85 A. L. R. 2d 96; Forest Preserve District of Cook County v. Lehman Estate, Inc., 388 Ill. 416, 58 N. E. 2d 538; County of Los Angeles v. Faus (Cal. App.), 304 P. 2d 257; (Supreme Court), 48 Cal. 2d 672, 312 P. 2d 680; Lawrence v. Greenwood,

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238 N.E.2d 818, 15 Ohio App. 2d 55, 44 Ohio Op. 2d 109, 1968 Ohio App. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-appropriation-for-hwy-purposes-of-land-of-seas-ohioctapp-1968.