In Re Condemnation of 23.015 Acres More or Less Known as Tax Map Parcel No. 15-29-129 Lands N/L

895 A.2d 76, 2006 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 90
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 28, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 895 A.2d 76 (In Re Condemnation of 23.015 Acres More or Less Known as Tax Map Parcel No. 15-29-129 Lands N/L) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Condemnation of 23.015 Acres More or Less Known as Tax Map Parcel No. 15-29-129 Lands N/L, 895 A.2d 76, 2006 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 90 (Pa. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge LEAVITT.

Robert L. and Maryanne P. Showalter appeal an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County (trial court) denying their motions for post-trial relief. 1 By their motion, the Showalters requested the trial court to set aside a jury award of $325,000 for property taken through condemnation by Pennridge School District (Pennridge). The principal issues on appeal concern certain evidentiary rulings by the trial court, which the Showalters believe constituted reversible error. The Showalters also challenge the trial court’s assessment of delay damages and attorney’s fees. We reverse and remand for a new trial.

The Showalters are the former owners of a 23.015 acre vacant parcel of land (Property) located adjacent to Pennridge’s property in Hilltown Township, Bucks County. The Showalters purchased the Property in 1988 for investment purposes. In 1998, when the Showalters anticipated needing money for their children’s college expenses, they retained the services of Mr. Showalter’s engineering firm, Robert L. Showalter & Associates, to prepare preliminary plans to subdivide the Property into four large residential “estate” lots. The plans were submitted to the Hilltown Township Planning Commission at a public meeting in June, 1998.

At around the same time, the Showal-ters entered into discussions with officials at Pennridge about its potential purchase of the Property. At the time, Pennridge was a long-standing client of Mr. Showal-ter’s firm. These discussions culminated in an exchange of documents that are relevant in this appeal. The first was a letter from Pennridge’s counsel to its realtor, dated July 2, 1999, contemplating the sale of the Property. Attached to the letter was a draft “Settlement Agreement” between the Showalters and Pennridge; a proposed agreement of sale listing a purchase price of $280,000; and a draft of a school board resolution to condemn the Property. Reproduced Record 550a-565(a)a (R.R.-). A second letter, dat *80 ed November 23, 1999, from Pennridge to the Showalters enclosed the draft Settlement Agreement; a revised agreement of sale listing a purchase price of $260,000; and a draft copy of the condemnation resolution. The Showalters responded to Pennridge’s November 23, 1999, communication with a memo dated December 15, 1999, proposing changes to the Settlement Agreement and the revised agreement of sale.

When the negotiations between the parties failed to yield an agreement of sale by the spring of 2000, the Showalters resumed their subdivision plans while Penn-ridge moved forward with its plans to acquire the Property by eminent domain. To that end, Pennridge filed a declaration of taking on November 3, 2000, condemning the Property. The Showalters petitioned for appointment of a Board of View to determine just compensation. On January 29, 2001, a view and hearing was held before the Board of View, and on April 18, 2002, it issued a Report and Award valuing the Property at $340,000. The Showalters appealed to the trial court and the parties proceeded to a jury trial on July 12, 2004.

Prior to trial, the Showalters filed a motion in limine to exclude all testimony and other evidence regarding their pre-condemnation negotiations with Pennridge regarding a sale of the Property. On the first day of trial, before the jury was seated, the trial court denied the Showalters’ motion and admitted into evidence the above-described documentation of the parties’ negotiations. The parties also offered testimony regarding their divergent recollections of the negotiations. Pennridge’s witnesses testified that an employee of the Showalters approached the school district with an offer to sell the Property in the spring of 1999, and they indicated their willingness to sell the Property for $260,000. Pennridge argued that it reached a “handshake deal” with the Showalters on November 15, 1999, to acquire the Property for $260,000, as was reflected in the proposed agreement of sale that was prepared by the school district and sent to the Showalters on November 23, 1999. Pennridge disavowed that it had any intent at that point to condemn the Property and characterized the condemnation resolutions as a “friendly condemnation,” designed to avoid payment of the 2% realty transfer tax.

The Showalters denied that they approached Pennridge first; they argued that Pennridge became aware of the availability of the Property when the Showal-ters submitted their subdivision plans to the Planning Commission in June of 1998. Pennridge then offered the Showalters $280,000 in its first set of documents. The Showalters further testified that they never accepted Pennridge’s second offer of $260,000 and, in support, noted that they never executed an Agreement of Sale. The Showalters denied that they ever reached a “handshake deal” with Pennridge.

On the second day of trial, Penn-ridge made an oral motion to exclude certain aspects of an expert valuation report the Showalters intended to offer into evidence. This report, prepared by the Showalters’ real estate appraiser, used both the “sales comparison approach” and the “subdivision development method” in affixing the value of the Property. 2 Penn- *81 ridge specifically objected to the “subdivision development method” portion of the expert report and any evidence referring to the value of individual lots in a proposed subdivision. The Showalters opposed the motion. They pointed out that Pennridge was violating the trial court’s directive to make all such motions in advance of the trial. They also argued that by fifing the motion in the middle of the trial, Penn-ridge was prejudicing Showalters’ case presentation.

The trial court initially denied Penn-ridge’s motion but, on the third day of trial, reversed itself. In its new order, the trial court made several critical rulings. First, it directed the Showalters to redact the inadmissible portions of their expert appraiser’s report. Second, the Showal-ters were directed not to elicit testimony from their expert on the value of the Property as a residential subdivision. Third, the Showalters were barred from offering correspondence between the parties that referred to the Property’s value as falling between $500,000 and $600,000; further, they were prohibited from eliciting testimony about these letters or their contents. Fourth, Showalters’ counsel was required to correct his opening remarks to the jury that he would present evidence of both the comparable sales and the subdivision development valuation methods. The Show-alters’ expert was permitted to testify that the fair market value of the Property was $650,000, using only the comparable sales methodology. Finally, Mr. Showalter, in his capacity as Property owner, but not as an expert engineer, was permitted to testify that, based upon his personal belief that the Property could be subdivided into twelve residential lots, its value was $690,000.

Pennridge rebutted the Showalters’ valuations with the testimony of their real estate appraiser setting a fair market value for the Property of $265,000, based upon comparable sales. Pennridge also offered the testimony of two engineers who concluded that the Showalters would encounter difficulty in obtaining approval from local planning authorities for their proposed subdivision plan.

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Bluebook (online)
895 A.2d 76, 2006 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-condemnation-of-23015-acres-more-or-less-known-as-tax-map-parcel-no-pacommwct-2006.