Land Clearance for Redevelopment Authority of Kansas City v. W.F. Coen & Co.

773 S.W.2d 465, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 575, 1989 WL 39318
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 25, 1989
DocketNo. WD39552
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 773 S.W.2d 465 (Land Clearance for Redevelopment Authority of Kansas City v. W.F. Coen & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Land Clearance for Redevelopment Authority of Kansas City v. W.F. Coen & Co., 773 S.W.2d 465, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 575, 1989 WL 39318 (Mo. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

SHANGLER, Presiding Judge.

The defendants Allright Auto Park, Inc. and Allright Carpark, Inc. [Allright], con-demnees, bring these consolidated appeals from a judgment entered on jury verdicts on a trial of exceptions to the commissioners’ awards in a condemnation action brought by Land Clearance for Redevelopment Authority of Kansas City, Missouri [LCRA] and from the judgment of apportionment entered by the court.

The subject of the condemnation and apportionment trials were three parcels of land located in the central business district. This land was for the site of the AT & T Town Pavilion development. The three lots, parcels 13, 14 and 15, constitute a surface parking area known as the Kline lot. Allright Auto Park was the fee owner of Parcels 13 and 15. Allright Carpark, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Allright Auto Park, was lessee of parcel 14. LCRA, the condemnor, purchased parcel 14 in fee, subject to the lease, shortly before commencement of the condemnation proceedings.

The commissioners determined the fair market value of the Kline lot, and on March 12, 1984, LCRA paid the sum into the court registry and so acquired title to parcels 13 and 15. LCRA had already purchased the fee in parcel 14, subject to the Allright lease, on February 24, 1984. The parties filed exceptions to the commissioner awards and the issue of the fair market value of the parcels taken was tried to a jury. Prior to the trial of the exceptions, each party moved in limine to exclude certain valuation evidence to be tendered by the other. LCRA sought to exclude the Allright evidence of business profits — actual or prospective — from the operation of the property as a surface parking lot. All-right sought to exclude the LCRA evidence of comparable land sales. The court denied both motions.

The valuation methodologies and determinations presented by the parties were markedly disparate. Allright undertook to prove value through two expert economists, Bums and Faurot. They gave opinion that the highest and best use of the Kline lot was for continued use as a surface parking lot. They gave opinion also that the value of each parcel on the date of taking was $98 per square foot. That calculation represented the present value of future profits lost as a result of the taking. LCRA undertook to prove value through two expert appraisers, Nunnink and Ar-note. They gave opinion that the highest and best use of the Kline lot was redevelopment or assemblage, but included interim surface parking. They gave opinion also that the value of each parcel on the date of taking was between $45 and $50 per square foot. That estimate of value was based on sales of comparable properties in the central business district. The jury returned a verdict of $64.80 per square foot for each parcel.1

The trial court then conducted a hearing under § 523.053, RSMo 1986, to apportion the jury award of $343,699.20 for parcel 14 between LCRA as fee owner and Allright as lessee. The value theories of apportionment, the bonus value method posited by LCRA and the summation method employed by Allright, were also markedly disparate. They will be fully explained in the course of opinion. The trial court entered detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law which expressly rejected the Allright theory of apportionment as inconsistent with Missouri law and generally accepted appraisal techniques. The court entered judgment of seven percent [7%], or $25,300, to Allright for its leasehold interest in parcel 14, and ninety-three percent [93%], or $318,399, to LCRA for its fee interest in parcel 14, the sum equal to the $343,699.20 fair market value at the time of taking as determined by the jury verdict.

[467]*467Allright preserves four contentions of error for our review: 1) that Instruction 6 and Instruction 7 which submitted fair market value as the standard and measurement of damages did not properly apply to the taking because the Kline lot was not subject to the usual fair market value tests, 2) that the trial court improperly received Exhibit 41, a computer printout prepared by an expert for LCRA, 3) that the trial court on the trial of the exceptions improperly precluded Allright from cross-examination regarding the source of funds to pay the condemnation verdicts, and 4) the trial court at the apportionment hearing improperly found the facts and declared the law in the rendition of that phase of the judgment.

INSTRUCTIONS 6 & 7 & FAIR MARKET VALUE

Allright contends first that fair market value does not measure the damages in the condemnation of a surface parking lot, but rather that in such a taking, the present value of lost future profits from the use of the land is the best evidence of value. All-right argues, accordingly, that Instruction 6 [MAI 9.01] and Instruction 7 [MAI 16.02] which submitted fair market value, misdirected the jury, and that the refusal of the court to submit Instruction A tendered by Allright was prejudicial error.2 The expounded argument is that our law recognizes that in the case of a surface parking lot, it is the character of the properly itself and not the labor of the owner that makes the land valuable. The profits are derived directly, almost altogether, from the use of the land and so are the land’s chief source of value. It was the Allright expert testimony, moreover, that the value of the parking lot was almost entirely dependent upon its location in the central business district, rather than upon improvements or operational and marketing efforts. The taking of the land is, therefore, tantamount to the taking of the business. Allright presented economist experts to project the future profits until February, 2008, [when the lease on parcel 14 expired] and then calculated the present value of the lost future profits by the application of a 10.5% interest rate — the formula prescribed by another Allright expert. This evidence, Allright argues, justified the submission of Instruction A under our decisions.

To sustain argument that the capitalization of profits was a valid method to prove the fair value of the surface parking lot taken in condemnation [and hence a valid basis for the submission of tendered Instruction A], Allright cites Private Property for Municipal Courts Fac. v. Kordes, 431 S.W.2d 124 (Mo.1968); City of St. Louis v. Union Quarry & Constr. Co., 394 S.W.2d 300 (Mo.1965); State ex rel. Highway Comm’n v. Mount Moriah Cemetery Ass’n, 434 S.W.2d 470 (Mo.1968); and Reorganized School Dist. No. 2 v. Missouri Pac. R.R. Co., 503 S.W.2d 153 (Mo.App.1973). The rule of decision in those cases, however, is not as casual as Allright makes out. Those cases reaffirm that business profits do not usually bear as admissible evidence to prove the value of the land on which the business is located. That exclusion rests on the theory that such evidence is “too speculative, uncertain, and remote to be considered as a basis for computing [468]*468or ascertaining the market value.” Union Quarry at 306[12].

The just compensation our constitution mandates for private property taken for public use means, usually,

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Bluebook (online)
773 S.W.2d 465, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 575, 1989 WL 39318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/land-clearance-for-redevelopment-authority-of-kansas-city-v-wf-coen-moctapp-1989.