Mississippi State Highway Com'n v. Robertson
This text of 350 So. 2d 1348 (Mississippi State Highway Com'n v. Robertson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
MISSISSIPPI STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION
v.
Frank ROBERTSON, Sr.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*1349 Danks, Craig & Moss, Ben J. Piazza, Jr., Earl Keyes Jackson, for appellant.
Stennett, Wilkinson & Ward, E.W. Stennett, Erwin C. Ward, James A. Peden, Jr., Jackson, for appellee.
Before SMITH, P.J., BROOM and LEE, JJ., and LOGAN, C.
FLOYD LOGAN, Commissioner for the Court:[1]
Mississippi State Highway Commission filed this action in a Special Court of Eminent Domain for Hinds County to condemn certain property located in the City of Jackson. The jury awarded the landowner, Frank A. Robertson, Sr., the sum of twenty-six thousand dollars ($26,000) damages, *1350 and the trial judge entered judgment for twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) to conform to the pleadings. The Commission appeals the award, and Robertson cross-appeals the remittitur of one thousand dollars ($1,000). We reverse and remand for a new trial.
The Highway Commission has assigned five errors in the trial below, but, since the case must be reversed and the other assigned errors probably will not recur, we only discuss two questions.
I.
Did the trial court err in admitting testimony of offers and opinions to purchase the subject property as evidence of the fair market value of the property condemned?
The landowner testified that, in his opinion, the value of the property before the taking was sixty-five thousand dollars ($65,000), and that his opinion was based on the fact he had been offered sixty-five thousand dollars ($65,000) for the property by a prospective purchaser. His opinion was not based upon a comparison of the value of his property with surrounding properties, but solely on what he had been offered for it. No objection was made by the Commission to this testimony.
Jack Bass, a justice of the peace, who had some experience with real estate, testified that he had offered Robertson sixty-five thousand dollars ($65,000) for the property prior to the taking. The offer was oral and no formal buy-sell agreement was ever executed between Bass and Robertson. No objection was made to this testimony by the Commission.
Frank Box testified that he had an option to purchase the property prior to its taking. The trial court sustained an objection to the admission of the option contract. Box then testified without objection that he had an option to purchase the subject property for sixty thousand dollars ($60,000), that he did not have a contract to purchase or a buy-sell agreement, and that the value in the option was "not necessarily" based on comparable sales.
Offers or options to purchase property are not competent evidence to establish the fair market value of property. State Highway Commission v. Johnson, 186 Miss. 889, 191 So. 820 (1939); 27 Am.Jur.2d, Eminent Domain, § 428 at 330 (1966); 29 Am.Jur.2d, Evidence, § 399 at 451 (1967). The testimony of Robertson, Bass and Box was, therefore, not competent to establish the fair market value of the property. The Highway Commission, however, made no specific objection to this evidence at the time it was offered. The fact that evidence which is introduced in a case may be, if objected to, incompetent evidence under some one or more exclusionary rules of evidence, does not destroy its probative effect, if admitted without objection. Meridian Hatcheries v. Troutman, 230 Miss. 493, 93 So.2d 472 (1957). The weight of such evidence is for the determination of, and is that which is attributed to it by, the trier of facts. Roberts v. Interstate Life and Accident Ins. Co., 232 Miss. 134, 98 So.2d 632 (1957); 29 Am.Jur.2d, Evidence, § 494 at 552 (1967) and 30 Am.Jur.2d, Evidence, § 1103 at 268 (1967). Although the Commission now assigns the admission of such testimony as error, this Court will not consider such an objection not specifically made to the trial court at the time the evidence was offered, and the trial court did not err in admitting same without objection. Lake v. Harrington, 210 Miss. 74, 48 So.2d 845 (1950); 5 Am.Jur.2d, Appeal and Error, § 601, at 67 (1962).
II.
Did certain jury instructions comment on the weight of the testimony?
Instruction No. 6 submitted by appellee and granted by the court over appellant's objection reads as follows:
The Court instructs the jury that a land owner in an eminent domain case is a competent witness in his own behalf and you should consider his testimony along with all of the rest of the testimony in the case. (Emphasis added).
*1351 This instruction states the general law as to the competency of the landowner as a witness in an eminent domain case. However, the question of the competency of witnesses is a question of law for the Court, while the weight and credibility to be accorded their testimony are questions of fact for the jury. Pearl River Valley Water Supply Dist. v. Wood, 252 Miss. 580, 172 So.2d 196 (1965). The instruction is, therefore, improper as an instruction on a matter of law which is not within the jury's function to determine. It is by nature argumentative and does not submit any fact finding for the jury's determination. Cheatham v. State, 67 Miss. 335, 7 So. 204 (1890).
More important, the instruction is a comment on the weight of the evidence and invades the province of the jury. Mississippi Code Annotated, Section 11-7-155 (1972) provides that "The Judge in any civil cause shall not sum up or comment on the testimony, or charge the jury as to the weight of evidence ...". This instruction singles out the testimony of the landowner as distinguished from the other testimony in the case and tells the jury that "they should consider his testimony." As this Court said in Gurley v. State, 101 Miss. 190, 57 So. 565 (1912):
We have never perceived upon what principle the trial Courts have acted in singling out particular portions of the evidence in a cause, and telling the jury that it ought or might consider this, that, or another part of the evidence in connection with the other evidence in reaching a verdict. By admitting the evidence the Court has declared its competency, and the jury should be left to its function of determining the weight and effect to be given to it. [57 So. at 566].
See also Thompson v. State, 73 Miss. 584, 19 So. 204 (1896).
Although the cases cited above are criminal cases, the propositions stated are applicable with equal force to civil cases.
Robertson's testimony that the property had a fair market value of sixty-five thousand dollars ($65,000) before the taking represents a three dollar and fourteen cents ($3.14) per square foot value for the property. This valuation is not supported by any testimony in the case other than the Bass offer of sixty-five thousand dollars ($65,000) and the Box option of sixty thousand dollars ($60,000), which were incompetent although not objected to. The highest valuation testified to by landowner's and condemnor's appraisers as supported by comparable sales was two dollars fifty cents ($2.50) per square foot. However, this comparable sale was distinguished from the subject property as being improved and having higher utilities. Robertson's testimony about the offer was not objected to, and its weight and credibility were for the jury's consideration along with the other evidence. Roberts v. Interstate Life and Accident Ins. Co., supra.
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350 So. 2d 1348, 1977 Miss. LEXIS 2247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mississippi-state-highway-comn-v-robertson-miss-1977.