Morales v. Chrysler Realty Corp.

843 S.W.2d 275, 1992 WL 361677
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 9, 1992
Docket3-92-001-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 843 S.W.2d 275 (Morales v. Chrysler Realty Corp.) 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
Morales v. Chrysler Realty Corp., 843 S.W.2d 275, 1992 WL 361677 (Tex. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

KIDD, Justice.

This appeal arises from a statutory-condemnation case. The Attorney General (“the State”) appeals from a judgment in favor of appellee, Chrysler Realty Corporation (“Chrysler”).

THE CONTROVERSY

This is another in a series of condemnation actions by the State to obtain property for the widening of U.S. Highway 183. Chrysler owns a car dealership sales facility on property located on the northbound IH-35 frontage road at the intersection of Blackson Avenue in Austin, Texas. This condemnation proceeding concerned the taking of approximately four thousand square feet of frontage from Chrysler’s property. As a result of the condemnation action, both parties introduced expert testimony as to the value of the part of the property being taken as well as the resulting damage to Chrysler’s remaining property. The jury found that Chrysler had been damaged in the amount of $623,000. The trial court rendered judgment on the verdict. In sixteen points of error, the State appeals the judgment, primarily complaining about the trial court’s charge to the jury. We will affirm.

DISCUSSION

Limiting Instruction on Community Damages

In a series of condemnation cases involving the U.S. Highway 183 project, the State has taken the position that the landowner is attempting to recover statutory condemnation damages that are non-compensable. *277 See State v. Munday Enterprises, 824 S.W.2d 643 (Tex.App. — Austin 1992, writ requested); State v. Schmidt, 805 S.W.2d 25 (Tex.App. — Austin 1991, writ granted). These non-compensable elements generally involve the loss of access to the landowner’s remaining property by the grade elevation necessary for the condemnation project, the loss of visibility resulting to the remainder property as a result of the elevated roadway, and the construction disruption and inconvenience that results to the remainder property. We held in both Schmidt and Munday that while the value of these items are not recoverable as separate items of damage, evidence of their value is admissible on the question of diminution in the fair market value of the landowner’s remainder property. In the instant cause, the trial was conducted after we issued our opinion in Schmidt. As a result of the Schmidt opinion, the State adopted a different trial strategy in this case. It introduced expert testimony that the remainder property had been damaged by loss of access, loss of visibility, and construction disruption, but joined issue with the landowner on the amount of damage which had been sustained. Thus, both sides offered evidence on the damage to Chrysler’s remainder property, the State conceding at trial that the condemnation project had caused some damage to the remainder property. 1

Points of error one through six complain of the trial court’s failure to give a limiting instruction in the court’s charge that the jury should not consider any damage to the remainder property that would be in the category of “community damages.” 2

Chrysler argues that the trial court did not err in failing to give the requested instruction in the court’s charge because: (1) by sponsoring evidence through its own expert witness on the so-called Schmidt elements of remainder-property damages, the State waived the right to request a limiting instruction on the very same elements of damage, and (2) no evidence of “community damages” was presented that required a limiting instruction. We agree.

A party must timely object to the admission of evidence in order to complain on appeal. Tex.R.App.P. 52(a). The State sponsored evidence of these damage elements through its own expert witness. The law in Texas concerning complaining about one’s own evidence is clear and unambiguous. “A party on appeal should not be heard to complain of the admission of improper evidence offered by the other side, when he, himself, introduced the same evidence or evidence of a similar character.” Mc Innes v. Yamaha Motor Corp., U.S.A., 673 S.W.2d 185, 188 (Tex.1984). The State in essence argues that the trial court erred by failing to instruct the jury not to consider portions of the State’s own evidence and portions of the evidence offered by the landowner, all of which was received without objection. We reject this argument. Because the State failed to object and in fact sponsored portions of the allegedly “tainted” evidence, which we have previously held in Schmidt and Mun-day to be admissible, the trial court did not err in refusing to give the State’s requested instruction.

In addition, Chrysler argues that there is no evidence in the record that testimony was introduced which would justify a limiting instruction on the issue of “community damages.” Again, we agree. The State refers this Court to some thirty-nine instances in the record where evidence of community damages was allegedly adduced. Of those, we note that only three *278 occurred in the jury’s presence. Those three instances came late in the cross-examination of the State’s expert witness, Rudy Robinson. In all three instances, Robinson confirmed that those elements of damage would affect the market value of the remainder properly in question. Thus, we cannot find in this record a single instance where either party sponsored community-damage testimony. A limiting instruction on the general proscription regarding community damages would have only served to confuse the jury in this case. The trial court properly refused to grant the requested instruction. We reiterate our holding in Munday that the term “general community damages” refers to the community at large and is not limited to other condemnee-landowners of the project in issue. Munday, 824 S.W.2d at 649. The State’s points of error one through six are overruled.

Single Damage Issue Submission

Just as in Munday, the trial court submitted this case upon a single broad-form condemnation-damage issue that required the jury to find the difference in market value between the whole Chrysler tract as it existed before the condemnation project was initiated and the remainder property after the condemnation, taking into account the effects of the condemnation project. 3 In points of error twelve and thirteen, the State argues that the trial court erred in refusing its requested jury issues. The State requested in separate issues one question that would have required the jury to find the value of the part taken, and then a second question requiring the jury to determine the decrease, if any, in the before-and-after value of the remainder property. The Texas Supreme Court has recently held in a partial-taking case that the submission the State requested is actually the preferred method. See Westgate Ltd. v. State, — S.W.2d — (Dec. 2, 1992).

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843 S.W.2d 275, 1992 WL 361677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morales-v-chrysler-realty-corp-texapp-1992.