Reynolds v. State

390 S.W.2d 493
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 27, 1965
Docket7650
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 390 S.W.2d 493 (Reynolds v. State) 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
Reynolds v. State, 390 S.W.2d 493 (Tex. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

FANNING, Justice.

This is a condemnation case brought by the State of Texas against J. H. Reynolds and wife, for the taking for highway purposes of 7500 square feet of commercially zoned property on Harwood Street in the City of Dallas. The property taken was being used by Reynolds and wife as a residence and also for a sign painting business. The State’s authority to condemn was admitted and the only dispute between the parties was the market value of the property taken.

A jury in response to the single special issue submitted found the market value of the land and improvements in question on August 15, 1962 (the date of the taking) to be $12,500.00. Judgment was rendered awarding appellee the condemned land excepting certain mineral rights stated in the judgment, and awarding appellants judgment for $1,000.00, being the difference between the commissioner’s award of $11,-500.00 deposited in the registry of the court and withdrawn by appellants, and the jury verdict of $12,500.00. Appellants Reynolds and wife have appealed.

Appellants by their points 1 to 4, inclusive, contend that the trial court abused its discretion and erred, over the objections of appellants, in not permitting Levy, the real estate appraisal expert of appellants, to introduce in evidence the amounts of four certain sales hereinafter referred to. By their 5th point appellants contend that the trial court abused its discretion and erred, over objections of appellants, in not permitting the said expert witness Levy, to testify that the gross multiple of the sales in points 1 through 4 confirmed and supported his opinion and was the basis of his opinion. By their 8th point appellants contend that the verdict of the jury and judgment of the court is wholly inadequate and insufficient.

Appellants’ value witness, Dan Levy, after duly qualifying as a real estate appraisal expert and after testifying as to his knowledge and familiarity with the subject property and surrounding areas, testified that the subject property was zoned C, commercial, and described the house located on the lot as being a one-story frame house, containing 1170 square feet, about 38 or 40 years old, and as one needing paint and general maintenance. He testified that the property at the time of the taking was being used as a residence and as a place for the sign painting business of Reynolds, and it was his opinion that the property could best be utilized by a sign painting company, an electrical contractor or a plumber. He further stated that in the area of subject property several land users had removed old residences and replaced them with commercial buildings and that the subject building could be replaced by a building which would have more utility, etc.

Levy used the cost approach to value the subject improvements and it was his opinion that the depreciated value of the improvements on Aug. 15, 1962, was $3,500.00.

Levy, in establishing the value of the subject land, used the market approach and in doing so he used sales in the area to determine the per square foot value of the land. He further testified that he used these sales to place a value upon the land only exclusive of the improvements. The value Mr. Levy placed on the subject land only was $18,750.00, or $2.50 per square foot.

To substantiate his land only value of $2.50 per square foot assigned by Levy to subject land, he attempted to testify to nine sales of property in Dallas, Texas, which Levy considered comparable to subject land. Five of these sales were admitted into evidence and four were excluded upon objection by appellee.

*495 Levy was not a party to any of these nine sales and his knowledge of these sales came from hearsay and such nine sales were not introduced in evidence as independent substantive evidence of the value of the properties sought to be compared with the subject property. Appellants sought to introduce evidence on these nine sales, on direct examination of the value witness Levy (by hearsay) to give an account of the factual basis upon which he founded his opinion on the issue of value of the real estate in controversy.

The four sales excluded by the trial court are discussed as follows:

Sale 1. Grandee to Ivy. A house and lot, 4 blocks from subject property, zoned C-2 (a different zoning than subject property). The improvement on said property was a two story rooming house, containing in excess of 2000 square feet, was inhabited, occupied and produced income. The house on the sale property was not comparable and similar to the house on subject property. By bill of exception Levy indicated that he considered that said rooming house had no value and might have been a liability to the land and that he used the entire consideration for the sale, $11,500.00 ($1.90 per square foot) in arriving at his value for subject land only.

Sale 2. Wyche to Croy and Croy. A house and lot 3]/2 blocks from subject property. Levy did not testify that this was a free and voluntary market transaction nor that he considered it as such. The improvement was a two-story house which was still standing at the date of the trial. There was no testimony that this improvement was comparable and similar to subject improvement. By bill of exception the witness Levy indicated that the total consideration for this sale was $13,500.00, that he considered the improvement to be worth $1250.00 which in his opinion would leave $12,250.00 for the land ($2.10 per square foot). This latter amount he then used in placing a value on subject land only.

Sale 3. Manning to Blair. A corner lot with house at Corsicana and Park with same zoning as subject property. The sale took place on March 4, 1957, which is 5j4 years prior to the date of taking in subject cause. The witness Levy did not testify as to any confirmation of the consideration paid nor as to the sale being a voluntary market transaction. The improvement on the property was a two-story, frame house, twice as large as subject house, which improvement remained on the property close to two years after the sale. The house was later removed and the property thereafter was used as a parking lot. By bill of exception Levy testified that the consideration was $20,000.00 and this would be $4.51 per square foot for the land and the improvements. Levy did not attempt to assign separate values to the land or the improvement. Levy used the total consideration in arriving at the value of the subject land only.

Sale 4. City of Dallas to Dallas Scottish Rite Temple Association. An unimproved tract zoned M-l (manufacturing) at the corner of Harwood and Canton which sold on April 16, 1956, which is six years and four months prior to the date of taking in subject cause. There was no testimony that there was any probability that the zoning of subject tract would be changed in the foreseeable future from C-l to M-l. No witness in the cause testified that there had been no change in land values in this area or in Dallas County during the period from April 15, 1956 (the date of this sale) to August 15, 1962, (the date of taking in this cause). By bill of exception the witness Levy gave the consideration for this sale as $35,000.00 or $5.07 per square foot.

The witness Levy in the bill of exceptions also testified to the effect that each of the four excluded sales were part of the basis of the opinion reached by him and confirmed and backed up his valuation of the subject property.

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390 S.W.2d 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-state-texapp-1965.