Ritchey v. State

302 So. 2d 83, 293 Ala. 265, 1974 Ala. LEXIS 959
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedSeptember 26, 1974
DocketSC 574
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 302 So. 2d 83 (Ritchey v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ritchey v. State, 302 So. 2d 83, 293 Ala. 265, 1974 Ala. LEXIS 959 (Ala. 1974).

Opinion

*267 McCALL, Justice.

The defendant landowners appeal from a circuit court judgment in a condemnation proceeding by the State of Alabama, which awarded them damages for the taking of a parcel of land with a brick building and improvements thereon, all of which were being used in the operation of a grocery store business. The real property so taken, which is located at the southwest corner of First Avenue South and 64th Street in the City of Birmingham, is for public use in the construction and maintenance of a public highway and controlled access highway facility, namely, U. S. Interstate 1-20.

The first question that the appellants raise in their brief relates to the propriety of certain remarks that the trial judge made during the course of the examination of one of the appellants’ witnesses. The appellants contend that these remarks were lengthy, unnecessary and prejudicial comment on the testimony of the witness in the presence of the jury. They also contend that the cumulative effect of the remarks was to destroy the witness’ testimony in the eyes of the jury.

The witness was one of the three citizens whom the probate court had appointed earlier as commissioners to assess the amount of damages and compensation to which the appellant landowners were entitled. During the course of his testimony in the circuit court, after stating that he had been appointed by the probate court to look at the property and that he had examined it, the appellants’ attorney asked the witness if he knew how many square feet were in the total piece of property. The record then shows the following which embraces the subject of the appellants’ complaint :

“A Yes, sir. We took the measurements—
“MR. LANDRUM: We object to what—
“THE COURT: I sustain on we. He is not asking you how that panel of three worked. He is asking you what you did.
“Q (BY MR. ACKER:) We.are talking about what you did, Mr. Dill.
“A All right, sir. I took the measurements of the property and the building that was being taken, and we — I checked the inside. I checked the building, the repairs, and gave it a — a thorough inspection as far as appraising goes.
# * % # %
“THE COURT: I assume you are still talking about this same lot there?
“THE WITNESS: Yes, sir. That is the one.
“THE COURT: All right.
“A And we had some comparables that we—
“MR. LANDRUM: We—
“A That I put in—
“THE COURT: You see. Let me explain this to the witness. You may not understand it. We — we are not taking the testimony about what that panel did.
“THE WITNESS: Uh huh.
“THE COURT: But if you came upon some facts yourself—
“THE WITNESS: Yes, sir.
“THE COURT: And acquired some information and have some information and have some personal judgment about it, that-is the things we are dealing with as far as you are concerned.
“THE WITNESS : Yes, sir.
*268 “Q (BY MR. ACKER:) Would you tell the jury, if you recall what the number of square feet in the total piece of property was?
“A I didn’t bring those notes. I just brought the — the final figures on — on the lot and on the building that we had — that I had compiled.
“Q All right. Well, what — what figures did you — did you arrive at ?
“THE COURT: Well, now, I am going to sustain on that and exclude it and I want to say this: I have said this to the witness two or three times. The law says to you and me that if we are going to try to see what they did down there and do the same thing, then we are just wasting our time. The law says we ourselves shall try this case anew. Anybody got a witness, bring him. We will hear what he has got to say. If you have got any data to give us, give it to us right here. We will look at it, come to our own judgment .about it, and that is what we are doing.
“Now, as far as some — some board, what they did, we are not interested in that. If this gentleman was a member of that group, that is all right, but he comes here an individual. What does he himself know? What is his own 'judgment? What does he say about this, that, and the other? That is the thing we are trying to take, and I don’t want us to get mixed up in what we are doing. The law says that is the way we should do it, and that is the way we are going to do it.”

After a colloquy about a voir dire examination of the witness by the State’s attorney on whether or not certain figures and notes were those of the witness, the court further stated:

“THE COURT: I am familiar with what the question is, gentlemen. Let’s don’t have any hullabaloo about it. I am trying to do some thinking as I go along.
“MR. ACKER: May I approach the bench ?
“THE COURT: I — I think I should caution the witness again. I don’t personally know, incidentally, what the three as a group did. That may sound strange, but that is a fact, because that isn’t any of my business, and I am not concerned with that. We are trying it anew. Whatever he may know about it or whatever inquiry he made about it being in the real estate business for these years, he may testify about. And then from that, if he himself personally has got a judgment, he may give us that judgment, and you can put it with the other testimony and come to your own judgment in the end about where the truth is.
“Now, I think that ought to make it clear. I don’t see why we should be running into any difficulty. If you want to go ahead with your question- — ■
“Q (BY MR. ACKER:) Do you have a judgment as of what the fair market value of Tract No. 173, land and all improvements, including equipment, was as of August 11, 1973 — ’69?
“A Yes, sir.
“Q What is that opinion ?
“A Is $136,700.”
Thereafter the following transpired in the course- of the direct examination of this witness:
“Q If you would, break it [his valuation] down the way you break it down in your judgment.
“A The land valuation — I mean the building valuation was $83,200.
“THE COURT: Now, you see the way he answers?
“MR. LANDRUM: Yes, sir.
“THE COURT: He says the building valuation was — I-—I believe there we are probably doing the very thing that the law says we must not do. I recess the Court until 1:30.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
302 So. 2d 83, 293 Ala. 265, 1974 Ala. LEXIS 959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ritchey-v-state-ala-1974.