State Highway Commission v. Compton

490 P.2d 743, 9 Or. App. 264, 1971 Ore. App. LEXIS 493
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedNovember 11, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 490 P.2d 743 (State Highway Commission v. Compton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Highway Commission v. Compton, 490 P.2d 743, 9 Or. App. 264, 1971 Ore. App. LEXIS 493 (Or. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinions

FORT, J.

Defendants appeal from a judgment determining the value of their land taken by the plaintiff in this condemnation action, asserting several errors. The first relates to the rejection by the court of evidence concerning the fair rental income obtainable for the property.

The Compton property is located on the east side of McLoughlin Boulevard, a major arterial in Portland, Oregon. The block on which the property is located contains 12 lots and lies immediately south [267]*267of the Ross Island Bridge and close to the downtown area. Before the taking, defendants owned nine of these lots, six of them comprising a block-long frontage on McLoughlin Boulevard of 312 feet and the remaining three adjoining but facing another street, with a total combined area in the nine lots in excess of 40,000 square feet. The acquisition leaves defendants with a remainder of the three lots facing the interior street. The six lots actually taken aggregate 26,772 square feet.

The property is visible from a number of places in the city. At the time of trial it was zoned for residential purposes, but both parties agreed that it was reasonably probable that a zoning change could be obtained. Several experts testified for both parties concerning the nature of the zoning change deemed to be a reasonable probability. A basic theory of defendants was that its highest and best use was as a motel site, and that rezoning the property to permit that use was a reasonable probability within the immediately foreseeable future. Expert opinion to that effect was offered and received. The state contended that rezoning for that particular use was not a reasonable probability within the immediately foreseeable future. Expert opinion supported both positions.

An expert witness was called by defendants. Mr. Rice, a certified public accountant working for an international accounting firm specializing in motel properties, had done extensive work for hotel and motel chains concerning possible locations for leasing arrangements, including studies to determine the feasibility of possible hotel and motel operations. He testified the property here would be a good motel site, and could probably be leased to a chain motel organization. This was substantiated by detañed evidence.

[268]*268Defendants sought to elicit from Mr. Rice testimony as to the minimum annual rental for the Compton property based upon a standard land lease arrangement typically made by a chain motel organization for suitable pieces of property. Mr. Rice testified that for such organizations there is a standard approach to a land lease. He explained what this standard approach involved and that there was nothing about the Compton property that would make it unsuitable for use by a motel chain. He stated the standard rental agreement does not depend on probable profitability of an imaginary motel on the property, but that it is simply the net amount paid to the landowner by a motel chain for the raw land exclusive of any expenses, and it is paid by the motel chain to the owner of the property whether or not a motel is erected on the premises.

During his direct examination Mr. Rice was asked the following question:

“Q Assuming again the Compton property which has forty thousand plus square feet in it, and we’re talking about March of 1969, do you have an opinion as to what the minimum annual rent would be, the net net net rent, under that type of lease for this property?”

The court, following an objection, refused to allow the witness to answer. This refusal constitutes the principal assignment of error. Id chambers the defendants made an offer of proof. Just before the witness testified, defendants’ counsel again said to the court:

“We are talking about here 40,000 square feet plus. Mr. Rice would testify from that how much land use. Something pretty obvious. You could have at least a hundred rooms in that much space. [269]*269Any chain motel would know this, like yon know you have enough room to put up a hotel or house on so many square feet. * * *”

The essence of the offer of proof was:

“[Defense counsel:] Q What is the minimum rental in your opinion?
“A I think in my opinion in bargaining between a competent landowner and between a chain motel that the minimum would probably be, the minimum would be two thousand a month or more.”

It is obvious that the witness in stating that figure was referring to the entire Compton tract of 40,000-plus square feet, not the 26,772 actually taken.

It has been the defendants’ theory to establish by other competent evidence, utilizing the capitalization of income method,

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Related

State Highway Commission v. Compton
507 P.2d 13 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1973)

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Bluebook (online)
490 P.2d 743, 9 Or. App. 264, 1971 Ore. App. LEXIS 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-highway-commission-v-compton-orctapp-1971.