State of Texas v. A. R. Enochs and Wife, Erlene Patton Enochs

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 15, 1993
Docket03-93-00004-CV
StatusPublished

This text of State of Texas v. A. R. Enochs and Wife, Erlene Patton Enochs (State of Texas v. A. R. Enochs and Wife, Erlene Patton Enochs) 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
State of Texas v. A. R. Enochs and Wife, Erlene Patton Enochs, (Tex. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS,


AT AUSTIN




NO. 3-93-004-CV


STATE OF TEXAS,


APPELLANT



vs.


A. R. ENOCHS AND WIFE, ERLENE PATTON ENOCHS,
AND SOUTHLAND CORPORATION,


APPELLEES





FROM THE PROBATE COURT NO. 1 OF TRAVIS COUNTY


NO. 2055, HONORABLE GUY HERMAN, JUDGE PRESIDING




This is a statutory condemnation action in which the State, as condemnor, acquired by "whole taking" the title to two legally subdivided lots located on U.S. 290 West, owned by the Enochs. The westernmost lot was improved with a 7-Eleven convenience store and fueling facilities subject to a long-term lease with Southland Corporation. The easternmost lot was effectively vacant and available for development, subject to environmental restrictions. Following a jury trial and damage award, the trial court rendered judgment. The State appeals alleging nine points of error. We will affirm the judgment of the trial court.



FAILURE TO EXCLUDE WITNESSES


In its first point of error, the State contends that the trial court erred:



a. By allowing Enochs to call and compel the testimony of William R. Carson, who, though designated an expert by the State had never been designated by Enochs as an expert witness in response to a proper request.



b. By allowing Enochs to call and present testimony of Mike Irvin over the objection of the State that he was not and had not been designated as either an expert witness or a witness having knowledge of facts pursuant to a proper request.



c. By allowing Enochs to present expert value testimony which was changed within 30 days of trial. The changed testimony was evidenced by a supplemental response to interrogatories filed within 30 days of trial without obtaining leave of court to file same and without having a hearing to determine good cause for late supplementation.



During the pre-trial discovery of this cause both the Enochs and Southland were active participants on behalf of the condemnees. Although the Enochs owned the land, Southland had a long-term ground lease on part of the property, the value of which would have to be determined and allocated to Southland in the final condemnation damage award.

The record reveals that the Enochs and the State exchanged normal discovery, including written interrogatories and requests for production. However, the State sought only very limited discovery from Southland. In response to a request for production, and subject to a confidentiality agreement, Southland provided the other parties with sales figures for the store to be acquired, as well as figures for a number of other stores in the Austin area. It also provided the oral deposition of its designated corporate representative, Mike Irvin, by informal agreement with the State's lawyer. The State never sent Southland any written interrogatories or took any other action to discover the identity of Southland's witnesses or to restrict the testimony of any witness which Southland might call.

Until the day of the trial, Southland and the Enochs had adverse interests in the allocation dispute regarding the damage proceeds of this condemnation action. The Enochs sent written interrogatories to Southland which were due to be answered on the date of trial. On that date, the allocation disagreement between the Enochs and Southland was settled and the Enochs withdrew the discovery requests, with permission of the Court.

The allocation agreement between the Enochs and Southland was announced on the record, in open court in the presence of all parties, as a Rule 11 stipulation of counsel. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 11. As a part of this Rule 11 agreement announced in open court in the presence of all parties, Southland specifically authorized John McClish, the Enochs' attorney, to represent it through the trial and to call witnesses on its behalf. The State did not object to this stipulation, and it was accepted by the trial judge when he excused Southland's previous lawyer from participation in the case.

During the trial when the witnesses were called, the State voiced its objections, which were overruled by the trial court. The State contends that the trial court erred in disregarding the mandatory exclusionary rule contained in Rule 166b(6) and Rule 215(5) of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. We disagree.

The record clearly reveals that no formal discovery was undertaken by the State to identify the witnesses who might be called on behalf of Southland. Contrary to the State's allegations, Southland was still very much a party during the trial of the case. Although it had resolved its differences with the Enochs, Southland's valuable leasehold interest was still being taken by the State as condemnor. By virtue of the parties' Rule 11 stipulation, Southland was represented during the trial by John McClish and by its corporate representative, Mike Irvin. Southland had a due-process right to call witnesses in its behalf, unlimited by any duty to make or supplement discovery. Although the agreement between Southland and the Enochs had extinguished the adversity between them, it had certainly not obliterated their separate identities. Because the State failed to send written interrogatories or other formal discovery requests to impose discovery duties on Southland, the attorney representing Southland was free to call any competent witness and elicit any relevant testimony. The admission or exclusion of witness testimony during a trial is left to the sound discretion of the trial judge. The trial court's action in allowing one of the condemnees, Southland, to call the challenged witnesses was not an abuse of discretion. The State's first point of error is overruled.



DAMAGE OFFSET -- PREJUDGMENT INTEREST


Following the State's eminent domain proceeding, the special commissioners awarded the condemnees $935,000. The award of the special commissioners was filed with the trial judge on November 14, 1991; it allocated 74% of the amount awarded to the Enochs and 26% to the Southland Corporation. Objections to the award were timely filed by all parties. On January 15, 1992, the State deposited the amount of the special commissioners' award of $935,000 into the registry of the court.

On July 9, 1992, the State filed its First Amended Original Petition. In Paragraph IV, the State alleged that although it became entitled to possession as of January 15, 1992, the condemnees actually had the continued use and occupancy from that date until the present date. The State then alleged it was entitled to an offset for the amount of the value of the use of the property by the condemnees.

Prior to trial, the condemnees specially excepted to the State's claim for the reasonable value for the use of the property, and the said special exception was sustained by the trial court. An order was entered severing the State's claim for the reasonable rental value of the property.

In the final judgment, the trial court awarded the condemnees prejudgment interest for the difference between the deposited special commissioners' award and the final amount awarded by the jury.

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State of Texas v. A. R. Enochs and Wife, Erlene Patton Enochs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-texas-v-a-r-enochs-and-wife-erlene-patton-texapp-1993.