State v. Childress

331 S.W.2d 230, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 1767
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 4, 1959
Docket3502
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 331 S.W.2d 230 (State v. Childress) 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 v. Childress, 331 S.W.2d 230, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 1767 (Tex. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

COLLINGS, Justice.

This is a condemnation suit. The State of Texas, as plaintiff, condemned 21.664 acres of land belonging to Robert Baxter Childress and wife, Mary Page Childress, for right of way purposes for Interstate Highway number 20, and also three small *232 tracts as drainage easements. Both parties appealed from the award of the commissioners which was in the sum of $14,615. Upon a trial in the County Court at Law, defendants admitted plaintiff’s right to condemn the land and assumed the burden of proof. The judgment based upon answers of the jury to special issues was for the sum of $39,135.75. The condemned land was out of a 99.6-acre tract, the larger portion of which was located in the corporate limits of the City of Abilene, and in the northwest part thereof. The land was rectangular in shape except for a panhandle extending in a westerly direction from the northwest corner. The right of way as platted entered the Childress property at its northeast corner and ran diagonally in a southwesterly direction, leaving the property near the midpoint of its westerly line. The main portion of the 99.6-acre tract, which was slightly longer from east to west than it was from north" to south, was divided by the right of way in such manner that there remained 40 acres on the north side of the right of way and 37 acres on the south. The north 40 acres was further divided by a drainage channel easement containing 3.349 acres. The other two drainage easements were out of the extreme northeast corner of the property, one containing 1.021 acres out of the north 40 acres and the other containing .762 acres out of the south 37 acres.

Numerous points complain of argument to the jury by appellees’ attorney. No objection was made at the time to some of the argument. Objection was made and sustained concerning most other argument. We have examined the arguments complained of and the record pertinent thereto, and find no reversible error. Appellant’s point number 11 complains of the cumulative effect of all of the instances of claimed prejudicial argument. We have considered this point and find no reversible error. All of the argument of appellees’ attorney to the jury was prefaced by his stated intention to present to the jury in his own words the position of the State on various issues and phrases of the case and to demonstrate how improper and unfounded such positions were.

Appellees’ attorney in his argument to the jury state, in effect, that the State was contending the enhanced value of ap-pellees’ remaining land was “Just about enough to offset what we will pay you for what we will take.” Appellant’s contention that this was a “positive misstatement of the law — telling the jury, in effect, that a finding of enhancement to the remainder would constitute an offset against what the State would otherwise have to pay for the property taken” is not well taken. The effect of the argument was not to advise the jury about the law as appellant contends, but to state appellees’ understanding of the state’s position. There was testimony by some of the State’s witnesses which fully justified the Inference, or conclusion, indulged by appellees’ attorney. An attorney, in arguing to the jury is entitled to draw reasonable conclusions and inferences from the evidence in the record.

It was shown that appellees’ land with a perimeter of 10,000 feet, had access to the outside world by only a little over 500 feet of a gravel public road. A major contention by the State concerning enhancement was the furnishing to appellees of an unrestricted right to get on and off of paved access roads which extended across the entire length of the property. It was urged as a vital part of the State’s case that access to these frontage roads could not be denied and that same would always be available for the use of the property and the owners thereof. Appellees’ attorney in stating his version of the State’s position in reference to this matter, stated to the jury: “We might give you authority to build across and get on the access road.” This is the argument complained of in appellant’s point number 3. Appellant urges that such argument casts “a doubt on the rights of the property owners to use at will the frontage or access roads to be built by the State”. The point is not well taken. *233 In the first place the argument was not objected to at the time, and the error, if any, was not of such highly prejudicial and inflammatory nature that it could not have been cured by an instruction from the court. In the next place, there was some basis for the argument in the evidence. An engineer for the State testified on cross-examination that the highway was a controlled access highway and that a property owner could enter upon the service road from any point on the Childress property “after they got a permit from the State of Texas.” The engineer also testified that the securing of a permit would be “no chore”. There was other testimony by engineers of the State that one desiring to “build a structure that comes on to a right of way” would have to get a permit. Obviously there was some restraint or regulation of the right of an abutting land owner to enter upon the road. The argument of appellees’ attorney was therefore not without basis in the record and he was entitled to discuss with the jury the existence and extent of the restraint and regulation. The argument under these circumstances, particularly in the absence of an objection at the time, does not constitute reversible error.

Appellant’s point number 4 complains of the following argument to the jury in which appellees’ attorney gave his version of a contention urged by the State:

“Well, we feel that you can really clean up by dividing what you have left into small tracts and selling it to people who want to raise chickens and horses if it just weren’t for the fact that they can’t raise chickens and horses out there. Now, we want to do it our way.”

Appellant objected to the above argument at the time on the ground that it was not supported by evidence and was contrary to the evidence. A witness for the State had testified that the highest and best use for the Childress land was for suburban acreage where people could run cattle and chickens and get away from thickly populated areas. The evidence shows that the major portion of the Childress land was inside the Abilene city limits. On cross-examination the witness admitted that cattle and chickens could not be kept in the city, but appellant’s objection to this testimony on the ground that it was hearsay because no ordinance of the city was introduced was sustained and the jury was instructed not to consider the testimony. The error, if any, in the argument complained of was harmless. The argument was not of a highly prejudicial and inflammatory nature. It was in answer to appellant’s contention that the highest and best use of the land was suburban acreage where homeowners could keep chickens and livestock. Obviously appellant’s contention assumed that it would be permissible to keep such chickens and livestock, although there was no evidence to justify such an assumption. Under the circumstances, appellees’ argument assuming to the contrary was not reversible error. Actually it is common knowledge that chickens and livestock are generally not permitted to be kept within the corporate limits of most cities.

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Bluebook (online)
331 S.W.2d 230, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 1767, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-childress-texapp-1959.