State v. Oak Hill Joint Venture

815 S.W.2d 827, 1991 Tex. App. LEXIS 2150, 1991 WL 164734
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 28, 1991
DocketNo. 3-90-115-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 815 S.W.2d 827 (State v. Oak Hill Joint Venture) 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. Oak Hill Joint Venture, 815 S.W.2d 827, 1991 Tex. App. LEXIS 2150, 1991 WL 164734 (Tex. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

JONES, Justice.

This is a condemnation case. Appellants, State of Texas and City of Austin (“con-demnors”), instituted eminent domain proceedings in the Probate Court of Travis County to condemn a portion of a tract owned by appellees, Oak Hill Joint Venture, NCNB Texas National Bank (formerly known as Interfirst Bank Austin, N.A.), and Steve Scott, Trustee (collectively, “Oak Hill”). Oak Hill stipulated that condemn-ors had the right to condemn the property, so the only issues to be decided were the amounts to award Oak Hill for the value of the part taken and for severance damages to the remainder. The case was tried to a jury after Oak Hill objected to the award of the special commissioners. The trial court rendered judgment awarding title to the condemned tract to the condemnors and, in accordance with the verdict, awarding Oak Hill $2,183,444.60: $1,734,516.82 as compensation for the part taken and $450,-315.78 for severance damages to the remainder. Condemnors appeal from the judgment, complaining that, among other things, the trial court erred in refusing to admit evidence that Oak Hill actually owned a remainder larger than that “designated.” We will affirm the judgment of the trial court in part and reverse and remand in part.

THE DISPUTE

When condemnors filed their original petition for condemnation, Oak Hill owned a 16.025-acre tract of land in Travis County abutting U.S. Highway 290. The two-thirds of the tract closest to the highway was zoned for commercial use. The remaining third was zoned for multi-family residential use. Condemnors proposed to take a 5.015-acre strip from the length of the tract abutting the highway for expansion of Highway 290. The taking would, therefore, leave Oak Hill all of the residential-use property and slightly more than half of the commercial-use property.

Neither party contests the award of compensation for the part taken; the parties’ dispute revolves, instead, around the amount awarded as damages to the remainder. For purposes of determining severance damages, Oak Hill claims a right to designate any portion of the remaining tract as the “remainder” and to waive damages to the part not designated. More importantly, Oak Hill claims a corresponding right to exclude from evidence all proof of its ownership of property abutting the “designated remainder” (i.e., of the existence of the non-designated portion of its remaining property). Condemnors, on the other hand, argue that such an exclusion is proper only where the “non-designated remainder” is not suitable for or adaptable to the use to which the designated remainder and the part taken were put or planned to be put.

The remainder designated by Oak Hill did not constitute all of the remaining part of its commercial-use property. Rather, Oak Hill designated as its remainder only a strip of land approximately 100 feet deep immediately behind the part taken. The strip contained 1.485 acres out of Oak Hill’s actual remaining property of 11.01 [829]*829acres. At trial, the trial court refused to admit evidence of the existence of the non-designated remainder. The case was tried as if Oak Hill owned only the part taken and a 100-foot-deep strip of land behind it.

PRESERVATION OP ERROR

We must first consider whether con-demnors have preserved their complaint for our review. They complain that the trial court erred by refusing to admit evidence of the true size of the remainder or, more precisely, of Oak Hill’s ownership of the “tract” lying behind the designated remainder. Oak Hill urges us not to reach the merits of condemnors’ argument, but to conclude, instead, that condemnors failed to preserve that complaint for our review.

The trial court heard the parties’ arguments concerning their motions in limine before trial began. Although the record is unclear, it appears the trial court granted Oak Hill’s motion as to evidence that the actual' remainder was larger than Oak Hill’s designated remainder. Oak Hill claims that, after losing the battle on the motion in limine, condemnors offered no evidence of the remainder’s actual size at trial. Oak Hill argues, therefore, that con-demnors have failed to make a record which shows that the trial court excluded any evidence. We disagree.

The record shows that condemnors did offer evidence of the true size of the remainder at trial. Condemnors’ Exhibit 4 was a map of the highway project area. In its original condition, Exhibit No. 4 identified Oak Hill as the owner of the adjacent property behind the designated remainder. Condemnors’ questioning of their expert witness about the map was interrupted by a discussion at the bench that was not recorded. Exhibit 4, with modifications described below, was later offered and admitted into evidence.

The record does not, at that juncture, indicate what took place during the off-the-record discussion at the bench. However, after the witness had been finally excused, counsel for all parties resumed their discussion about the exhibit on the record while the jury was not present. Certain portions of that on-the-record discussion clarify what had taken place during the earlier off-the-record discussion:

THE COURT: Yes, folks?
MR. ADLER (Counsel for Oak Hill): Your Honor, we had a bench conference where I objected to the admission of Exhibit No. 4 for the reason that the exhibit originally had shown, ... not only the ownership of the tract, but the size of the taking and the approximate size of the remainder. The Court deleted — actually physically cut out the reference to the subject property and the size of its remainder which, of course, we know is larger than the subject property in this case. But the other properties, and they’re all numbered sequentially, the other properties continue to have the acreage and the take, and the remainder, thus it’s going to be — I think the jurors, when something’s cut out of an exhibit, immediately look to see what it is that’s cut out. And my experience is that’s the first thing they do when they get back to the jury room. And in this case, there’s going to be no question but what information was deleted from that given the fact that—
THE COURT: Where are you talking about?
MR. ADLER: At the bottom.
THE COURT: Where it says, “5. Regency Park Joint Venture, 129, Oak Hill mini warehouse deed, and 130”?
MR. ADLER: Yes. And I believe on the top of the exhibit also, top left-hand corner.
* * * * * *
MR. ADLER: I would ask that they be cut out before we show it to the jury.
THE COURT: Sure.

A photograph of Condemnors’ Exhibit No. 4 is included in the record. It shows three excisions from the exhibit.

A party seeking appellate review of an asserted error must have properly preserved its complaint in the trial court. Consequently, the Rules of Appellate Procedure direct litigants to make a “timely [830]*830request, objection or motion, stating the specific grounds for the ruling [it] desired the court to make if the specific grounds were not apparent from the context.” Tex. R.App.P. 52(a).

The recorded bench conference and the photograph of Condemnors’ Exhibit No. 4 indicate that condemnors offered evidence of the remainder’s true size by tendering an exhibit showing Oak Hill’s ownership of the “tract” behind the designated remainder.

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Bluebook (online)
815 S.W.2d 827, 1991 Tex. App. LEXIS 2150, 1991 WL 164734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-oak-hill-joint-venture-texapp-1991.