Trinity River Authority of Texas v. Harris

439 S.W.2d 670
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 13, 1969
Docket7028
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 439 S.W.2d 670 (Trinity River Authority of Texas v. Harris) 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
Trinity River Authority of Texas v. Harris, 439 S.W.2d 670 (Tex. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

PARKER, Chief Justice.

This is an eminent domain case with trial to jury. In answer to the only issue submitted to the jury, it found the reasonable market value of the 764.14 acres of land condemned, exclusive of the minerals, when it was condemned by the Trinity River Authority of Texas on November 21, 1967 for reservoir purposes, was $365.00 per acre. On that basis, judgment was rendered for the defendants, John W. Harris and Florence H. Meyers, that they recover from the plaintiff, Trinity River Authority of Texas, the sum of $278,911.00, plus the additional sum of $7,641.40, in full payment for the damages or decrease in market value of the minerals owned by these defendants in accordance with the stipulation between the parties. The total of these two stated sums is $286,552.40.

Trinity River Authority has appealed and for convenience will be called “T.R. A.”. The defendants in the trial court will be called “defendants”, or the two defendants will be called “Harris”.

Appellant has five points of error. Appellant has briefed the first three points of error together. This court will consider them in the same manner. They are:

“I.
“There is no evidence of probative value to support the jury finding to Special Issure [sic] No. 1.
“II.
“There is insufficient evidence to support the jury finding to Special Issue No. 1.
“III.
“The trial court erred in permitting Ap-pellees, over the objection of the Appellant, to introduce evidence of sales of various properties which were not comparable with the subject property.”

The contentions of appellant in this case are very similar to the -eontentions of ap *671 pellant in our No. 7010, Trinity River Authority of Texas v. Chain et al, 437 S.W.2d 887, and our No. 7018, Trinity River Authority of Texas v. Hutchings, Trustee, 437 S.W.2d 383. In all three suits, the contention of T.R.A. is that the highest and best use of the land being taken was for agricultural or grazing purposes with its witnesses seeking comparable sales on that basis. The contention of appellees in these suits is that the land taken had a highest and best use as property adaptable for rural subdivision purposes.

THE EVIDENCE: The residents of the City of Houston are exerting an appreciable influence on land value within 100 miles of Houston. Houston is one of the fastest growing cities in the country. Land around Houston is flat. Many people of Houston with good jobs and money want to buy a tract of land for a homesite, a retreat or for a second home, in a rolling country with streams of water and wooded land. Some commute to their business or employment in Houston. They have the money to buy. There is a strong and growing market for such lands. Likewise, the market price has greatly increased for several years. State highways from Houston go in a northerly direction to Conroe and Livingston, and are intersected by highways running east and west. Taxes are lower in the area of Conroe, Livingston, Coldspring and Huntsville than in Harris County. Demand is stronger than the supply for such lands for the reason that most of the land is owned by the National Forest, the paper companies, or lumber companies, and not available for market. Comparable sales are not abundant. Generally, the price of lands decreases with the distance from Houston. Scarcity of land in Harris County, coupled with high prices, force a potential buyer to go inland. Availability of lands is shrinking, for some one million acres of land is being taken for reservoirs from Lake Texhoma to Houston.

The land condemned is in this area described by appellees’ witness, Clark, as being in rolling hills, except when crossing the Trinity River bottom, where some six miles are flat; but the rest of the land is beautiful rolling country with attractive timber with a few farms, but most of the land is wooded from Huntsville to Livingston, particularly beautiful during the springtime when the dog woods are in bloom.

The subject property consists of 764.14 acres of land in the northwestern portion of San Jacinto County, Texas, located on U.S. Highway 190, and is between Point Blank and Livingston, Texas, and west of the Trinity River. Livington is to the east about sixteen or seventeen miles; Cold-spring is about seventeen miles southeast of the subject property; and Point Blank is about four miles west thereof. U.S. Highway 190, which is well-traveled, crosses the subject property, leaving perhaps sixty or seventy acres south of the road and approximately seven hundred acres north of the road. The subject property has 3,200 feet frontage on U.S. Highway 190. A county road leads from U.S. Highway 190 north through the subject property. It is a well-maintained, all-weather road. The tract of land is relatively flat, with the elevation running from about 105 to 115 feet, and it is drained by Mill Creek. There is no indication that the tract of land is subject to over-flow from the river, although that portion lying south of the road did not drain as well as the area north of the road. Rain water had a tendency to stand for several days in places following a heavy rain. Eighty per cent of the tract had river bottom hardwood, consisting of oak, gum, sycamore and other common river-bottom species. The timber was sold in 1960, and was cut and removed in 1965; however, the tract has second-growth pine and hardwood timber, mostly hardwood. There is a small lake in the upper portion of the tract, and also another one just north of U.S. Highway 190. There is an ever-flowing artesian well near the lake, supplying a tenant with running water. Except for the fences, the improvements on the property *672 are of no consequence. Adjoining is a National Forest. No shacks are near to detract from the attractiveness of the land.

One hundred to one hundred fifty acres of the property was in cultivation and had been for the past twenty years. It is seventy-nine miles from downtown Houston by way of U.S. 59 and Liberty Hill Road. Many photographs of scenes on the subject property are in evidence. They show Highway 190, the county road, the artesian well and attractive timber on each side of the highway and road. An aerial map shows trees for rural subdivision purposes — magnolia, oak, and other hardwoods and some pine. Photographs of attractive-appearing lakes and streams are in evidence.

The expert witnesses placed on the stand by Harris were Stuart F. Clark and J. W. Dinkins. Their qualifications were not challenged. Each used the market data approach, considering that the highest and best use of the subject property was for residential subdivisions, investments and some commercial sites along the roads. The expert witnesses for T.R.A. were T. A. Cauthen and Will S. Holmes. Cauthen considered the highest and best use for the subject property was farming and ranching; Holmes considered the highest and best use for said land was to grow timber and for use as pasture land. The opinions as to the market value of the surface of the subject property by the witnesses are tabulated below:

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439 S.W.2d 887 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1969)

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439 S.W.2d 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trinity-river-authority-of-texas-v-harris-texapp-1969.