Urban Renewal Ag. of City of San Marcos v. Bethke

420 S.W.2d 803, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 2327
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 1, 1967
Docket11541
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 420 S.W.2d 803 (Urban Renewal Ag. of City of San Marcos v. Bethke) 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
Urban Renewal Ag. of City of San Marcos v. Bethke, 420 S.W.2d 803, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 2327 (Tex. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

PHILLIPS, Chief Justice.

This is a condemnation case arising in the City of San Marcos. Appellant, and plaintiff below, is a governmental agency with the power of eminent domain 1 over real property and the question of the proper award in damages for property taken from appellees under this power is the sole question before this Court. The property sought was for the expansion of Southwest Texas State College. Trial was before a jury in the County Court of Hays County and the jury found the market value of appellees’ property to be $75,000. Judgment was entered on the verdict and from that judgment this appeal was taken.

We affirm.

Appellees’ property consists of land and a building situated on the northeast corner of Colorado Street and North Lyndon B. Johnson Drive, both being paved streets in the City of San Marcos. The property fronts approximately 80 feet on Colorado Street and 106 feet on Lyndon B. Johnson Drive with a square footage of approximately 8,445 feet. The service station on the property rents for $250 per month, the cleaning shop for $60 per month, the cafe for $50 per month and the apartment for $65 per month or for a total monthly rental of $425. This property is located in a part of the city that is well located from a business standpoint being some two blocks due north of the courthouse square lying between this square and the College. There is no dispute between the parties that the principal value factor in appellees’ property is its location.

*805 Appellant is before this Court on eighteen formal points of error, however it states in its brief that these points can be grouped into several main categories.

The first of these categories 2 is the refusal of the trial court to admit into evidence the zoning ordinance of the City of San Marcos effective on the date of taking or to permit appellant to examine or cross examine witnesses concerning its provisions applicable to appellees’ property thus permitting the jury, in determining market value, to consider and speculate on uses of the property to which it was not reasonably adaptable. Appellant contends that appel-lees’ valuation witnesses based their opinions of market value upon uses which the off-street parking requirements of the zoning ordinance, of which they were admittedly unaware, would either severely restrict or prohibit.

We overrule these points.

Appellant’s position here is that a zoning ordinance was passed prior to the date of the taking of appellees’ property. That this ordinance had an off-street parking requirement which provided that if buildings not located in the central business district are altered or demolished, off-street parking must be provided on the basis of one space for each employee and one space for each three hundred feet of building space. That this off-street parking requirement would apply to the subject property if the buildings were altered or demolished. That there was value testimony based on making structural changes and alterations to the building.

Appellant’s counsel began questioning witnesses concerning the ordinance and as far as this Court can ascertain the ordinance itself was never offered into evidence or received into evidence. Appellant contends that it was offered, however the record does not bear this out although there is evidence that appellant did intend to offer the ordinance, referred to it on numerous occasions and in fact cross examined witnesses concerning the ordinance. Appellant correctly states that the record does not reflect any ruling of the trial court on the admission of the ordinance and the trial court rejected appellant’s motion to change the statement of facts to show a ruling excluding the ordinance and certified the statement of facts as filed in this Court. Consequently, we can only assume that the trial court had nothing on which to rule concerning the admissibility of the ordinance.

Appellees vigorously objected to the admission of this ordinance on the ground that, since it was enacted as a part of the plan of the City of San Marcos to condemn appellees’ land and change its use, it would be unfair and improper to admit it for the purpose of diminishing the value of the land taken.

*806 Since the ordinance was not in evidence, it was not improper for the court to have excluded testimony concerning the contents of the ordinance and its relation to the property in question.

With respect to the court’s sustaining of the objection to appellant’s question of a witness as to whether or not there is any off-street parking requirement in San Marcos, no bill of exception was taken to the ruling, consequently nothing tangible has been properly presented for determination by this Court. Johnson v. Poe, 210 S.W.2d 264 (Tex.Civ.App. Galveston 1948, writ ref’d, n. r. e.).

It should be pointed out here that counsel through his questioning of the witnesses left little doubt in the minds of the jury that there was in fact an off-street parking ordinance in San Marcos. The trial court correctly sustained objections to questions intending to secure from the witness his construction of the ordinance and his opinion as to its effect. These are questions of law or of mixed law and fact which the trial court properly excluded. 2 McCormick and Ray, Texas Law of Evidence, Sec. 1423, p. 263; Dallas Railway & Terminal Company v. Gossett, 156 Tex. 252, 294 S.W.2d 377, (1956).

With respect to the court’s refusal to allow the witness Moon to testify as to whether the ordinance had caused a certain sale to fall through, we hold that this ruling was correct on the ground that it related to an unaccepted offer of sale. It is well settled that unaccepted offers of sale are inadmissible. See Hanks v. Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Ry. Co., 159 Tex. 311, 320 S.W.2d 333, (1959).

Appellant’s second main category of errors 3 is that of the trial court in permitting,. appellees to introduce a deed which recited a consideration of $85,000 to the Mauldin Plymouth Agency property diagonally southwest across Lyndon B. Johnson Drive from appellees’ property without any evidence of comparability and to allow appellees’ counsel in jury argument to hammer on it, together with the court’s refusal to grant a mistrial after appellees’ counsel asked appellant’s valuation witness if he had' not appraised the Kercheville Pontiac property directly west across Lyndon B. Johnson Drive from appellees’ property for $120,000 without subsequent proof of same thus encircling appellees’ property with high dollar sums totally unrelated to the market value of appellees’ property. Since appellees’ evaluation witnesses did not base their opinions on comparable sales, the above innuendoes were particularly prejudicial since the jury could hardly be expected to exclude from consideration what the court admitted into evidence. It is the position of appellant *807

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420 S.W.2d 803, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 2327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/urban-renewal-ag-of-city-of-san-marcos-v-bethke-texapp-1967.