Warwick Musical Theatre, Inc. v. State

525 A.2d 905, 1987 R.I. LEXIS 488
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 20, 1987
Docket85-170-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 525 A.2d 905 (Warwick Musical Theatre, Inc. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warwick Musical Theatre, Inc. v. State, 525 A.2d 905, 1987 R.I. LEXIS 488 (R.I. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

SHEA, Justice.

This case involves cross-appeals from a Superior Court judgment following a nonju-ry trial for the assessment of damages resulting from a partial taking by condemnation. We affirm.

Warwick Musical Theatre (the theater) filed a petition against the state for assessment of damages sustained by the theater. The partial taking consisted of a strip of land approximately 40 feet in depth fronting on Quaker Lane in Warwick, Rhode Island, and running the entire length of the theater’s property. The parcel taken consisted of 17,647 square feet of land, improved by asphalt pavement and two fences, fronting on Quaker Lane. In addition, the state took two easements contiguous to both the theater’s remaining land and to each other. One was a permanent easement encompassing 911 square feet to allow for aerial telephone and electrical wiring. The other was a 6,567-squarefoot temporary easement that would allow state personnel access to the theater’s land to restore and improve the theater’s property. The state built a sidewalk in front of the theater and installed a stone retaining wall with ramps to provide for ingress into and egress from the theater property. The theater was paid $74,080, which would be deducted from any award made by the court. *908 The theater and the state each produced one expert witness. Both experts began their appraisal by dividing the property into three theoretical zones measured by their distance from Quaker Lane. The theater’s expert employed a “before and after” valuation method to determine damages to the theater property. The before-and-after calculation determines the difference between the value of the entire tract before the taking and the value of the entire tract after the taking. The difference equals the amount of compensation. 7A Nichols, The Law of Eminent Domain § 12.02 [3] [a] (rev. 3d ed. 1985). The state’s expert determined damages through the use of the “market data” or comparable-sales method. A brief description of each valuation approach will be helpful to our analysis of the case.

The theater’s expert concluded that the area consisting of the first 200 feet in depth by the entire width of the property along the highway was the most valuable and used three comparable sales to determine its value. In this valuation he included his specific evaluation of the improvements located on this first parcel, namely, the fences and the asphalt. The next two zones, the second 200 feet in depth and the remainder of the parcel, were similarly evaluated at lesser amounts per square foot. Adding the values of all three zones he testified that the value of the theater property prior to the taking, excluding buildings, was $611,600.

Next, the theater’s expert assigned a figure to the additional incremental value provided to the entire parcel by the improvements that consisted of a theater-in-the-round with accessory structures and a racquetball-club building. He determined that the improvements were special-purpose buildings and testified that because he could not find comparable sales figures, he had computed replacement cost less depreciation, utilizing the actual construction costs submitted by the theater’s accountant. He consulted Boeckh’s tables to arrive at a measure of inflation or deflation in the construction industry and then determined the value of the building after depreciation. The expert determined that the total value of the land and buildings prior to the taking was $2,216,600.

In determining the value of the land and buildings after the taking, the theater’s expert ignored the temporary easement as insignificant compared to the overall importance of the taking. He combined the permanent easement with the taking of the fee, however, because it is located on the Quaker Lane side of the retaining wall and could not be utilized by the theater for any useful purpose. Each depth zone was devalued carrying lower per-acre values because of the loss of frontage resulting from the taking. He testified that both the theater and the racquetball facility also suffered devaluation because of the loss of frontage. Specifically, the expert noted that prior to the taking the entire frontage was at highway level and could all be utilized but that after the taking, because of the change in grade and the need now to use ramps to enter and exit the property, patrons’ ability to maneuver their vehicles was limited. Vehicles entering the property could not move to the right or left until they moved beyond the ramp. In the case of the theater,. there was no longer room for cars to drive up to the box office without blocking the entrance lane from the ramp. The racquetball building was now high above. the highway because of the change in grade, thereby decreasing its value. In conclusion, the theater’s expert determined that the value of the property after the taking was $1,810,300, amounting to a total loss to the theater of $406,300 as a result of the condemnation.

The state’s expert agreed that the highest and best use of the premises was its present use as a theater and racquetball facility and utilized the “whole value to whole value” method to determine the fair-market value of the parcel actually taken from the entire tract. He further stated that he used the comparable-sales method to determine the value of the land only. He “found no buildings being taken, and therefore, there was no practical application for the cost approach.” For this reason, the state’s expert did not consider severance damages since there was no tak *909 ing of any part of the improvements. His total valuation therefore included only loss to the land itself. He then described his depth analysis of value, utilizing comparable sales, three of which were the same comparable sales as were used by the theater’s expert, and made adjustments to the comparable-sales figures to determine what he considered to be the fair-market value per square foot of the subject land. Like the theater’s expert, the state’s expert found the first 200 feet in depth fronting on Quaker Lane to be prime commercial property, with values per square foot decreasing relative to their distances from Quaker Lane. In his attempt to determine the value of the third-depth zone, furthest removed from the highway, however, the expert used comparables that were, by his own description, “back land.” The compa-rables employed had no frontage, were undeveloped and were each served by a small roadway or right of way. No adjustment was made to these parcels and consequently the rear acreage of the subject property received a valuation of $0.14 per square foot as opposed to the $0.95-per-square-foot valuation reached by the theater’s expert. The state’s expert then determined an average value per square foot of the entire parcel rather than incorporate the different rates assigned to each zone. Adding values for the land comprising the permanent and temporary easement and allowing for the cost of the fences and asphalt contained on the property taken in fee, the state’s expert determined total damages to the theater to be $32,113 notwithstanding the fact that the state had already awarded the sum of $74,080 to the theater as compensation for the taking.

Although the trial justice recognized as acceptable the method of valuation employed by the state’s expert, he did not accept his selection of comparable sales.

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Bluebook (online)
525 A.2d 905, 1987 R.I. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warwick-musical-theatre-inc-v-state-ri-1987.