Brookhaven Associates appeals from the judgment in a condemnation action after a jury found that $775,000 was just and adequate compensation for the property that DeKalb County took for the construction of a MARTA station. Brookhaven contends that the trial court erred in refusing to admit two pieces of evidence at trial. We disagree and affirm the judgment.
1. At trial, MARTA called its appraiser of the condemned property to testify about his findings. He had concluded that as of March 31, 1983, the date of condemnation, the fair market value of the property was $4.65 per square foot. Brookhaven cross-examined him about that valuation and how it compared with an appraisal report he had prepared in 1974, in which he valued the parcel at $6.50 per square foot, and an appraisal he made in 1982, when he valued the property at $2.00 per square foot. The appraiser admitted to all of the valuations as stated, and did not say that those figures were inaccurate for those dates. When Brookhaven sought to have the actual 1974 appraisal report admitted into evidence so that it could be sent out with the jury in its deliberations, appellees objected, and the trial court ruled in appellees’ favor. Brookhaven cites this ruling as error, arguing that the report was a prior inconsistent statement and that under
Gibbons v. State,
Brookhaven mistakenly characterizes the 1974 report as a prior inconsistent statement. A prior inconsistent statement is one that is contradicted by a later statement on the same issue. See, e.g.,
Lockhart v. State,
2. Brookhaven also claims that the trial court erroneously excluded certain testimony concerning what MARTA representatives told Brookhaven’s representatives about the possibility of preserving Brookhaven’s air rights over the condemned property. The contention is an inaccurate one. The testimony was discussed at the pre-trial conference, and when Brookhaven’s counsel specifically asked the trial court whether his client would be allowed to testify about the matter, the trial court responded that he would not, because the issue involved, whether MARTA had acted in good faith, had been decided in previous litigation. See
Concept Capital Corp. v. DeKalb County,
Judgment affirmed.
