¶ 1 In this eminent domain case, the trial judge permitted the landowners’
expert
witness to estimate damages based on his opinion that a portion of the original parcel had a different highest and best use from the rest. Thus, the appraiser testified, the property should be treated as two separate units before the taking, with different valuations given to the 5-acre corner, in which the parcel to be taken was located, and the rest of the parcel. The jury verdict was based on that theory. The court of appeals reversed, holding that the trial judge erred in permitting such testimony.
City of Phoenix v. Wilson,
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶ 2 The Wilsons owned a 23.24-acre parcel of vacant land at the southwest corner of 71st Avenue and McDowell Road in Phoenix. The City of Phoenix condemned 1.4 acres at the very corner of the parcel for a fire station. The central issue at trial was the valuation of the corner. At the time the condemnation action was filed, the entire 23.24 acre parcel was zoned RE-43, meaning it was limited to low-density residential development (one house per acre) or use as a school or place of worship. The General Plan for the City of Phoenix, however, classified the area that included the Wilsons’ property as one that should be developed for high-density residential use such as apartments. The Wilsons’ appraiser, Martin White, testified that rezoning was “very likely.” Thus, White testified, portions of the property had different highest and best uses, and the property’s highest value before the taking was as two parcels: a 5-acre lot at the corner, including the 1.4 acres to be taken, valued at $1.25 per square foot and the remaining 18.24 acres, valued at $0.60 per square foot. The 5 acre corner was suitable for a school, place of worship, or other commercial but residentially compatible uses such as professional offices, dependent care facility, hotel, or mini-storage.
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¶ 3 All of
¶ 4 Irvin Wilson, one of the owners, also testified, valuing the entire 23.24-acre parcel at $2,500,000, based on comparable sales in the area. He believed the highest and best use of the property was for high-density housing or commercial use and valued a 10-acre parcel at the corner, which included the 1.4-acre taking, at $3 per square foot and the remaining 13.24-aeres at $2 per square foot. According to his calculations, the 1.4-acre parcel taken was worth $162,180 and the taking caused $371,915 in severance damages to the remainder. 1
¶ 5 However, in the opinion of Dennis Lopez, the City’s appraiser, the highest and best use of the Wilsons’ entire 23.24 acre lot was immediate development for single-family residential use. Lopez testified that, based on his estimate of highest and best use, no separate economic use existed for any portion of the property. Relying on sales he considered comparable, Lopez appraised the value of the Wilsons’ entire 23.24-acre parcel at $0.55 per square foot. He therefore testified that the market value of the 1.4-acre parcel taken was $35,088 and that there were no severance damages. The jury rejected the views of Wilson and Lopez and accepted White’s testimony, awarding $80,000 for the part taken and $99,000 in severance damages. Judgment was entered in those amounts.
¶ 6 The court of appeals reversed, holding that the property taken should have been valued only as a discrete, separate unit or as a part of the entire parcel, but not as part of a hypothetical unit less than the entire parcel.
Wilson,
¶7 The court of appeals conceded that
Buchanan
had not prohibited White’s approach.
Id.
at 460 ¶ 15,
ANALYSIS
¶ 8 The Arizona Constitution mandates payment of just compensation when the state takes land by eminent domain. Ariz. Const, art. 2, § 17. Just compensation is the amount of money necessary to put the property owner in as good a financial position as if the property had not been taken.
Def-
A. Valuation of part taken
¶ 9 The court of appeals erred in concluding that prior Arizona cases limit the
Buchanan
principle to only two methods of evaluation — the part taken as a separate unit or as part of the whole.
Wilson,
¶ 10 The Land Department argued that its parcels should be valued in separate units, thus fixing the land’s value at $80 per acre. The trial judge rejected this approach and adopted the Highway Department’s argument that the value of the 109.43-acre parcel taken must be established pro rata as part of the entire 101,000-acre Babbitt ranch. The judge therefore fixed the value of the land at the $25 per acre figure ascribed to the entire ranch as a single unit. We reversed and remanded, commenting that if the property taken is capable of independent use, it must be valued separately and not as part of the whole.
Id.
at 128-29,
¶ 11 The facts of that case gave us no reason to advert to the situation presented here. We merely held that the trust lands, checkerboarded over a right-of-way crossing sixteen sections, had independent value from the entire 101,000-acre ranch and should be valued separately under A.R.S. § 12-1122(A)(1),
2
which requires that if the parcel taken “consists of different parcels, the value of each parcel [must be determined] separately.” In large part, this was because the federal allotments and state grazing leases were made in 640-acre squares.
Id.
at 129,
¶ 12 In the present case, the court of appeals believed
Arizona State Land Department
implied that “property in a partial-taking case routinely is valued either by the ‘whole parcel’ or the ‘separate unit’ method.”
Wilson,
In partial taking cases, generally the land taken is valued as part of the whole tract and not as if it stood alone. Ordinarily this method of valuation gives the part taken — particularly where it is a narrow strip condemned for highway — -widening purposes — a greater value. The rule protects the condemnee by assuring a just reward, because in many cases the part taken would be useless and valueless if considered alone.
¶ 13 However, the converse is also true: when the units of property are actually worth more when valued independently, the landowner should have the benefit of that greater, more realistic market-based value. Emphasizing the role of the market in valuation, we held in
Buchanan
that when the part taken has a “separate and independent economic use and could therefore command a higher value as a separate entity, this value must be considered without resort to the value of any tract from which it was severed.”
Id.
at 162-63,
¶ 14 To exclude White’s appraisal would be inconsistent with the longstanding principle that valuation should not be applied mechanistically in eminent domain cases.
See Maricopa County v. Barkley,
¶ 15 As we have seen, the eases do not support a rigid rule that “the property taken should have been valued either as a separate unit or as part of the whole parcel” but not “as part of a hypothetical parcel within the whole parcel.”
Wilson,
¶ 16 Thus, when the evidence provides an adequate foundation by common sense and market data showing different highest and best uses, we see no reason why it is improper to consider a large tract of property as if, in the before condition, it were divisible into separate hypothetical entities. See 4A Nichols on'Eminent Domain § 14.02, at 14-34 (3d ed. rev.1999). Unlike the strip-taking'street-widening cases on which the court of appeals relied, the subject property could clearly be so divisible. The jury concluded that a 5-acre intersection corner, which could probably be rezoned for different and higher use than the rest of the tract, would have a different and higher value than the remainder of the property. Once that is accepted, the owner is entitled to that higher value when the property is taken, whether the taking is of all or only a part of the more valuable portion. The owner must be compensated for the entire damage, which, of course, includes the value of what was taken and the lessening in value of what remains. The result should be the same, no matter what the methodology. As has been stated in the leading text in the field:
Much of the confusion in eminent domain litigation has arisen from attempting to apply methods of valuation appropriate in one case to another in which the facts are materially different. The only principle applicable [in] all eases is that of fair and just compensation for the land taken and to that end each case must be viewed in the light of its own facts.
Id.
at 14-41 (quoting
City of Richardson v. Smith,
B. Severance damages
¶ 17 We next turn to the issue of severance damages. The City argues that if the part taken is considered as a separate unit, severance damages should not be allowed for any of the remaining property. Having concluded, however, that White’s method of appraisal was properly admitted, we affirm the award of severance damages. Here, again, the question is whether the concept of just compensation required reimbursement to the Wilsons if there was real damage to the remaining 3.6-acre parcel because of the taking of the corner piece. The court of appeals noted that “duplicative damage” awards might result if an approach such as White’s were permitted in cases such as this.
Wilson,
¶ 18 At trial, White testified that the taking of the 1.4 acres at the corner reduced the value of what had been the 5
¶ 19 In
Buchanan,
in which the property owner presented evidence that the part taken should be valued as a separate unit, we held that he could not claim severance damages because the separate unit was not part of a larger parcel.
¶ 20 This result was supported by evidence from the market and by common sense. We conclude that the trial judge acted properly in leaving the severance damage issue to the jury.
CONCLUSION
¶ 21 We find no error in the trial judge’s rulings permitting the testimony of the Wil-sons’ expert and in allowing the jury to consider the issue of severance damages. While trial judges should not permit valuation testimony when it is offered without foundation other than mere speculation or on incorrect factual predicates, we discourage the use of rigid formulae or arbitrary rules that reject valuation opinions based on a proper foundation — common sense and market information.
¶ 22 The court of appeals’ opinion is vacated and the trial court’s judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. There appears to be some confusion in the court of appeals’ opinion regarding the content of Wilson's testimony; because it seems clear that the jury rejected his testimony, we feel no need to address the problem.
. A.R.S. § 12-1122, which implements the constitutional guarantee of just compensation, reads, in pertinent part, as follows:
A. The court or jury shall ascertain and assess:
1. The value of the property sought to be condemned and all improvements thereon pertaining to the realty, and of each and every separate estate or interest therein, and if it consists of different parcels, the value of each parcel and each estate or interest therein separately.
2. If the properly sought to be condemned constitutes only a part of a larger parcel, the damages which will accrue to the portion not sought to be condemned by reason of its severance from the portion sought to be- condemned, and the construction of the improvement in the manner proposed by the plaintiff.
The statute has not changed since our opinion in Arizona State Land Department issued in 1976.
. We do not find the other cases cited by the court of appeals persuasive. In
Tucson Title Insurance Co. v. State ex rel. Herman,
involving a strip of land taken for highway use, the court held that the land taken could not be valued separately but only as part of the whole.
City of Los Angeles v. Allen
is also not helpful to the City.
Both Allen and Tucson Title are strip-taking cases involving small amounts of land that decreased the depth of the parcel but were useless on their own. In the present case, by contrast, the 5-acre unit, of which the 1.4 acres taken was a part, was on the corner of an intersection with a main, heavily traveled street. Both the market data presented and common sense dictate that this unit could have a different and-independent value.
. The City overlooks the fact that loss of commercial development potential would reduce the value of the remainder to the same extent no matter whether the remainder were measured in terms of an area of 3.6 acres or 21.84 acres.
