Opinion
In
I
Introduction
Under the names Baja-Mex Insurance Services, Incorporated, and BajaMex Insurance and Money Exchange, defendants Sobke
II
Factual and Procedural Background
Since 1975 Baja-Mex has operated a number of currency exchange and Mexican insurance businesses in the City’s San Ysidro neighborhood near the international border with Mexico.
In 1988 Baja-Mex as tenant opened its office No. 4 on two adjacent San Ysidro parcels (Parcels 1 & 2) on East San Ysidro Boulevard in a prime area for currency exchange businesses. Configured as a “compound” with a fence running along the property’s boundaries not bordering the boulevard and with the rear of the property lighted along the fence, the two parcels provided an appearance of security for Baja-Mex’s customers. Accessible parking with good visibility from Baja-Mex’s business operations differentiated office No. 4 from its competitors.
A
Pretaking Condition of Parcel 1
In August 1991 Baja-Mex leased Parcel 1 from the property’s owner for 10 years, ultimately at a monthly rental of about $4,800. The lease provided for a rent proration if a portion of Parcel 1 were condemned. Baja-Mex operated most of its business at office No. 4 from a small (425 square feet) free-standing building on Parcel 1 in the center of the compound. The small free-standing building included one drive-through cashier station, three cashier windows inside, and an office in the rear. From that building, Baja-Mex controlled access to both parcels.
Baja-Mex also operated two cashier windows in two hundred fifty square feet of an adjacent larger building (the furniture store building) on Parcel 1. Baja-Mex subleased most of the furniture store building for $3,200 monthly to a furniture retail outlet operated by Giron. The sublease’s term was from September 1991 through August 1996. The sublease provided that if part of the small free-standing building were lost by condemnation, Baja-Mex could use an additional 250 square feet inside the furniture store building with subtenant Giron receiving a prorated rent reduction. However, in early 1994 after experiencing difficulties in paying rent Giron vacated the furniture store building for reasons unrelated to the property’s impending condemnation by the City. Despite inquiries by potential new subtenants, Baja-Mex did not sublease the furniture store building due to uncertainty about the
B
Pretaking Condition of Parcel 2
Meanwhile, in 1988 Baja-Mex began leasing Parcel 2 from the property’s owner for one year initially and then on a month-to-month basis, ultimately for about $767 monthly rent. Baja-Mex subleased a trailer coach on Parcel 2 to a perfume store on a month-to-month basis, ultimately for about $840 to $870 monthly rent.
In December 1993 Baja-Mex’s subtenant vacated the trailer on Parcel 2 due to the impending condemnation by the City.
c
The Taking
In January 1994 the City filed these two related and ultimately consolidated eminent domain actions to condemn portions of the two parcels for road improvement purposes. Answering the City’s lawsuits, Baja-Mex sought to recover compensation for loss of goodwill caused by the taking.
In May 1994 the superior court authorized the City to take possession of the condemned portions of the two parcels.
In June 1994 the City removed the small free-standing building from Parcel 1. The City also moved the trailer elsewhere upon Parcel 2. The City then proceeded to build a street across the condemned portions of the two parcels. Baja-Mex negotiated with the City about the eventual configuration of the property. During construction Baja-Mex kept its business operations open and worked with the contractor to arrange parking available for its patrons.
In May 1995 the City finished its road improvement project. Construction of the street passing between the remaining portions of the two parcels eliminated their configuration as a compound, decreased Baja-Mex’s ability to control use of the parcels, and lowered the number of parking spaces adjacent to Baja-Mex’s business operations.
D
Post-taking Condition of Remainder of Parcel 1
In June 1994 instead of paying prorated rent for the remainder of Parcel 1, Baja-Mex entered into an amended lease with the property owner for $4,000 monthly, an amount believed by Sobke to be reasonable. Baja-Mex moved all its business operations into the furniture store building remaining on Parcel 1 and took over the entire building despite Monzon’s belief that continuation of the business did not require all of such space. Baja-Mex began operating six cashier windows in the furniture store building. BajaMex also remodeled the furniture store building and negotiated with the City to retain some adjacent parking. However, the loss of parking caused by the condemnation limited Baja-Mex’s ability to sublease any portion of the furniture store building. Due in part to parking limitations, Baja-Mex did not seek subtenants for the furniture store building. One end of the furniture store building remained vacant.
During 1994 Baja-Mex began contributing to a pension fund program for its employees.
After moving its operations to the furniture store building, Baja-Mex began offering expanded services there. By late 1995 at the furniture store building Baja-Mex offered check cashing, faxes, money orders, Mexican money orders, and post office box rentals in addition to continuing its money exchange and Mexican insurance business operations. Baja-Mex hired an employee to oversee its additional business services offered at office No. 4, added equipment to the property to advertise those additional services and rented a billboard along the adjoining freeway. Consistent with its practices before the condemnation, Baja-Mex continued using employees “shared” by its stores located elsewhere. Baja-Mex also added a new business location (the Texaco location) about 100 yards away from its office No. 4 in part to prevent another business from locating there. Due to an audit, Baja-Mex changed its business
E
Posttaking Condition of Remainder of Parcel 2
In February 1994 Baja-Mex notified the owner of the remainder of Parcel 2 that it no longer wanted to rent the parcel but instead would vacate the property in 30 days. The property owner responded by seeking to rent the parcel to another money exchange business. Eventually, motivated by the need for sufficient parting during peak business hours and in part by the desire to prevent occupancy by another money exchange, Baja-Mex agreed to rent the remainder of Parcel 2 plus an adjacent “Quonset hut” parcel for three months at the higher rent of $1,700 monthly for those two properties combined. Ultimately, Baja-Mex leased the remainder of Parcel 2 along with the Quonset hut parcel for two years at the increased monthly rent of $2,400.
Meanwhile, after June 1994 the trailer moved elsewhere upon Parcel 2 by the City was inoperable as lacking necessary utility connections. Deeming the expense of connecting the utilities to be excessive, Baja-Mex did not seek to rent out the trailer to a subtenant.
In November 1995 Baja-Mex subleased the Quonset hut with a small adjacent parting area to a shoe store.
F
Baja-Mex’s Business After the Taking
Monzon believed the property’s configuration after condemnation was worse due to parting limitations. Because construction after the taking resulted in separation of its business premises by a street, Baja-Mex increased its number of employees by hiring additional parking attendants to control use of its parking areas, help customers and provide a sense of security to patrons. Although Sobke thought it would be profitable to open a money exchange in the trailer because in the post-taking configuration the trailer had frontage visibility at an intersection with a traffic signal, BajaMex delayed any immediate implementation of the idea due to cost and lack of time.
Baja-Mex kept separate income records for each of its seven business locations. Although Baja-Mex kept expense records for all its stores on a consolidated basis, at the time it met with Brinig in 1993 Baja-Mex segregated the expenses for office No. 4 for years 1988 through 1992, permitting calculation of net income. However, after the condemnation, Baja-Mex never generated any written study comparing the net income, profitability or parking availability for office No. 4 in its pretaking and post-taking conditions. Similarly, Baja-Mex did not compare the number of transactions at office No. 4 in its pretaking location with those in the post-taking location.
When the Mexican peso was volatile or devalued, Baja-Mex commonly experienced increased earnings. In December 1994, upon devaluation of the Mexican peso, Baja-Mex’s gross monthly earnings at office No. 4 rose from about $50,000 to $198,000. Baja-Mex’s gross earnings at office No. 4 continued high through April 1995.
G
Resolution of Eminent Domain Proceedings
In November 1995, after severance of Baja-Mex’s goodwill claim, judgment upon stipulation was entered on the remainder of the consolidated cases involving the property owners’ interests.
In December 1995 Baja-Mex’s claim for compensation for loss of goodwill was tried to the superior court. Baja-Mex presented evidence including Brinig’s expert opinion that the condemnation caused Baja-Mex to lose $389,760 in compensable goodwill resulting from its increased expenses for additional rent, additional employee costs for parking lot attendants, and decreased rental income from subtenants. Brinig testified his methodology for valuing loss of goodwill was appropriate under this case’s specific circumstances and explained his results calculated using such approach. The parties disputed
In January 1996 the court entered judgment favoring the City against Baja-Mex. Baja-Mex appeals.
in
Discussion
Baja-Mex contends the judgment should be reversed and the matter remanded for new trial since the superior court assertedly prevented a full and fair evaluation of its claims for lost goodwill and for mitigation expenses by striking the testimony of its expert Brinig. Citing
People
ex rel.
Dept. of Transportation
v.
Muller
(1984)
Asserting Baja-Mex did not meet its burden to establish the existence of goodwill, the City contends the trial court properly struck Brinig’s testimony as not valuing the business’s goodwill in either its pretaking or posttaking condition but instead simply stating the present value of the business’s increased rent and wage costs after condemnation.
On this record we conclude the superior court acted within its discretion in striking Brinig’s testimony. Although Brinig characterized his valuation methodology as reasonable and appropriate to the unique situation presented here, Brinig’s approach did not establish the existence or loss of goodwill.
A
The Law
“Historically, business goodwill was not an element of damages under eminent domain law. As recently as 1975, the California Supreme Court reaffirmed the principle that damage to a business conducted on property condemned for public use was not compensable as a property right under the just compensation clause of the California Constitution. [Citation.] But in
1975, the Legislature enacted a comprehensive revision of California’s eminent domain law, which, among other things, authorizes compensation for the loss of business goodwill.”
(Community Development Com.
v.
Asaro
(1989)
“Section 1263.510 was enacted in 1975 as part of a comprehensive revision of eminent domain law in California. [Citations.] The section was enacted in response to widespread criticism of the injustice wrought by the Legislature’s historic refusal to compensate condemnees whose ongoing businesses were diminished in value by a forced relocation. [Citations.] The purpose of the statute was unquestionably to provide monetary compensation for the kind of losses which typically occur when an ongoing small business is forced to move and give up the benefits of its former location.”
(Muller, supra,
A tenant “may possess goodwill
as owner of a business.’’’’ (City of Vista
v.
Fielder
(1996)
“Section 1263.510 provides a statutory right to compensation for loss of business goodwill, but remains silent on the question of how to properly value the loss of goodwill.”
(Salami, supra,
In
Muller, supra,
In
Asaro, supra,
B
The Record
1
Brinig’s Testimony
We summarize the trial testimony of Baja-Mex’s expert Brinig:
A typical case would involve a decrease in net income after condemnation with the appraiser capitalizing the difference and arriving at value of lost goodwill based on reduction
Because Baja-Mex did not provide expense information, Brinig did not look at office No. 4’s pretaking 1993 net income, its 1994 net income or its 1995 net income. However, a posttaking decrease in office No. 4’s goodwill value was identifiable although not analyzed under a traditional methodology based upon net income. Analysis of the underlying characteristics affecting net income in the property’s pretaking and posttaking conditions revealed the existence of a “fundamental difference” between those conditions. Specifically, office No. 4 experienced “an absolutely defined increase” in expenses after the condemnation and, “all other things being equal, those defined increases in expenses affect net income and affect goodwill.” The phrase “all other things being equal” referred to Brinig’s characterization of this case as “a classic from an economic [perspective], the laboratory case where there is the closest laboratory situation to an identical before-condition and an identical after-condition that could possibly exist in the real world.” This case was “as close to a laboratory case where you can do this in the real world as” Brinig had seen.
Fundamental to Brinig’s analysis was “the concept of before and after.” Brinig focused on what change the taking caused in the business. Various factors bearing on goodwill were essentially the same in both the pretaking and post-taking conditions, to wit, the business’s name, its management, marketing, the industry, economic conditions, the effect of peso devaluation, and the business’s reputation. The post-taking location after moving 10 feet was no better. Other circumstances bearing on goodwill were worse after the taking, namely, access to the building housing office No. 4’s business operations, parking, and security in the absence of the compound configuration. Occupying a total square footage of 1,500 rather than 675 square feet was “insignificantly better.” Internal design was better but “absolutely insignificant in terms of generating revenues.” The furniture store’s new internal configuration with six cashier windows was perhaps a “bit better” because patrons had the opportunity to come inside. The business’s financing was the same except to the extent it was better or stronger due to additional financing obtained based on the significant increase in posttaking gross revenues resulting primarily from Mexican peso devaluation.
Although post-taking gross revenues increased “dramatically” in a manner that would generate “substantial net income” primarily due to peso devaluation, the characteristics affecting pretaking and post-taking goodwill were “virtually identical except for some of them being worse, measurably worse.” Such fact was necessarily taken into consideration in Brinig’s “analysis of the benefits of the old location versus the benefits of the new location, which is essentially a goodwill analysis.” Brinig’s analysis of those characteristics permitted identification of benefits of the old location lost as a result of the taking. The measure of the “identifiable benefits of the old location” was “the fact that in the old location there were a group of expenses that were lower as a result of the rental situation and the configuration of the location, and those expenses being rent and wages, are higher in the new location.” Characteristics of “access, security, and parking” related to the post-taking parking situation were worse. “The parking was better in the compound situation, and the security was better in the compound situation,” as demonstrated by Baja-Mex’s hiring more employees to cover the reconfigured parking area. As a result of such economic damage, Baja-Mex suffered a loss of goodwill. The “costs of the loss of benefit” Baja-Mex suffered could be measured. 8
The post-taking traffic signal at office No. 4’s front intersection, the increase in the business operations’ square footage, and the improved look of the inside of the furniture store building perhaps constituted economic betterments but were insignificant and not measurable with respect to an increase in the business’s profitability.
Brinig’s analysis of increased expenses was “specific to this business” and not in a “vacuum.” Brinig calculated Baja-Mex suffered $389,760 compensable loss of goodwill. Brinig believed from an accountant’s standpoint it was improper for a “strategic reason” to do a traditional goodwill loss analysis. Brinig stated: “There’s no question that in my mind, in my opinion, if you look at the goodwill, a pure analysis of the goodwill before, and you look at a pure analysis of the goodwill after, there is an increase, and—but that increase I frankly think is misleading because when you identify the factors of the before- and after-condition, you see that there is one factor— two factors, I think, that changed, and those changes are directly related to a permanent increase in expenses, and I believe all other things are equal.” Brinig thus concluded the “change in net income” should be analyzed through expenses that occur and are assigned “to the taking.”
2
The Parties’ Arguments to the Trial Court
The City argued that by not conducting a net income analysis Brinig did not value goodwill in the business’s pretaking condition but instead employed an assertedly inappropriate and unacceptable “capitalization of increased expenses analysis” effectively isolating selected post-taking cost increases in a vacuum. The City concluded that by not valuing pretaking goodwill Brinig could not establish the existence or loss of any such goodwill.
Characterizing Brinig’s methodology as sound and appropriate for the circumstances, Baja-Mex argued that any isolated expenses occurring as a result of the loss of a benefit of the property’s pretaking location were compensable under section 1263.510 and
Muller, supra,
3
The Trial Court’s Decision
Concluding Brinig’s approach was not an acceptable method of valuing goodwill and there was no evidence that it was acceptable, the trial court granted the City’s motion to strike Brinig’s testimony. After rejecting BajaMex’s additional claim for mitigation expenses as merely a means to circumvent the ruling excluding Brinig’s goodwill testimony, the court granted judgment favoring the City.
C
Analysis
1
Goodwill
Evidence Code section 801 limited Brinig’s expert opinion testimony on the existence and loss of goodwill to an opinion based on matter
“of a type that reasonably may be relied upon by experts in forming an opinion upon the subject to which his testimony relates. In large measure, this assures the reliability and trustworthiness of the information used by experts in forming their opinions.” (Cal. Law Revision Com. com., 29B West’s Ann. Evid. Code (1995 ed.) foll. § 801, p. 21.)
9
In ruling on foundational matters forming the basis of Brinig’s opinion testimony, the superior court enjoyed broad discretion.
(Korsak
v.
Atlas Hotels, Inc.
(1992)
In order to be awarded compensation for goodwill, Baja-Mex was statutorily required to prove that its alleged loss of goodwill was caused by the taking, could not be prevented by relocation, would not include relocation expenses, and would not be duplicated by compensation otherwise awarded to Baja-Mex. (§ 1263.510.) Thus, Baja-Mex had the burden to prove entitlement to goodwill.
(Redevelopment Agency
v.
Thrifty Oil Co.
(1992)
The goal of these eminent domain proceedings was “to determine just compensation,” to wit, to put Baja-Mex in “as good a position” as if its property had “not been taken.”
(Leslie, supra,
Acknowledging that application of the traditional methodology of comparing the value of a business’s goodwill in its pretaking and post-taking conditions would result in a determination that the goodwill of Baja-Mex’s office No. 4 increased after the condemnation, Brinig testified he did not employ such traditional approach. Instead, without determining the actual value of goodwill before or after the taking, Brinig analyzed goodwill as the increased rent and wage costs at the post-taking location. However, although characterized by Brinig as reasonable and appropriate in this assertedly unique situation, his valuation methodology was insufficient to establish the existence or loss of any goodwill. 11
Although no “single method exists to value goodwill”
(Leslie, supra,
Employing an approach he characterized as crafted to the specific circumstances of this case affecting patronage, Brinig concluded that despite enjoying an increase in income at office No. 4’s post-taking location due to devaluation of the Mexican peso unrelated to condemnation, Baja-Mex nonetheless suffered a post-taking loss of benefits that had accrued from its pretaking location and that constituted lost goodwill measurable by identifiable post-taking permanent net increases
Brinig did not measure the value of office No. 4’s alleged intangible asset of goodwill in the business’s pretaking or post-taking condition. 12 Hence, Brinig never compared the value of goodwill before condemnation with its value after condemnation. Indeed, at deposition Brinig admitted he “never actually sat down and calculated” the business’s goodwill. Further, although this case involved alleged cost increases for rent and wages as well as increased revenues at office No. 4’s larger post-taking location, Brinig did not compare the business’s income or losses in its pretaking and posttaking conditions. Instead, Brinig focused only on increased isolated costs after condemnation while disregarding any post-taking revenue increases attributable to expanded services or any post-taking cost increases related to occupancy of a larger space, the new pension plan, use of additional employees in providing expanded services, and sharing of employees with other Baja-Mex locations.
In sum, Brinig’s methodology was limited to capitalizing and discounting isolated increased costs arising from Baja-Mex’s office No. 4’s post-taking access, rental income, security and parking. Brinig concluded those identified increased costs were equivalent to loss of goodwill since other factors bearing on goodwill remained substantially the same. According to Brinig, he essentially applied a net income analysis tailored to this specific situation where measurable post-taking changes occurred only in the business’s increased expenses for rent and wages. Hence, Baja-Mex contends Brinig effectively valued goodwill in the pretaking and post-taking conditions by determining other potential factors to be insignificant and attributing revenue increases to the Mexican peso devaluation. However, Brinig’s methodology was inadequate to measure the value of any pretaking goodwill or to compare any such value with the value of post-taking goodwill.
Brinig approached valuation of office No. 4’s goodwill as a laboratory exercise rather than as an empirical measure of what actually existed. Stated otherwise, instead of quantifying in dollars the elements constituting the business’s alleged goodwill, Brinig sought to determine goodwill by analyzing various factors bearing on the business’s functioning. However, although perhaps working in a laboratory, Brinig’s methodology failed here because of the practical impossibility of accounting for the countless variables potentially affecting a business’s profitability in the real world. By attempting to predict Office No. 4’s profitability without calculating and verifying its actual revenues, expenses and profits, Brinig accomplished nothing toward the goal of determining the existence and true measure of any goodwill. Thus, since not based upon a quantified and verified comparison of patronage-related benefits accruing to the business before and after condemnation, Brinig’s testimony about the value of loss of goodwill did not meet the statutory requirements for admissibility as an expert opinion. (Evid. Code, § 801.) Although Brinig was not required to use the capitalization of excess earnings method
2
Mitigation
After the superior court granted the City’s motion to strike Brinig’s testimony, Baja-Mex claimed entitlement to recovery of “mitigation expenses as a lost goodwill component.” Citing Muller, supra, 36 Cal.3d 263, and Arvey, supra, 3 Cal.App.4th 1357, Baja-Mex contended that section 1263.510, subdivision (a)(2), imposed an obligation to mitigate loss of goodwill and such mitigation expenses then became compensable as lost goodwill. 14 Hence, asserting Brinig’s testimony established the existence of “an economic loss related to the increased expense that the business has incurred in an effort to mitigate their damages,” Baja-Mex concluded “those mitigation expenses are compensable in this action.” The superior court rejected Baja-Mex’s claim for mitigation expenses. In declining to permit Baja-Mex to recover as mitigation expenses its asserted loss of goodwill, the court stated: “You can’t come around in another direction and claim recovery for it just calling it something else.”
Baja-Mex contends that even if it was not entitled to damages for loss of goodwill under section 1263.510, it was nonetheless entitled to recover mitigation costs “independent” of its rejected claim for loss of goodwill. Characterizing those mitigation costs as “the same expenses that were used to determine [its] loss of goodwill,” Baja-Mex claims entitlement to recovery since Brinig assertedly determined such expenditures were actually made and represented an economic loss to Baja-Mex. However, the superior court properly denied Baja-Mex’s request for mitigation costs.
On this record Baja-Mex was not entitled to recover its alleged loss of goodwill under the designation of mitigation expenses. Baja-Mex’s claim for mitigation costs compensable as lost goodwill was based solely on Brinig’s testimony.
15
However, Baja-Mex could not recover its expenses incurred in
In sum, the trial court properly found Baja-Mex’s claim for mitigation expenses was simply a means to attempt to circumvent its ruling excluding Brinig’s testimony on goodwill. Hence, the court correctly rejected BajaMex’s mitigation claim and then granted judgment favoring the City.
IV
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Benke, J., and Huffman, J., concurred.
The petition of all appellants for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 2, 1998.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise specified.
We may refer to Baja-Mex Insurance Services, Incorporated, Baja-Mex Insurance and Money Exchange, Sobke, and Monzon collectively as Baja-Mex.
Section 1263.510 provides:
“(a) The owner of a business conducted on the property taken, or on the remainder if such property is part of a larger parcel, shall be compensated for loss of goodwill if the owner proves all of the following:
“(1) The loss is caused by the taking of the property or the injury to the remainder.
“(2) The loss cannot reasonably be prevented by a relocation of the business or by taking steps and adopting procedures that a reasonably prudent person would take and adopt in preserving the goodwill.
“(3) Compensation for the loss will not be included in payments under Section 7262 of the Government Code.
“(4) Compensation for the loss will not be duplicated in the compensation otherwise awarded to the owner.
“(b) Within the meaning of this article, ‘goodwill’ consists of the benefits that accrue to a business as a result of its location, reputation for dependability, skill or quality, and any other circumstances resulting in probable retention of old or acquisition of new patronage.”
In recommending the Legislature act to “compensate the owner of a business taken or damaged in an eminent domain proceeding for losses he suffers,” the Law Revision Commission stated “in order to assure that the losses are certain and measurable for the purposes of compensation, recovery should be allowed only for the loss of goodwill proved by the property owner and only to the extent that such loss is caused by the acquisition of the property or the injury to the remainder and cannot reasonably be prevented by a relocation of the business and by taking those steps and adopting those procedures that a reasonably prudent person would take and adopt in preserving the goodwill.” (12 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep. (Dec. 1974) p. 1653.)
The record indicates Baja-Mex accepted compensation for fixtures and equipment taken by the City.
“The capitalization of excess earnings approach values goodwill as follows. First, the net earnings of the business are computed by subtracting expenses and reasonable officers’ salaries from gross earnings. Next, a percentage return which would ‘normally’ be expected from the value of the tangible assets of the business is calculated and then subtracted from the net earnings. The remaining figure, if any, is the ‘excess’ earnings of the business and is attributable to intangible assets, usually goodwill. The capitalized present value of the excess earnings is computed by dividing the excess earnings figure by a percentage which reflects current interest rates.” (Muller, supra, 36 Cal.3d at p. 266, fn. 2.)
In
Salami, supra,
Brinig testified: “I would suggest if all other things stay approximately equal and they incur additional expenses just to do that, then that—those additional expenses can be measured, and that is not met with the response that says, ‘Oh, but they’re significantly better off,’ because it’s my position that all other things remain approximately equal.”
Evidence Code section 801 provides: “If a witness is testifying as an expert, his testimony in the form of an opinion is limited to such an opinion as is: [ft] . . . [ft] (b) Based on matter (including his special knowledge, skill, experience, training, and education) perceived by or personally known to the witness or made known to him at or before the hearing, whether or not admissible, that is of a type that reasonably may be relied upon by an expert in forming an opinion upon the subject to which his testimony relates, unless an expert is precluded by law from using such matter as a basis for his opinion.”
Evidence Code section 803 provides in relevant part: “The court may, and upon objection shall, exclude testimony in the form of an opinion that is based .in whole or in significant part on matter that is not a proper basis for such an opinion.”
We note that Brinig could not testify about office No. 4’s net income in its pretaking or post-taking conditions because for the years after 1992 Baja-Mex did not provide the segregated information about such office’s expenses that would have permitted calculation of its net income. Further, Baja-Mex did not otherwise produce any written study comparing office No. 4’s net income, profitability or parking availability before and after condemnation. Moreover, Baja-Mex never.compared the number of transactions at office No. 4 in its pretaking location with those in its post-taking location.
Baja-Mex acknowledges the exact value of the benefits of the pretaking location “would be difficult, if not impossible, to determine.”
Unlike the expert appraiser in
Leslie, supra,
In
Muller, supra,
Citing
Muller, supra,
36 Cal.3d at pages 271-272, the appellate court in
Arvey, supra,
As noted, in seeking to recover mitigation costs in the trial court Baja-Mex acknowledged those costs were “the same expenses” that Brinig used to determine its “loss of goodwill.” Earlier at trial Baja-Mex acknowledged it incurred the increased net expenses for rent and wages assertedly constituting lost goodwill to mitigate damages it would have otherwise suffered by relocating elsewhere. In its reply brief Baja-Mex acknowledges that after quantifying the “additional expenses” it incurred in “mitigating this loss” of pretaking locational benefits of compound configuration, low net rents and parking, Brinig determined that such quantified expenses “represented lost goodwill under section 1263.510.”
