OPINION
Pepper Lee appeals the portion of a final judgment awarding appellee, Leland Dykes, $13,000 for conversion damages. Lee contends the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the jury’s finding that Dykes sustained damages in this amount. Because we agree the evidence is legally insufficient to support the jury’s finding, we reverse and render with respect to the award of damages for conversion and affirm the remainder of the judgment.
I. Background
According to Dykes, in January 2005, he and Lee became engaged to be married. Dykes gave Lee a diamond ring, which he considered “predicated” on their impending marriage and not a gift. Dykes also paid the down payment, monthly payments, insurance premiums, and taxes on a home purchased in Lee’s name. Both parties signed a document entitled, “Property Agreement/Financial Responsibility” (“the property agreement”), which provided, “[i]n the event of incompatibility in the relationship ..., [Dykes] will assume the financial responsibility of [the property] and will be added to the ownership and continues possession so as to release [Lee] for homestead rights.” Their relationship ended on May 15, 2006; however, according to Dykes, Lee refused to return the ring and give Dykes possession and part ownership of the property.
Dykes sued Lee for breach of contract, fraud, and conversion, among other claims. Dykes requested damages and equitable relief including imposition of a trust and equitable lien on the real property. Lee filed a counterclaim for various causes of action.
A jury found as follows: Lee did not fail to comply with the property agreement; Lee did not commit fraud; Dykes expended $110,000 for purchase of the real property; Dykes gave Lee the ring “upon the condition” that they marry; Lee ended the engagement on May 15, 2006; and “reasonable cash market value” of the ring on that date in Harris County, Texas was $13,000. The jury also found in Dykes’s favor on Lee’s counterclaim. .
On April 1, 2008, the trial court signed a final judgment awarding Dykes $123,000 in damages, representing $110,000 relative to the real property and $13,000 for conversion of the ring. The trial court also imposed a resulting trust and equitable lien against the real property relative to the $110,000 Dykes expended thereon and ordered foreclosure of the lien. The trial court ordered that Lee take nothing on her counterclaim. Lee filed a motion for new trial, which the trial court denied by written order.
II. Analysis
Lee originally presented four issues, challenging the money judgment for
Lee’s remaining complaints pertain to the $13,000 portion of the damages award imposed for conversion of the ring. In her second and third issues, Lee contends the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the jury’s finding that reasonable cash market value of the ring on or about May 15, 2006 in Harris County was $13,000. Lee objected to submission of this jury question on the ground there was no evidence of market value of the ring. For the reasons explained below, we agree there was no evidence to support the jury’s finding.
A. Standard of Review
When examining a legal-sufficiency challenge, we review the evidence in the light most favorable to the challenged finding and indulge every reasonable inference that would support it.
City of Keller v. Wilson,
B. Conversion Damages
The only evidence Dykes offered to prove reasonable cash market value of the ring on May 15, 2006 in Harris County, Texas was his testimony that he purchased it for $26,000 in December 2004 from a jeweler in Houston. Dykes contends this testimony regarding purchase price established market value at the time of conversion and thus supported the jury’s award of a lower amount. In contrast, Lee contends this testimony was not evidence of market value at the time of conversion.
Preliminarily, we note that, under Texas law, “fair market value” is defined as “the price the property will bring when offered for sale by one who desires to sell, but is not obliged to sell, and is bought by one who desires to buy, but is under no necessity of buying.”
Exxon Corp. v. Middleton,
Nonetheless, we conclude that the commonly-understood meaning of “reasonable cash market value” is similar to the legal definition of “fair market value”; i.e., the amount the owner could realize on the “market.” Accordingly, cases addressing sufficiency of the evidence under the legal definition of “fair market value” are persuasive in this case.
See Kroger Co. v. Brown,
Several courts, including the Texas Supreme Court, have indicated that, not only is purchase price generally inadmissible to prove subsequent market value, but it does not constitute evidence of market value even if admitted. In
Redman Homes, Inc. v. Ivy,
The only evidence offered to prove value of the home immediately before the fire was the owner’s testimony that he purchased it for $43,000 ten months before the fire. Id. at 685. The court stated,
The historical cost of the home, however, has little bearing on its market value immediately before the fire. Indeed, purchase price is ordinarily not even admissible to show market value at a particular later time.... Competent evidence of the value of the mobile home will refer both to its market value, as defined above, and will reflect the proper temporal specificity.
Id.
(citing
Rosenfield v. White,
Nevertheless, the jury was asked to assess aggregate damages for both the home and its contents in a single issue, and the owners presented testimony sufficient to
When upholding the court of appeals’s legal-sufficiency conclusion, the Texas Supreme Court stated, “[The defendant] argues, and the [owners] concede, that his statements about the cost of the home were not admissible to show its market value at the time of the loss.”
Redman Homes,
Accordingly, we construe
Redman Homes
as authority from the Texas Supreme Court that purchase price alone is legally insufficient to establish market value of property at a later date.
See id.; see also Dolenz v. Sorensen,
No. 05-95-00447-CV,
In contrast, Dykes asserts that we “need only look at”
Burns v. Rochon,
Specifically, the
Wutke
court concluded that evidence regarding the amount the plaintiff paid for certain furniture several years before the date of the conversion was admissible on the issue of actual value.
When goods of this character are destroyed, a proper method of arriving at their value at the time of loss is to take into consideration the cost of the articles, the extent of their use, whether worn or out of date, their condition at the time, etc., and for them to determine what they were fairly worth. The cost alone would not be the correct criterion for the present value, but it would be difficult to estimate the value of such goods, except by reference to the former price in connection with wear, depreciation, change of style, and present condition.
Id.
(emphasis added) (quoting
Wells, Fargo Express Co. v. Williams,
In
Murray,
the defendant apparently argued that the trial court erred by permitting the plaintiff to testify regarding purchase price of his vehicle three-and-a-half years before the accident in which it was damaged.
The
Murray
court’s holding is not exactly clear. Although the court recited the “general rule” that purchase price is inadmissible to prove market value, it seemed to suggest price may be admitted to establish market value if the opponent does not object on the ground the purchase was too
Therefore, we respectfully disagree with the
Bums
court, as well as some other courts, citing
Murray
for the proposition that purchase price alone, if admitted without objection or uncontroverted, is legally sufficient to prove an item’s market value at a later date.
See Burns,
Additionally, we decline to follow these cases because their holdings are contrary to
Redman Homes.
In
Redman Homes,
by indicating the owners’ testimony regarding purchase price was not evidence of subsequent market value of the home, despite no challenge to admission of the testimony and apparently no controverting evidence, the supreme court effectively negated the reasoning that purchase price is probative of market value if admitted without objection or uncontroverted.
See Redman Homes,
Moreover, we disagree with the suggestion in
Bums
and similar cases that evidence is necessarily legally-sufficient to support a certain element of a claim simply because it is admitted without objection or is uncontroverted.
See Burns,
Even if we did not construe
Redman Homes
as Texas Supreme Court authority for the proposition that purchase price is alone legally insufficient to prove market value at a later date, we would nevertheless follow the courts of appeals, including
Moreover, we acknowledge that the jury did not decide the purchase price represented the market value at the time of conversion because it awarded $13,000 rather than $26,000. However, assuming that $26,000 even represented market value at the time of purchase, there was no evidence regarding the dollar amount attributed to any depreciation between the purchase and the date of conversion. We recognize that the ring may not have depreciated by half its market value, or may have even appreciated in market value, during this period. However, we also cannot foreclose the possibility the ring depreciated by even more than $13,000 during this period. Consequently, the jury’s finding that market value of the ring one-and-a-half years after purchase was half the price was an assumption unsupported by any evidence.
Finally, the
Bums
court also cited, and Dykes reiterates, the “well-settled” general rule that a property owner may opine regarding the value of his own property.
Burns,
We reverse the portion of the $123,000 monetary judgment that consists of $13,000 for conversion damages and render judgment that Dykes take nothing on his conversion claim. We affirm the remainder of the judgment.
Notes
. Lee does not challenge the equitable relief relative to the $110,000 expended by Dykes on the real property; she appeals only the award of monetary damages.
.
We note that courts use various terms such as "market value," "fair market value,” and "cash market value,” but these terms are synonymous.
See Panola County Appraisal Dist. v. Panola County Fresh Water Supply Dist. Number One,
. The court had previously set forth the same definition of "market value” that we have recited.
Redman Homes,
. Although the supreme court affirmed the court of appeals on all substantive issues, the supreme court reversed the court of appeals’s judgment because it improperly remanded for a new trial on only damages instead of both liability and damages.
Redman Homes,
. We also note the supreme court framed the above-cited pertinent quote as merely reciting the defendant’s argument, and the owners' concession, that purchase price is inadmissible to prove market value.
See Redman Homes,
. The court also mentioned that the owner presented testimony concerning revenues generated by the converted equipment.
Burns,
. However, some courts have cited
Murray
as authority that purchase price is generally inadmissible to establish market value without any qualification based on whether the purchase was remote in time or place to the operative date for establishing market value.
See, e.g., Redman Homes,
. The court of appeals's opinion is not clear regarding the reason it concluded that evidence of purchase price was material and relevant because it did not mention the basis on which the plaintiff proved damages relative to the vehicle.
See Murray,
