{1} In this ease, we are asked to decide if restrictive covenants are considered property for purposes of eminent domain. Specifically, the question before this Court is whether Defendant Village of Los Lunas (Village) must compensate Plaintiffs Mondy Leigh and Sylvia Leigh (Leighs), owners of Tract 2 in a subdivision, based on the Village’s construction of a drainage pond on Tract 1 in violation of the restrictive covenants imposed on both properties. The Village additionally argues that the district court erred by admitting an appraiser’s report and challenges the sufficiency of the evidence for the damages award. We hold that the government is required to compensate for the diminution in value of the property benefitted by the restrictive covenants. We agree with the Village that the award was unsupported by the evidence; we therefore reverse the district court’s judgment and remand for recalculation of damages in accordance with this opinion.
I. BACKGROUND
{2} In 1995, the Leighs purchased Tract 2 for $21,000. Tract 2 is a lot in a subdivision
{3} On January 19, 2001, the Leighs filed an action for damages against the Village, claiming breach of restrictive covenants, inverse condemnation, and trespass. The jury trial was limited to the breach of restrictive covenants and inverse condemnation claims. At the close of the Leighs’ case, the Village moved for judgment on the breach of restrictive covenants claim on the ground that inverse condemnation was the Leighs’ exclusive remedy; the motion was granted. Following trial, the district court entered judgment against the Village, awarding the Leighs $50,000 in inverse condemnation damages for the diminution in the value of their land caused by the Village’s violation of the restrictive covenants. The Village appealed this judgment and filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding verdict (JNOV), remittitur, or new trial. The district court denied the Village’s motion, and the Village appealed that order as well. The Village’s two appeals were consolidated under case number 23,674.
II. DISCUSSION
{4} This case relates to the power of eminent domain, under which a government may take or damage private property. City of Sunland, Park v. Santa Teresa Servs. Co.,
A. Restrictive Covenant as a Compensable Property Right
{5} Article II, Section 20, of the New Mexico Constitution mandates that “[pjrivate property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation.” Whether the taking of a restrictive covenant falls within the constitution’s mandate presents a purely legal issue. As such, we review it de novo on appeal. See Fed. Express Corp. v. Abeyta,
{6} The subdivision in question is known as the “Lands of Jayson Epstein,” Epstein being the owner who established and recorded restrictive covenants binding on all purchasers of his land and on their successors in interest. The portion of the covenant at issue specifies that “[n]o lot shall be used except for residential purposes.” The Village constructed a storm drainage pond on the lot but nevertheless asserts that the use of property by a public entity in contravention of a restrictive covenant does not result in a compensable taking under the New Mexico Constitution.
{7} Restrictive covenants are sometimes described as equitable easements or negative easements. Montoya v. Barreras,
{8} Without question, easements constitute valuable property rights, and their taking requires compensation. See, e.g., Yates Petroleum Corp. v. Kennedy,
{9} We recognize that there is a split among jurisdictions on the question of whether restrictive covenants are protected property interests: jurisdictions, including those cited above, that consider restrictive covenants to be equitable easements and compensable property interests reflect the “majority view”; jurisdictions that insist the covenants do not convey property rights, thus refusing compensation, reflect the “minority view.” See Sackman, supra § 5.07[4][a], [b], at 5-378-83 (discussing both views and collecting cases); see also Restatement, supra § 7.8, reporter’s note, at 383 (noting that it is “generally accepted” that the benefits of restrictive covenants are protected property rights, “although there are some jurisdictions that treat covenant benefits as non-compensable interests”); R.E. Barber, Annotation, Eminent Domain: Restrictive Covenant or Right to Enforcement Thereof as Compensable Property Right,
{10} The essence of the minority view is (1) that restrictive covenants are not property entitled to eminent domain protection but are merely contractual rights, (2) that it is against public policy to restrict the government’s eminent domain power through private agreements, and (3) that to require compensation would create undue financial burden for the public. See, e.g., United States v. Certain Lands in Jamestown,
{11} We find the Village’s reliance on the minority view cases unpersuasive. First, as we have already stated, restrictive covenants are deemed property interests in New Mexico. Thus, the question of whether the covenants convey mere contract rights has already been decided. See Montoya,
{12} The minority’s third argument concerns costs, particularly pertinent in a large subdivision where restrictive covenants provide all lot owners with property rights in the lot condemned. Minority jurisdictions suggest that compensating these numerous lot owners for the government’s violation of the restrictive covenant would be an intolerable burden on the public. See, e.g., Town of Bay Harbor Islands,
{13} We stated earlier that restrictive covenants are characterized as equitable easements in the lots burdened by the covenant. See, e.g., Montoya,
{14} We emphasize that the before and after rule requires that a claimant prove a decline in the value of the claimant’s land caused by the taking. See id.; Vuono,
{15} The Village additionally insists that the Leighs are not entitled to eminent domain damages because the Leighs failed to meet the requirement under the damages clause of Article II, Section 20: that a property owner’s injury be different in kind from the injury suffered by the general public. See N.M. Const, art. II, § 20 (covering property taken “or damaged” for public use); Estate and Heirs of Sanchez v. County of Bernalillo,
{16} We recognize that both the Leighs and the Village discuss the purchase of Tract 1 and the destruction of the Leighs’ property interest in the tract in terms of a damage to property, not a taking. Indeed, the Leighs insist that the requirement for the damages clause was met. Damages from the violation of the covenants, the Leighs state, were different in kind from any damages to the public, since only the lots in the subdivision shared the restrictive covenants. We need not decide whether the Leighs are correct in their statement because we do not agree with the parties that the damages clause of Article II, Section 20, is implicated in this case. When the Village took Tract 1 for public use, it also took the Leighs’ property interest in enforcing the restrictive covenants as to that tract. The Leighs’ interest was not merely damaged; it was extinguished. Indeed, the jury was instructed that any damage award would result from the Leighs’ “inability to enforce their restrictive covenants.” Because the Leighs completely lost their property interest in Tract 1, we conclude that the Village took the Leighs’ interest. See Aragon & McCoy v. Albuquerque Nat’l Bank,
{17} The Village also claims that the only damages complained of resulted from the Leighs’ proximity to the drainage pond and so are not compensable. See Aguayo v. Village of Chama,
B. Evidence for the Leighs’ Damages Award
{18} We determined above that the proper calculation of damages for the taking of a restrictive covenant is the difference between the fair market value of the property benefítted by the covenant immediately before and immediately after the taking. See Vuono,
{19} The Village disputes the adequacy of the evidence for the award. Specifically, the Village asserts that the district court erred in admitting the report of the Leighs’ appraiser because it was not a proper before and after appraisal. The Village also challenges the competency of the Leighs’ testimony — which, according to the Village, did not present the fair market value of their property. The standard of review for the admission of evidence is abuse of discretion. Hourigan v. Cassidy,
{20} The Village does not dispute its failure to object to the appraiser’s testimony; the only objection was to the admission of the report immediately following the appraiser’s testimony. Again, the Village’s objection to the report was based on its lack of a before and after appraisal. The Village does contest the Leighs’ assertion that any error in the court’s admission of the report was cumulative and therefore harmless. See Leithead v. City of Santa Fe,
{21} We agree with the Village that the court abused its discretion by admitting the report into evidence because the report failed to use the proper method of appraisal: the before and after rule. See Yates Petroleum Corp.,
{22} The Leighs suggest that the values of their property “ ‘without the pond and with the pond’ ” as opposed to “ ‘before the pond and after the pond’ ” appear to be a difference in semantics. The “with and without” terminology used by the Leighs’ appraiser is not a serious problem if the method used actually calculated before and after values. See State v. Doyle,
{24} The appraisal of the worth of the property after the pond, however, seems to have been based on the health and safety concerns with the presence of the pond, including the pond’s attractive nuisance to small children and the possible infestation of flies, mosquitoes, and snakes, as well as the pond’s odors. The appraiser quoted the addendum of her report, which states, “It appears that the [$60,000] value of this lot has been negated by the actions of an external party.” She interpreted that statement to mean the lot was worth $60,000 without the pond and nothing with the pond. We find no attempt to assess the property’s fair market value with the pond. The appraiser did not, for example, compare the value of lots next to drainage ponds. There is no suggestion that such comparables are unobtainable; apparently, at least three of the approximately thirty-eight drainage ponds in thirty-one area subdivisions have standing water on a regular basis. We note that the Village’s appraiser, after comparing the market values of similar lots adjoining drainage ponds and those not adjoining drainage ponds, reported that the Leighs’ property suffered no diminution in value from the construction of the drainage pond. We disagree, therefore, with the Leighs’ assumption on appeal, contrary to their appraiser’s own trial testimony, that the report’s “with and without” the pond calculation is the same as a before and after valuation. We find the report’s admission in error. Since the appraiser testified to the contents of her report, we disagree with the Leighs that the appraiser’s trial testimony constituted separate and substantial evidence that would render the inadmissible report cumulative.
{25} The only other testimony offered as to valuation was the Leighs’ own testimony. A landowner may offer testimony as to the value of the property. UJI 13-716 NMRA 2004; State ex rel. State Highway Comm’n v. Chavez,
{26} Ms. Leigh testified that the value “to us was about $60,000” and that the land now, as a hazard and nuisance, “is worthless to us.” On cross-examination, she explained that the basis for the $60,000 figure was the amount of time the Leighs expended in finding the perfect property and its suitability to them for building a home. In contrast, later in the cross-examination, she acknowledged that the value of the property as an investment was $30,000. Similarly, Mr. Leigh testified that in his opinion, the value of his property prior to the construction of the pond was priceless “[t]o me,” and the land after the construction was useless “[t]o me.” He stated that he was not a market analyst and would have to depend on the appraisal done in that point of time but was willing to sell the property for $50,000. He also testified that he currently had Tract 2 on the market for $26,000 but would not want to sell it for less than $21,000. He stated that the property did have residual value after the
{27} Neither the Leighs’ testimony nor them appraiser’s testimony provided sufficient evidence of the before and after fair market values of the property. We therefore find the erroneous admission of the appraiser’s report to be reversible error. See Roberson v. Bd. of Educ. of Santa Fe,
{28} We address one other related matter: the apparent dispute over the date of the taking. The parties stipulated that the Village began construction of the pond on September 26, 2000. The Village assumed the Leighs meant for this date to be the date of the taking. On appeal, the Leighs remark that the exact date of the appraisal does not appear to be critical, and they suggest that the stipulated date of the pond’s substantial completion, February 14, 2001, is the “more logical date of ‘taking or damaging.’ ”
{29} Section 42A-1-29 requires that the value of property taken under eminent domain be “at the time the property is or was taken.” See State Highway Comm’n v. Grenko,
{30} Having reversed the district court’s judgment, we need not consider the denial of the Village’s motion of JNOV.
III. CONCLUSION
{31} For the reasons stated above, we reverse the district court’s judgment awarding the Leighs $50,000 in inverse condemnation damages, and we remand for a calculation of the value of the Leighs’ property before and after September 26, 2000.
{32} IT IS SO ORDERED.
