Loretta Lynn GOMEZ, Petitioner v. KANAWHA COUNTY COMMISSION, Respondent
No. 15-0342
Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia.
Submitted: April 27, 2016. Filed: June 3, 2016.
787 S.E.2d 904
Chief Justice Ketchum
to persuade the jury that the evidence did not establish that the petitioner was a custodian of A.O. Applying the stringent standards set forth in Guthrie to the State‘s evidence at trial, and viewing all of the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, we conclude there was sufficient evidence for the jury to convict the petitioner of being a custodian at the time he sexually abused A.O.
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, the petitioner‘s convictions of first degree sexual assault, incest, and sexual abuse by a parent in relation to M.C. are reversed,
Affirmed, in part; Reversed, in part; and Remanded.
Shannon M. Bland, Esq., Bland and Bland Attorneys at Law, Charleston, West Virginia, Counsel for the Petitioner.
Charles R. Bailey, Esq., Kelly C. Morgan, Esq., Daniel T. LeMasters, Esq., Bailey &
Chief Justice Ketchum:
Condemnation actions are sui generis, unique and peculiar, when considered against other civil actions. The
As we discuss below, the parties and the circuit court acknowledged that the landowner had asked for a jury trial, and that the landowner was prepared to offer her opinion as to the value of the land taken. The circuit court therefore erred in granting summary judgment against the landowner.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The respondent, the Kanawha County Commission (“the Commission“), is a member of the Central West Virginia Regional Airport Authority (“the airport authority“).2 The airport authority owns and operates Yeager Airport.
Southwest of Yeager Airport, and near the flight path of planes using the airport‘s runway, was a high hill in the Coal Branch Heights neighborhood of Charleston. The high hill was about 200 feet higher than Yeager Airport‘s runway. In 2012, at the behest of the Federal Aviation Administration, the Commission and the airport authority started a project to remove the top of the high hill.3 The project (called the “Runway 5 Approach Ground Obstruction Removal Project“) required the removal of some 1.1 million cubic yards of rock and dirt from the high hill and its placement at an alternative location.4
This is a condemnation action by the Commission to take a 10-acre tract of land near Coal Branch Heights called the “Nutter Farm.” The Commission determined that the Nutter Farm was the best site to deposit the material removed from the high hill.
William McClellan Nutter originally owned the farm, but he died in 2009. Ownership of the Nutter Farm was inherited by his three adult children: the petitioner, Loretta Lynn Gomez, and his two sons, William Watson Nutter and Charles Curtis Nutter. Each child inherited an undivided one-third interest.
The land surrounding the Nutter Farm had previously been developed into a business park called “Northgate.” After Mr. Nutter‘s death, the developer of Northgate5 offered to purchase the farm from the three children. On November 13, 2012, the two Nutter sons signed an option agreement to sell their one-third interests to the Northgate developer; the developer later consummated the sale and paid $58,333.33 to each son. Gomez, however, refused to sell her one-third share.
The Commission later purchased the sons’ two-thirds interest in the Nutter Farm from
The circuit court determined that the Commission‘s stated purposes for taking the property were a proper public use, and then appointed condemnation commissioners6 to determine the value of her one-third undivided interest in the Nutter Farm. On October 15, 2013, after visiting the property and hearing testimony by the Commission‘s appraiser, the condemnation commissioners valued Gomez‘s one-third share of the land at $33,335. The circuit court thereafter permitted the Commission to pay $33,335 into court, and in an order dated December 12, 2013, granted the Commission immediate possession of the Nutter Farm. The date of the entry of this order is the “date of taking” by the Commission.7
Counsel for Gomez timely objected to the condemnation commissioners’ valuation and demanded a jury trial. The circuit court established a schedule requiring eight months of discovery to be completed by December 1, 2014, and set a date for trial in February 2015.
Following the completion of discovery, the Commission made a motion for summary judgment. The Commission asserted that, while Gomez had retained an appraiser, the appraiser had failed to offer any opinion about the fair market value of the Nutter Farm. The Commission asked the circuit court to strike the appraiser‘s testimony. The Commission also asked the circuit court to strike Gomez‘s “claims,” because she had failed to attend her deposition. The Commission conceded in oral argument to the circuit court that Gomez could testify to the value of her interest in the property, but asked the circuit court to take judicial notice of the condemnation commissioners’ fair market valuation of $33,335.
In an order dated January 9, 2015, the circuit court struck the testimony of Gomez‘s expert and struck Gomez‘s claims. In a later order, dated March 12, 2015, the circuit court granted the Commission‘s motion for summary judgment and took judicial notice of the condemnation commissioners’ valuation of the property. The circuit court found that evidence “could have [been] submitted at trial as to the value of the take” through “the testimony of Gomez.” Still, the circuit court noted that counsel for Gomez agreed that summary judgment was preferable to a trial, because “trying the case was nothing more than preserving the record” so that Gomez could challenge the circuit court‘s pretrial rulings on appeal.
Gomez now appeals the circuit court‘s summary judgment order. In so doing, she also challenges five pretrial rulings of the circuit court that we discuss below.8
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a circuit court‘s entry of summary judgment de novo.9 A circuit court should grant summary judgment “only when it is clear that there is no genuine issue of fact to be tried and inquiry concerning the facts is not desirable to clarify the application of the law.”10
Summary judgment is appropriate where the record taken as a whole could not lead a rational trier of fact to find for the nonmoving party, such as where the nonmoving party has failed to make a sufficient showing on an essential element of the case that it has the burden to prove.11
Several of the issues raised by Gomez in her appeal challenge the circuit court‘s interpretation of the law of condemnation. Questions of law are subject to a de novo review by this Court.12
III. ANALYSIS
Petitioner Gomez asserts that the circuit court erred in five different pretrial rulings, rulings that then culminated in a summary judgment ruling in favor of the respondent Commission. Gomez asserts the circuit court erred: (1) in finding, as a matter of law, that the Commission took the Nutter Farm for a public use, and in refusing to submit the question of public use to a jury; (2) in preventing her from arguing that the highest and best use of the Nutter Farm (and thereby, its highest fair market value) was by the Commission as a dump site for dirt; (3) in excluding her expert; (4) in striking her claims when she failed to appear at her deposition; and (5) in taking judicial notice of the condemnation commissioners’ valuation of her land. We examine these five pretrial rulings in that order before addressing the circuit court‘s summary judgment order.
A. Public Use is a Question of Law
Gomez argues that the circuit court erred when it found that the Commission took the Nutter Farm for a “public use.” Gomez‘s counsel cites us to no law supporting her argument, but she contends the question is one of fact for a jury.
Gomez‘s argument is basically this: the Commission stated in its condemnation petition that it sought to permanently take the Nutter Farm “for the purpose of improving, maintaining, and operating Yeager Airport.” Gomez, however, sought to dismiss the petition and argued below that the Commission‘s taking of the land was not a proper public use, largely because the land was not connected to or being used as an airport. Further, she asserted the Commission only temporarily used the land as a site to dump dirt and rock; once construction was completed, the land would no longer be used by the Commission (even though covered by 1.1 million cubic yards of material). Overall, Mrs. Gomez argued that a jury should be allowed to decide whether the taking of the Nutter Farm was for a legitimate public purpose.
In several orders, the circuit court refused to dismiss the Commission‘s condemnation petition.13 The circuit court made two rulings
Eminent domain is the power of the State to take or damage private property for a public purpose upon payment of just compensation. The right of the State to take private property for public purposes “is an inherent attribute of sovereignty, irrespective of any constitutional or statutory provision.”14 The right of eminent domain may be delegated and vested by the Legislature in the various subdivisions of the State, such as counties and regional airport authorities.15
The
Private property can constitutionally be taken by eminent domain only for a “public” use.19 Further, it may only be taken in exchange for payment of “just” compensation.20 “In the exercise of its power of eminent domain the State, through its legislature, . . . may take . . . for public purposes, any estate in land dictated by its sovereign will.”21
In a condemnation proceeding, the circuit court is charged with determining whether the applicant has a lawful right to take property for the purposes stated in the condemnation petition.22 The circuit court determines, as a matter of law, whether a
When the court has determined that the use for which property is condemned is a public use, its judicial function is gone and the legislative discretion is unrestrained. Whether the proposed plan will accomplish the end proposed, or to what extent it will be beneficial to the public, are not matters to be determined by the courts; these are matters belonging to the legislative discretion.28
Gomez does not suggest, let alone make an affirmative showing, that the Commission‘s decision to use its eminent domain power was impelled by bad faith or arbitrary and capricious motives. Her arguments center solely
The Commission‘s condemnation petition expressed that it sought to take the Nutter Farm “for the purpose of improving, maintaining, and operating Yeager Airport.” The Commission determined that removal of the high hill southwest of the public airport would improve navigation of planes onto and off of the runway, and determined that the Nutter Farm was the best location for depositing the material removed. The taking of the Nutter Farm for these purposes has a direct and certain effect on the public: the improvement, maintenance, and operation of a publicly-owned airport. On this evidence, the circuit court was correct to find the property was condemned for a public use.
Gomez further asserts, however, that the issue of whether the property was taken for a public use is a factual question that should be submitted to a jury. We reject this argument. “The question of what is a public use is always one of law.”29 It is well established that the question of whether property has been taken for a public use in a condemnation proceeding is a question of law for the court, and not a question of fact for a jury.30 The circuit court was correct to deny Gomez a jury trial on the question of whether the land was taken for a public use.
B. The Project Influence Rule
Gomez‘s second argument — and the centerpiece of her entire case — concerns the methods for calculating the just compensation that the Commission should pay for her one-third interest in the Nutter Farm. Gomez asserts that any proper valuation of her interest should include the Commission‘s use of the land as a dump site for 1.1 million cubic yards of material. Gomez noted that the Commission had agreed to pay a neighboring landowner, the Northgate developer, a $3.50 per cubic yard “wheelage fee” for permission to transport the removed hill material across Northgate property. She argued that the fair market value of the Nutter Farm should incorporate a similar per-cubic-yard dumping fee.
Before the circuit court, the Commission filed a motion in limine to preclude Gomez from offering any valuation of the land that incorporated the Commission‘s intent to use it as a dump site. In an order dated November 25, 2014, the circuit court granted the motion in limine and ruled that Mrs. Gomez would “not be permitted to introduce evidence of an increased value of the property as it relates to the purpose of the condemnation, i.e. the runway project.” The circuit court concluded that the fair market value of condemned real estate is based upon the price that would be paid in the open market between a willing buyer and a willing seller, as of the date of the taking, without any consideration of the impact the proposed government project would have on the property.
Gomez asserts that the circuit court‘s ruling was wrong. However, we reject her assertion and affirm the circuit court‘s pretrial ruling.
“The measure of just compensation to be awarded to one whose interest in real estate is taken for a public use in a
In a recent eminent domain case, West Virginia Department of Transportation v. Western Pocahontas Properties,33 we discussed the elements that enter into a determination of a property‘s fair market value:
The challenge in assessing just compensation in a condemnation case is this: what uses and factors would be considered in setting the market price by a willing buyer and a willing seller, each acting with complete freedom and knowledge of the property? “[E]very element of value which would be taken into consideration between private parties in a sale of property should be considered in arriving at a just compensation for the land proposed to be taken[.]” Conversely, “[c]onsiderations that may not reasonably be held to affect market value are excluded.” Essentially, any factor that a reasonable buyer or seller would typically consider should be included in an analysis of fair market value.
Thus, for the purpose of determining the market value of property taken by eminent domain, consideration should be given to every element of value which ordinarily arises in negotiations between private persons with respect to the voluntary sale and purchase of land, the use made of the land at the time it is taken, its suitability for other uses, its adaptability for every useful purpose to which it may be reasonably expected to be immediately devoted, and the most advantageous uses to which it may so be applied.
Finally, whatever uses and factors are considered, “the date of take for the purpose of determining the fair market value for the fixing of compensation to be made to the condemnee is the date on which the property is lawfully taken by the commencement of appropriate legal proceedings [.]”34
An important consideration in estimating fair market value is determining the “highest and best use” of the property.35 In
Gomez argues that, on the day that the Commission took her land, the “highest and best” use of the land was as a dump site by the Commission for the rock and dirt carved off a nearby hilltop. Gomez asserts that she should be permitted to introduce evidence that the Commission‘s runway obstruction removal project enhanced the value of her land.
We reject Gomez‘s argument because it runs afoul of the long-standing “project influence rule.” This rule was developed in recognition that, when the government (or other condemnor) announces it will construct a public improvement, the value of the land in the vicinity of the proposed improvement often rises or decreases before the actual taking. “An impending condemnation . . . can distort the market by inflating or depressing land values.”37 The change in valuation directly caused by the project is often called “condemnation blight” or “project enhancement“:
Condemnation blight is a diminution in the market value of a property due to pending condemnation action; project enhancement is an increase in a property‘s market value in anticipation of a public project requiring condemnation action.38
The project influence rule basically holds that any enhancement or depreciation in value caused by a public project for which the land is condemned and taken must be disregarded in determining the market value of the land. “[M]arket value should be determined as if the condemnation did not exist.”39 The rule is supported by “the great weight of authority,”40 and there are two general motives behind the rule:
The dual purpose of this rule is first to safeguard the government from paying a premium price for land that would not have been valued so high but for the planned government project‘s enhancement of land value in the area. Second, even more crucial to individual property rights, the rule exists to protect citizens who own private property from being penalized by receiving depreciated compensation for their land that would not have been so low but for the fact that the project will cause land prices in the area to fall.41
This Court recognized the project influence rule as early as 1874 when it found that an increase in land value resulting from a proposed public project could not be considered in awarding just compensation. In Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad Company v. Tyree, we said that a landowner in a condemnation action is constitutionally entitled to “the actual value of the land taken, at the time when taken.”42 When a public project is announced
This Court considered the project influence rule in the context of a decrease in property values (that is, condemnation blight) in 1978. In Huntington Urban Renewal Authority v. Commercial Adjunct Company, the government sought to take a tract of land being used for a parking lot as part of a large urban renewal project.47 The owner of the parking lot asserted that his parking revenues, and the value of his land, had diminished over several prior years because the government had condemned several nearby business properties. Some of those properties has been converted into government-owned parking garages that competed with the parking lot‘s business. The question on appeal was whether the jury should have been instructed to “disregard any decline in the value of Commercial Adjunct‘s parking lot for which the jury could hold the Urban Renewal Authority solely and directly responsible.”48
This Court ruled that the jury should have been instructed to disregard any depreciation to the parking lot‘s value caused by the urban renewal project. The Court stated in the Syllabus:
Any decrease, not of a general character, in the fair market value of real property prior to the date of valuation, caused by the public improvement for which such property is acquired, or by the likelihood that the property will be acquired for such improvement, other than that due to physical deterioration within the reasonable control of the owner, should be disregarded in any determination of the just compensation to be awarded the property owner for the property.49
As we previously noted, only elements of value that a reasonable buyer or seller would typically consider should be included in an analysis of fair market value. The emphasis is on a reasonable buyer and seller, not on a unique buyer or seller.
Fair market value is to be determined in terms of what the property would be worth to a knowledgeable but disinterested buyer in the general market — a generic buyer as opposed to a specific one — as if there were no condemnation action. Put another way, ” ‘just compensation’ contemplates compensation measured by what the landowner has lost rather than by what the condemner has gained.”50
“Valuation should try to exclude values which appear when the market is distorted[.]”51 Hence, in a condemnation case, courts should exclude from the calculation of fair market value consideration for “an owner who may not want to part with his land because of its
Moreover, while the landowner is entitled to a fair market value based upon the land‘s highest and best use, “its special value to the condemnor as distinguished from others who may or may not possess the power to condemn, must be excluded as an element of market value.”53 “Highest and best use cannot be predicated on a demand created solely by the project for which the property is acquired[.]”54 “To compensate a landowner for value attributable to the condemnation project itself . . . would place the landowner in a better position than he would have enjoyed had there been no condemnation.”55
[M]arket value ordinarily means the price the property would bring if sold in the open market under ordinary and usual circumstances, for cash, assuming that the owner is willing to sell and the purchaser willing to buy, but neither under any obligation to do so. Under this test it is obvious that just compensation cannot include any increment arising from the very fact of acquisition [by condemnation] of the subject property. If the land were sold in the open market under ordinary and usual circumstances, factors relating to public acquisition would have to be excluded from consideration. In such a case there would be no condemnation at issue.56
Stated another way, “government projects may render property valuable for a unique purpose. Value for such a purpose, if considered, would cause the market to be an unfair indication of value, because there is no market apart from the government‘s demand.”57
The underlying notion of the “no value attributable to Government demand” principle, then, is that the Government, when pursuing public benefits through its condemnation power, should not have to spend more for property than would a reasonable and willing private purchaser solely because it is exercising its condemnation power on behalf of the public; instead, the Government is to be equated to a private purchaser buying the property for its “highest and best” nongovernmental use in an open market.58
In federal projects, Congress has codified the project influence rule under the Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of 1970.59 The Act provides:
Any decrease or increase in the fair market value of real property prior to the date of valuation caused by the public improvement for which such property is acquired, or by the likelihood that the property would be acquired for such improvement, other than that due to physical deterioration within the reasonable control of the owner, will be disregarded in determining the compensation for the property.60
The United States Supreme Court has similarly stated:
It is not fair that the government be required to pay the enhanced price which its demand alone has created. That enhancement reflects elements of the value that was created by the urgency of its need for the article. It does not reflect what ‘a willing buyer would pay in cash to a willing seller,’ in a fair market. . . . [T]he
enhanced value reflects speculation as to what the government can be compelled to pay. That is a hold-up value, not a fair market value. That is a value which the government itself created and hence in fairness should not be required to pay.61
We emphasize that the project influence rule is implicated in condemnation actions for property that is taken. When only a portion of the property is taken, leaving the landowner in possession of a “residue,” then any increase or decrease in the fair market value of the residue caused by the public improvement may be considered by the jury.62 The residue may be valued by its highest and best use that accounts for the public improvement.63
We hold that, under the project influence rule any increase or decrease in value to the condemned land directly attributable to the project for which the land is taken must be disregarded in determining the market value of the land.64 There are, of course, exceptional situations where evidence of enhancement or depreciation resulting from the taking are admissible, such as when the condemnor‘s proposed use of the land taken is consistent with the highest and best use of the property in the private marketplace.65 No such exceptional situation exists in this case.
However, Gomez‘s position plainly violates the project influence doctrine. The Commission cannot be required to pay an enhanced price for the property which its demand alone has created. Gomez‘s proposed method for valuing the land value does not reflect the market; it does not reflect what ‘a willing buyer would pay in cash to a willing seller,’ in a fair market. Rather, it reflects a value created solely by the Commission‘s need for the property. Gomez cannot show that the general land marketplace in Kanawha County, separate and apart from the Commission‘s needs, sought to pay dump fees to use the Nutter Farm as a site for depositing fill. To allow a jury to consider any increase in value attributable to the Commission‘s condemnation project would place Gomez in a better position than other sellers in the market, and in a better position than she would have enjoyed had there been no condemnation.
Accordingly, we affirm the circuit court‘s November 25, 2014, in limine ruling prohibiting Gomez from offering any evidence of an increased value to the Nutter Farm caused by the Commission‘s Runway 5 Ground Obstruction Removal Project.
C. Striking the Landowner‘s Appraiser
The circuit court‘s deadline for completing discovery was December 1, 2014. Gomez‘s third argument is that the circuit court erred when, in an order dated January 9, 2015, it struck her appraisal expert and refused to give her expert additional time to inspect the Nutter Farm and formulate an opinion about the property‘s value. The circuit court struck the expert for two reasons. First, after eight months of discovery, the expert failed to offer any opinion as to the fair market value of the property at the time of the Commission‘s taking. The only opinion offered by the expert was a criticism of the methods used by the Commission‘s expert appraiser.
Second, and more importantly, Gomez had asked the expert to develop an opinion that violated the project influence rule. Gomez asserted to the circuit court that the expert needed additional time to assess the enhanced value of the property, after the date of the taking, caused by the Commission‘s project.66
Rule 16 of the
If a party . . . fails to obey an order to provide or permit discovery . . . the court in which the action is pending may make such orders in regard to the failure as are just, and among others are the following:
. . .
(B) An order refusing to allow the disobedient party to support or oppose designated claims or defenses, or prohibiting that party from introducing designated matters in evidence[.]
When a party fails to disclose expert discovery in a timely fashion, we have stated that a trial court has substantial discretion to formulate a remedy:
The
West Virginia Rules of Evidence and theWest Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure allocate significant discretion to the trial court in making evidentiary and procedural rulings. Thus, rulings on the admissibility of evidence and the appropriateness of a particular sanction for discovery violations are committed to the discretion of the trial court. Absent a few exceptions, this Court will review evidentiary and procedural rulings of the circuit court under an abuse of discretion standard.69
“The imposition of sanctions by a circuit court under
It is undisputed that Gomez‘s counsel did not disclose an expert opinion on the fair market value of the property taken within the time period set by the court. Moreover, Gomez‘s counsel argued for an extension of time so that the expert could generate a report that would be inadmissible under the project influence rule.
After reviewing the record in this case, we find no abuse of discretion in the circuit court‘s January 9, 2015, ruling prohibiting Gomez‘s expert appraiser from testifying. The Commission would have been surprised and prejudiced by the expert‘s testimony in the planned-for February 2015 trial. Additionally, the assertions of Gomez‘s counsel after the close of discovery suggest that the expert‘s opinion would have been wholly inadmissible. We therefore affirm the circuit court‘s ruling striking Gomez‘s expert.
D. Striking Gomez‘s “Claims”
The Commission scheduled a deposition of Gomez for the morning of November 18, 2014, and provided proper notice. However, Gomez did not appear for her deposition. Counsel for Gomez appeared and stated he had met with Gomez the day before, and stated that Gomez said she would meet him at his office before traveling to the deposition site. However, counsel said his client had failed to meet him at his office that morning, and said repeated calls to Gomez were unanswered and that he was unable to locate her.
Thereafter, the Commission made a motion for sanctions against Gomez, and asked the circuit court to strike Gomez‘s “claims.” At a December 22, 2014, hearing, the circuit
In Cattrell Companies, Inc. v. Carlton, Inc., we stated that a circuit court may impose sanctions when a party fails to appear at a scheduled deposition, but only after making specific findings:
Before a circuit court may impose the sanction of dismissal or default judgment under
Rule 37(d) of the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure for a party‘s failure to attend a deposition, the court must first make a finding that the party‘s failure was due to willfulness or bad faith. Once this finding has been made, the circuit court must then weigh the following factors to determine if default judgment or dismissal is an appropriate sanction: (1) the degree of actual prejudice to the other party; (2) the effectiveness of less drastic sanctions; and (3) any other factor that is relevant under the circumstances presented.72
In the instant case, the circuit court made no finding that Gomez‘s failure to attend her deposition was willful or in bad faith, as required by Cattrell Companies. Even assuming willfulness or bad faith, the circuit court never weighed the actual prejudice to the Commission, the effectiveness of less drastic sanctions, or made any analysis of the parties’ situation. On this record, we find the circuit court abused its discretion by failing to conduct the required analysis under Cattrell Companies.
We additionally note that the circuit court‘s order, as written, is meaningless. The circuit court agreed to “strike the claims” of Gomez; we are unclear what the word “claim” means in the context of a condemnation case. A “claim” might mean Gomez‘s factual assertions or her defenses to the Commission‘s evidence. In a typical civil case, had the circuit court struck Gomez‘s “pleadings,” the meaning would be clearer: under
We need not discern the meaning of the word “claim.” We simply find that the circuit court erred by failing to make the specific findings required by Cattrell Companies, Inc. v. Carlton, Inc.
E. Judicial Notice of the Value of the Land Taken Based upon the Condemnation Commissioners’ Report
After the circuit court entered orders striking Gomez‘s “claims,” and striking Gomez‘s only expert on land valuation, the Commission made a motion for the circuit
Gomez argues that the circuit court wrongly took judicial notice of the condemnation commissioners’ reported value of her land interest. We agree, and reverse the circuit court‘s ruling.
Under
We reject the Commission‘s argument. While a condemnation proceeding is governed by the
However, any party may object to the condemnation commissioners’ report and demand a jury trial. Within 10 days after that report is filed,
either party may file exceptions thereto, and demand that the question of the compensation, and any damages to be paid, be ascertained by a jury, in which case a jury of twelve freeholders shall be selected and impaneled for the purpose, as juries are selected in civil actions.
Only if no timely objections to the report are filed must the circuit court, in most instances, confirm the report and accept the valuation.83
In the instant case, Gomez filed an objection to the condemnation commissioners’ report within 10 days. Once that objection was filed, constitutionally and statutorily the par- ties
F. Summary Judgment was Wrong
It is a well-established rule that summary judgment is appropriate “only when it is clear that there is no genuine issue of fact to be tried and inquiry concerning the facts is not desirable to clarify the application of the law.”84 The Commission asserted below that Gomez had no evidence to offer as to the valuation of her property, yet simultaneously contradicted that assertion by admitting that Gomez herself could testify to the valuation. The circuit court likewise acknowledged in its summary judgment order that evidence “could have [been] submitted at trial as to the value of the take” through “the testimony of Gomez.” Summary judgment was therefore plainly wrong.
Ordinarily, a person who is not qualified as an expert witness may not testify as to the value of property taken by condemnation (or about damages to the residue, if any). However, in a condemnation case, “[o]ur law has long recognized the admissibility of a landowner‘s opinion concerning the value of his land.”85 The “authorization for a landowner to testify is not merely the granting of permission to the litigants to act out” and “testify to grossly inflated values.”86
Gomez has the right to offer her opinion about the value of her one-third interest in the land before a jury. She may be aware of comparable sales (for example, her brothers’ sale of their one-third interests in the subject property to the Northgate developer for $58,333.33 each). Therefore, genuine issues of material fact existed for resolution by the jury concerning the just compensation due to Gomez for her interest in the Nutter Farm. It was error for the circuit court to grant summary judgment to the Commission.
IV. CONCLUSION
After careful consideration, we find no error in the circuit court‘s first three pretrial rulings: (1) The determination of whether land is being condemned for a public use is plainly a question of law solely for judicial consideration, and the circuit court correctly found the Commission‘s stated reasons for
As to the fourth pretrial ruling, we find that the circuit court‘s striking of Gomez‘s so-called “claims” as a sanction for her failure to appear at her deposition was error. Fifth, we find that the circuit court erred in taking judicial notice of the condemnation commissioners’ report on the value of the land.
Lastly, we find the circuit court erred in granting the Commission‘s motion for summary judgment. Gomez has a right to testify to the value of her interest in the property on the date of the taking by the Commission. The circuit court‘s March 12, 2015, order is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings.
Affirmed, in part, reversed, in part, and remanded.
Notes
City of Tulsa v. Mingo Sch. Dist. No. 16., 559 P.2d 487, 494 (Okla. App. 1976) (citations omitted).Market value is simply a practical standard adopted to provide the owner with his constitutionally guaranteed indemnity; it is not an end in itself. Moreover, it seems clear that the Constitution may require alternative means of indemnity where the market value standard proves inadequate. The United States Supreme Court has thus stated that it “has refused to make a fetish of market value, since it may not be the best measure of value in some cases.” It must be remembered that the purpose of any condemnation value rule is simply to put the owner “in as good (a) position pecuniarily as he would have occupied if his property had not been taken.”
In a condemnation proceeding, there is no statutory requirement that an answer be served and filed to a condemnation petition. SeePleadings. There shall be a complaint and an answer; a reply to a counterclaim denominated as such; an answer to a cross-claim, if the answer contains a cross-claim; a third-party complaint, if a person who was not an original party is summoned under the provisions of Rule 14; and a third-party answer, if a third-party complaint is served. No other pleading shall be allowed, except that the court may order a reply to an answer or a third-party answer.
(a) This rule governs only judicial notice of adjudicative facts.
(b) The court may judicially notice a fact that is not subject to reasonable dispute because it:
(1) is generally known within the trial court‘s territorial jurisdiction; or
(2) can be accurately and readily determined from sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.
In rare cases, an opinion on the value of the property taken can be offered by other lay witnesses with personal knowledge. The weight to be given to the testimony and the credibility of the witness is for the jury. See, e.g., Syllabus Point 5, Guyandotte Valley Ry. Co. v. Buskirk, 57 W.Va. 417, 50 S.E. 521 (1905) (“The opinions of persons residing near the property and who have known it for a considerable period of time, though not dealers in real estate nor specially informed as to prices, are admissible evidence on the question of its value.“); Syllabus Point 1, Tennessee Gas Transmission Co. v. Fox, 134 W.Va. 106, 58 S.E.2d 584 (1950) (“A witness in a proceeding in eminent domain who is acquainted with the land involved, or who has recently visited and examined it and is familiar with the market value of other lands in the same locality, or who owns and has lived upon the land, is sufficiently qualified to give his opinion of its market value. The opinion evidence of a witness so qualified is admissible but its weight and its credibility are questions for the jury.“). But see Syllabus Point 4, State Rd. Comm‘n v. Darrah, 151 W.Va. 509, 153 S.E.2d 408 (1967) (“In an eminent domain proceeding, a non-expert witness is not competent to express an opinion concerning the market value of the land taken or the damages to the residue, beyond benefits, unless he has some peculiar qualification or more knowledge in relation to the subject of such opinion than jurors are ordinarily supposed to have.“).
