This appeal arises out of a condemnace. proceeding by the appellee Arkansas State Highway Commission and its construction project to widen that part of Highway 67 which runs through Pocohontas. The appellants, Donnie and Peggy Reed, own a flower shop located along Highway 67’s right-of-way. As part of the project, the Commission filed an action of condemnation and declaration of a taking for a temporary easement needed to construct curbs, gutters, and sidewalks within the Commission’s right-of-way abutting the Reeds’ property. The Commission interpleaded $100.00 as compensation for the estimated fair market value of the taking. The Reeds conceded that the Commission’s construction was contained wholly within the Commission’s highway right-of-way. Nonetheless, the Reeds responded by stating they intended to offer lay and expert testimony bearing on lost profits to its' business and other fair market value damages. The Commission, on the other hand, sought to limit the Reeds’ proof to the fair market value of the property taken by the temporary easement. Based on the Commission’s assertion, the Reeds’ damages were limited to the use of the construction easement for sixty days, which amounted to the $100.00 amount deposited by the Commission.
On March 8, 1999, prior to the commencement of a jury trial, the trial court conducted a hearing on two motions in limine filed by the Commission, whereby the Commission sought to exclude any lost profits evidence offered by the Reeds and to exclude testimony by their expert appraiser, R. M. Weaver. Mrs. Reed’s testimony, if given, was intended to show lost profits in the amount of $26,484.44, and Mr. Weaver’s testimony placed damages caused by the construction at $30,175.00. After listening to argument of counsel for
After the Reeds opted not to proceed further, the trial court suggested a directed verdict was in order, even though no trial testimony had been introduced. At this point, the Reeds were given the opportunity to proffer Mrs. Reed’s and Mr. Weaver’s testimonies. The Reeds also advanced an inverse condemnation argument, which was rejected by the trial court. The trial court concluded that the only damages shown were in the $100.00 amount deposited by the Commission, so it awarded that amount to the Reeds. The Reeds responded that they would appeal, and the hearing ended.
Following the March 8 hearing, the Reeds prepared the trial court’s precedent which the trial court signed and entered on May 20, 1999. The Reeds appealed from that judgment on June 2, 1999. However, the Commission discovered the May 20 order contained errors, and it filed a motion pursuant to Rule 60(b) of the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure to correct the May 20 judgment. To protect its claim on cross-appeal, the Commission, on June 7, 1999, filed its notice of appeal from the May 20 judgment.
Upon reviewing its May 20 order, the trial court found numerous errors. The order contained seven findings that mistakenly related that the Commission, as plaintiff, was granted a directed verdict on points such as the value of the construction easement and the Reeds’ inverse condemnation claim. The judgment was significantly erroneous, by stating (1) that the Reeds had been prohibited from testifying about their knowledge of rental values in the area as those values related to damages resulting from the Commission’s temporary easement, and (2) that the trial court permitted the introduction of Mr. Weaver’s appraisal as a joint exhibit. The trial court corrected the foregoing errors by entering a new judgment on June 15, 1999. Neither the Reeds nor the Commission filed an appeal from the June 15 corrected judgment.
On appeal, the Reeds seek to reverse the trial court’s May 20 judgment, arguing the trial court erred by excluding their market value evidence and by holding they had no inverse condemnation claim. The Commission, on the other hand, submits that, in the event this case is reversed on appeal, the trial court erred in the May 20 judgment by purporting to admit Weaver’s appraisal report. We are unable to reach the merits of this case because the parties appealed from the wrong judgment.
The central issue here is the effectiveness of the notices of appeal and cross-appeal which were filed after the entry of the trial court’s original May 20 judgment but prior to the trial court’s correction of its judgment pursuant to Rule 60. Although neither party raises the issue, the question of whether an order is final and subject to appeal is a jurisdictional question which the Court will raise sua sponte. Arkansas Savings & Loan Association v. Corning Savings & Loan Ass’n,
Appeal and cross-appeal dismissed.
