In this condemnation case, the State of Texas challenges both the amount awarded for land taken as part of a highway improvement project and the compensability of severance damages to the remainder. The principal issue is whether the landowners are entitled to severance damages resulting from permanent denial of direct access to the highway if the restrictions on access changed the “highest and best use” of the property from commercial to residential. We hold that the landowners are not entitled to compensation for diminished value of the remainder because they have not suffered a material and substantial impairment of access. We therefore reverse the portion of the court of appeals’ judgment awarding severance damages and remand that claim to the trial court for further proceedings. The portion of the judgment awarding damages for the land taken is affirmed.
As part of a project to widen and elevate FM 1695, the State instituted condemnation proceedings to acquire approximately 12.89 acres of an unimproved 79.546 acre tract of land in Hewitt, Texas owned by Dawmar Partners, Ltd., LP and Howard Wayne and Beverly Ann Gruetzner, co-independent executors of the estate of Martha Lillian Attaway Gruetzner (collectively “the landowners”). 1 The taking divided the larger tract into a 3.671 acre northern remainder and a 62.981 acre southern remainder, and the only dispute in the condemnation proceeding was the amount of compensation owed to the landowners for the land taken and damage to the southern remainder. The landowners sought severance damages to the southern remainder because safety concerns related to the highway project necessitated eliminating all direct access to FM 1695 and its frontage roads from that portion of the tract, which reportedly changed the highest and best use of the property from commercial use to residential use despite the existence and extent of direct access to two other public roads.
The landowners objected to the special commissioners’ award of $267,000.00 for the taking and severance damages, and the case proceeded to trial. See Tex. PROP. Code § 21.018(a). At trial, the highest and best use of the property before condemnation was the central issue and was hotly contested. The landowners introduced evidence that the highest and best use of the property was to hold it for subsequent commercial development. There was also evidence that the loss of direct access to FM 1695 made the remainder suitable only for residential development. Although there was considerable conflicting evidence regarding the highest and best use of the property before and after the taking, the salient facts about the condition of the property, the degree of impaired access, remaining access points, and the status of development plans were undisputed.
The State argued that (1) diminished value resulting exclusively from restrictions on access is not compensable unless access is materially and substantially impaired, (2) the landowners retain sufficient access to the remainder property and FM 1695 via two other public roads, and (3) expert testimony regarding the market value of the condemned land and damages to the remainder was unreliable. The trial court entered judgment on a jury verdict awarding $561,662.64 in damages for the condemned land and $402,616.80 in severance damages, and the court of appeals affirmed.
*878 The focus of this appeal is the com-pensability of severance damages. The landowners claim that the restrictions on access lowered the total value of the property by changing the highest and best use of a separate economic unit from commercial to residential. The arguments in favor of compensability, as we perceive them, are: (1) diminished value resulting from a change in a property’s highest and best use is independently compensable or (2) an impairment of access that changes a property’s highest and best use is necessarily material and substantial or (3) the reasonableness of access must be evaluated in light of a property’s highest and best use.
We have long held that a change in a property’s use due to condemnation is relevant to the fair market value of the property, but that does not mean all diminished value is compensable.
See County of Bexar v. Santikos,
It is well settled that diminished value resulting from impaired access is compensable only when access is materially and substantially impaired.
City of Waco v. Texland Corp.,
The landowners apparently argue that access is materially and substantially impaired, as a matter of law, when loss of access changes the highest and best use of the property. If we were to accept this proposition, it would be a rare case in which a reduction of access would not have some impact on the value of property, and the “material and substantial” limitation would be effectively eliminated in the vast majority of cases, contrary to our body of impaired access law.
See, e.g., Schmidt,
In determining whether diminished value due to impaired access is compensa-ble, we first look to whether other access points remain after the taking and whether those access points are reasonable. See,
e.g., Archenhold,
In contrast, we have rejected impairment of access claims based on speculative or hypothetical uses of remainder property.
See Santikos,
We also rejected a similar claim for severance damages in another case involving diminished access to raw land.
Delany,
This case similarly lacks evidence of a material and substantial impairment of access. Although the southern remainder no longer has direct access to FM 1695 and its frontage roads, the remainder retains 2,165 feet of access to Old Ritchie Road and will acquire 1,827 feet of access to New Ritchie Road. 2 New Ritchie Road *880 is a two-lane road with a center turn lane, curbs, and gutters. Both roads are public roads that run virtually the entire length of the southern remainder, and both intersect FM 1695 at or near the point where the remainder fronts the highway. In addition, the property at issue is unimproved, and there is no evidence of existing driveways or drainage systems that would make access to the available roads impossible or impracticable. Furthermore, the property is zoned for residential use, and there is no evidence of a pending request for a zoning change, existing commercial development plans, or a contract for commercial use.
The restrictions on access in this case have resulted only in increased circuity of travel, which this Court has repeatedly held is not compensable.
See, e.g., State v. Wood Oil Distrib., Inc.,
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that access to the southern remainder is not materially and substantially impaired and the landowners are not entitled to severance damages as a matter of law. It was therefore error to allow evidence of diminished value to the remainder resulting from a change in the property’s highest and best use. We need not consider in this case the extent to which remaining access can ever be properly evaluated in light of reasonably foreseeable future uses because any future commercial development of the southern remainder is purely speculative.
Cf. Santikos,
*881
The State also challenges the amount awarded for the land taken, arguing that two of the landowners’ witnesses, Randy Reid and Howard Gruetzner, were not qualified to offer opinions on its value. The State contends that the erroneous admission of this testimony probably caused the rendition of an improper judgment as evidenced by the fact that the jury awarded the same amount to which these witnesses testified.
See
Tex.R.App. P. 61.1(a)(1). We conclude that Reid’s and Gruetzner’s testimony was cumulative of substantially similar evidence from another expert, David Bolton, whose testimony has not been challenged on appeal.
Cf.
Tex. R.App. P. 53.2(f). Therefore, any error in admitting Reid’s and Gruetzner’s testimony was harmless.
See Gee v. Liberty Mut. Fire Ins. Co.,
Because the jury’s award included non-compensable damages to the remainder, the State argues that we must remand the entire case for a new trial.
See Interstate Northborough P’Ship v. State,
Accordingly, without hearing oral argument, we affirm the portion of the judgment awarding compensation for the condemned land, but we reverse the portion of the judgment awarding severance damages and remand that part of the case to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. See Tex.R.App. P. 59.1.
Notes
. While the condemnation petition was pending, Martha Lillian Attaway Gruetzner passed away, and her estate was substituted as a party.
. In the record, the names of these roads are spelled both as “Richie” and “Ritchie”. It is unclear which, is the correct spelling, but the City of Hewitt website uses the spelling we *880 have adopted in this opinion. See http:// www.cityofhewitt.com (accessed September 23, 2008).
