Truck Parts & Service, Inc. appeals the order of the superior court denying its motion for new trial. Appellants’ sole enumeration is that the trial court erred in denying appellants’ motion for directed verdict on the issue of damages in that the jury was allowed to consider elicited hearsay testimony which had no probative value and was not based upon an adequate foundation. Specifically, appellants assert that only inadmissible hearsay evidence was introduced as to the value of a building removed without authority from appellee/ plaintiff’s property by appellant/defendants. Held:
1. No timely and specific objection was posed at trial to appellee’s testimony concerning the value of the building. Thus, any foundation objection thereto was waived.
Patton v. Bank of LaFayette,
2. “The standard for granting a directed verdict or a judgment notwithstanding the verdict are the same. Where there is no conflict in the evidence as to any material issue, and the evidence introduced, with all reasonable deductions therefrom, shall demand a particular verdict, such verdict shall be directed.”
Pendley v. Pendley,
Appellant contends that the sole evidence regarding the value of a certain building removed from appellee’s property was hearsay testimony of appellee that the value of the building was worth $15,000 to $20,000.
Appellee testified that the building appellant removed was a metal, two-bay shop, approximately ninety feet long and sixty feet wide. Parts of the disassembled building included metal sheets, metal bolts and not less than eight to ten metal beams. Appellee laid the foundation for admission of three photographs of the building; one showed the interior, one was an exterior view of the building, and one showed the building exterior from the side. These photographs were admitted into evidence. Other photographs were identified and admitted showing how the building was removed from the land.
*167 Thereafter, appellee testified that the value of the removed building was $15,000 to $20,000. He subsequently admitted he had gotten the figure testified to as to the building’s value from an “estimate” obtained from someone in the business of installing or erecting buildings and not present in court. Appellee also agreed that “those two lists of damages . . . were just somebody else’s opinion and not yours,” and further conceded he had no factual basis, other than what he thought or speculated, for telling the jury that he suffered total damages in the amount of $29,000. However, appellee re-affirmed that, although he had no independent facts to support his claim for damages, his figures were “based on estimates” he had been given.
Construing appellee’s testimony in its totality and in a light most favorable to verdict and judgment
(Dept. of Transp. v. Hillside Motors,
However, appellants, relying in part on
Reeves v. Crawford,
Generally, admissibility of evidence rests in the sound discretion of the trial court.
Gene Thompson Lumber Co. v. Davis Parmer Lumber Co.,
Additionally, assuming arguendo that appellee’s testimony that the building had a value of between $15,000 and $20,000 was without probative value, nevertheless there exists in the record (by means of photographs and appellee’s testimony as to the type of construction and general size of the building) some evidence from which the jury could find that the building had some value. As the jury could find the building had some value, a motion as to directed verdict as to damages for the removal of the building was not demanded by the evidence, and appellants’ contention that the trial court erred in denying them a directed verdict as to the issue of damages for building removal would remain without merit. As appellants did not enumerate as error that the verdict and judgment were excessive, this issue is not before us on appeal.
Judgment affirmed.
