Warren and Birdie Sickles owned a 29-acre farm in Monongalia County. About 1952 they had built a residence, barn, and other outbuildings on this property where they raised cattle and thoroughbred Togganburg goats. The residence was a one and one-half story house with four rooms, a bath, and basement. Most of the land was cleared, part of it was wooded, and like most West Virginia land, it was divided between hillside and flat land. The property fronted for a distance of 1700 feet on Aarons Creek Road, approximately two miles from the City of Morgantown.
In April 1971, the State took 12.48 acres of the Sickles property for the construction of a modern, four-lane highway connecting Interstate 79 with Cumberland, Maryland. This take included all improvements and all frontage on the Aarons Creek Road and left a remainder of approximately 17 landlocked acres. The State’s appraiser testified to a market value for the entire property with improvements immediately before the taking of $14,800.00, of which $2,500.00 was attributable to the remaining 17 landlocked acres, the value of which was diminished by $1,250.00 as a result of the taking. Consequently the State’s expert testified that the total fair market value of the property taken, plus the damage to residue, amounted to $13,550.00.
The appellant landowner, Mrs. Sickles, placed a valuation on the property taken plus the damage to the residue of $44,000.00. She based her opinion upon a
At the conclusion of the trial, the jury awarded the landowners $18,000.00 for all damages. The landowners now appeal on the grounds that Mrs. Sickles should have been permitted to testify with regard to the foundation of her opinion on the value of her land, namely the price paid for comparable pieces of real estate in the general vicinity.
I
There are three fundamental techniques which are used in the appraisal of real estate, and in the appraisal of complex property consisting of different qualities of land and numerous improvements, all three can be used simultaneously as cross-checks upon one another. All three of these techniques in the hands of an expert appraiser are designed to provide some estimation of what a willing buyer, desirous of buying
Our law has long recognized the admissibility of a landowner’s opinion concerning the value of his land.
Clay County Court v. Adams,
In the case before us there were six allegedly comparable transactions which the landowners sought to introduce into evidence. Of the six allegedly comparable parcels, the record demonstrates that at least one of them involved not only payment by the West Virginia Department of Highways for land actually taken but also damages for injury to residue. Our law indicates that sales involving damage to residue are not “comparable” and, therefore, not admissible into evidence to establish a per acre land value.
United Fuel Gas Co. v. Allen,
The Department of Highways argues that the other five parcels of land were not comparable because they involved less than an acre, or the sales were too distant
in time, or the land contained improvements which were not comparable, or the topography was markedly dissimilar. While the trial court would undoubtedly be permitted to exclude utterly irrelevant evidence offered under the guise of comparable sales, we hold that where the sales sought to be introduced are in the same general vicinity, are similar in character to the land involved, and are not so distant in time, in light of the nature of the economy in the area where the land is located, as to be irrelevant, questions such as size, topography, value of improvements, and proximity of the sale to the date of the taking all go to the weight of the evidence rather than its admissibility.
See State Road Commission v. Ferguson,
II
The appellants further argue that the trial court erred in forbidding their counsel to cross-examine the State’s expert concerning the sales which the appellants had originally sought to introduce into evidence through Mrs. Sickles’ testimony. With the exception of the tract
of land previously discussed, for which the purchase price included damages for injury to residue, we find that the trial court erred in circumscribing counsel’s cross-examination of the condemnors’ expert witness. While some cross-examination was permitted in the record, the court consistently sustained objections to extensive examination when the expert said that he had not considered one of the subject pieces of property either because he did not think that it was comparable or because the sale occurred after he had made his appraisal. Where an appraiser has not considered a sale the court should permit the landowners’ counsel to set forth the facts of the sale and inquire of the expert whether knowledge of such a sale would have changed his appraisal, and if not, why not. Where the facts used in such cross-examination are in question, and upon proper motion, the trial court in the exercise of his discretion may require counsel to prove them first, but in this case there already was an offer of proof which had been rejected.
See Clay County Court v. Adams,
Accordingly, for the reasons set forth above the judgment of thé Circuit Court of Monongalia County is reversed and the case is remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
Notes
We note that in West Virginia eminent domain proceedings, “peculiar weight is given to the verdict where a view has been had.”
Clay County Court v. Adams,
