Board of County Commissioners of County of Weld v. DPG Farms, LLC , 2017 COA 83 ( 2017 )


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  • COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS                                           2017COA83
    Court of Appeals No. 15CA1951
    Weld County District Court No. 14CV30182
    Honorable Julie C. Hoskins, Judge
    Board of County Commissioners of the County of Weld, a political subdivision
    of the State of Colorado,
    Petitioner-Appellee,
    v.
    DPG Farms, LLC,
    Respondent-Appellant.
    JUDGMENT AND ORDER AFFIRMED
    Division II
    Opinion by JUDGE HARRIS
    Dailey and Márquez*, JJ., concur
    Announced June 15, 2017
    Bruce Barker, County Attorney, Bob Choate, Assistant County Attorney,
    Greeley, Colorado; Hamre, Rodriguez, Ostrander & Dingess, P.C., Donald M.
    Ostrander, Joel M. Spector, Denver, Colorado, for Petitioner-Appellee
    Robinson Waters & O’Dorisio, P.C., Richard D. Judd, Brian A. Magoon, Jena R.
    Akin, Denver, Colorado, for Respondent-Appellant
    *Sitting by assignment of the Chief Justice under provisions of Colo. Const. art.
    VI, § 5(3), and § 24-51-1105, C.R.S. 2016.
    ¶1    In this condemnation action, respondent, DPG Farms, LLC
    (DPG), appeals from a judgment entered on a jury verdict after a
    valuation trial. The issue on appeal concerns the proper method for
    determining compensation when the condemned property, and
    portions of the remainder, are capable of producing income.
    ¶2    DPG argues that the district court erred in (1) determining as
    a matter of law that water storage was not the highest and best use
    of the property; (2) excluding its lost income evidence which, it says,
    was admissible under its income capitalization approach to valuing
    the affected property; and (3) denying a substantial portion of its
    request for costs. We affirm.
    I.   Background
    ¶3    Petitioner, the Board of County Commissioners of Weld
    County (the County), filed a petition in condemnation to extend a
    public road over 19 acres1 of DPG’s 760-acre property (the
    Property). When condemnation proceedings were initiated, the
    1 The condemned property included 16.96 acres in fee, 2.04 acres in
    permanent easements, and 2 temporary construction easements.
    The nature of land interests conveyed to the County is not at issue
    in this case, and there is no dispute regarding the value of the
    easements.
    1
    Property was used primarily for agricultural and recreational
    purposes.
    ¶4    The parties stipulated to the County’s immediate possession of
    the nineteen acres and proceeded to a valuation trial.2 DPG’s
    valuation encompassed two steps: (1) determining the highest and
    best use of the Property; and (2) in light of that determination,
    calculating the fair market value of the condemned property as well
    as any diminution in fair market value to the residue.
    ¶5    According to DPG’s experts, the highest and best use of the
    Property was mixed: portions of the Property were most
    advantageous for continued agricultural and recreational use, while
    other portions had the potential for gravel mining and subsequent
    water storage.
    ¶6    Specifically, approximately 280 acres of the Property contained
    gravel deposits. DPG’s experts testified that those acres could be
    mined over a period of time and then repurposed for water storage.
    The evidence of the feasibility of mining and water storage was set
    forth in a detailed development plan (the mining plan). The mining
    2Before filing the petition, the County paid DPG $148,719, the
    amount the County estimated as just compensation for the
    nineteen acres.
    2
    plan split the 280 minable acres into four areas — referred to as
    “cells” — located in a horizontal line across the Property. The
    nineteen-acre strip condemned by the County ran through Cell C.
    ¶7    DPG’s method of valuation proceeded as follows: first, it used
    primarily a comparable sales approach to calculate the
    pre-condemnation fair market value of the Property. DPG’s
    appraiser relied on six similar properties (though only two had
    potential for mining and water storage) to arrive at a per-acre value
    of $11,500, or $8.74 million for the entire 760-acre Property. The
    gravel mining expert, who was not an appraiser but had substantial
    experience buying and selling properties with mining potential,
    used a similar approach. He testified that, at the time of the
    condemnation, taking into account the expenses and losses
    inherent in gravel mining, a willing buyer would have paid
    approximately $5,000 per non-income-producing (agricultural) acre,
    and $10,000 per income-producing (mining) acre, or a total of $5.2
    million for the Property. The County’s own appraiser ultimately
    endorsed the mining expert’s pre-condemnation, fair market value
    of the Property.
    3
    ¶8    Next, to calculate the loss in value to the Property caused by
    the condemnation, DPG switched to what it calls an income
    approach. But rather than calculating a post-condemnation fair
    market value of the Property (that could be compared with the
    pre-condemnation value, as calculated by the appraiser and mining
    expert), DPG used its mining plan to compute the total income that
    could have been generated from the nineteen-acre strip ($1 million),
    as well as from a twenty-seven-acre portion of Cell C affected by the
    condemnation ($2.1 million). It then attempted to present the $3.1
    million loss figure as its compensable damages.
    ¶9    The district court excluded only the ultimate loss figure,
    concluding that without any evidence of that figure’s connection to
    the Property’s fair market value, the figure amounted to
    inadmissible frustration-of-plan damages. In light of the court’s
    ruling, DPG presented an alternative damages figure: the appraiser,
    using his $11,500 per-acre fair market value figure, testified that
    the Property’s value decreased by $550,000 — the value of the
    approximately forty-six acres (plus the easements) that were either
    condemned or damaged by the condemnation.
    4
    ¶ 10   The jury awarded DPG $183,795 in damages for the
    condemned property3 and nothing for any damage to the residue.
    ¶ 11   DPG filed a post-trial motion to recover its costs, as permitted
    by statute. It sought $248,680.92, much of which was attributable
    to expert witness fees. The district court rejected a substantial
    portion of the requested costs on the grounds that the costs were
    disproportionate to DPG’s success and that certain expert evidence
    had been excluded. The court awarded costs in the amount of
    $68,808.96.
    II.   DPG’s Contentions on Appeal
    ¶ 12   On appeal, DPG contends that the district court erred in
    rejecting water storage as the highest and best use of certain
    portions of the Property and in excluding its lost income evidence.
    DPG also argues that the court erred in disallowing a significant
    portion of its costs.
    3 The nineteen-acre condemned strip consisted of seven-and-a-half
    minable acres and eleven-and-a-half non-minable acres. The value
    of the easements was $14,500. DPG’s appraiser valued the
    condemned strip at $233,000 ($11,500 per acre X 19 acres +
    $14,500). DPG’s mining expert valued the strip at $147,000
    ($10,000 X 7.5 + $5000 X 11.5 + $14,500). The jury’s award of
    approximately $184,000 is close to the mid-point between the two
    numbers.
    5
    A.   Highest and Best Use of the Property
    ¶ 13   The measure of compensation in an eminent domain case
    turns on the value of the entire property as it exists at the time of
    the condemnation, “taking into consideration its highest and best
    future use.” Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs v. Vail Assocs., 
    171 Colo. 381
    ,
    389, 
    468 P.2d 842
    , 846 (1970). Under this principle, the property’s
    value is based on the most advantageous use to which the property
    reasonably may be applied and is not limited to its current
    condition. Dep’t of Highways v. Schulhoff, 
    167 Colo. 72
    , 77-78, 
    445 P.2d 402
    , 405 (1968); see, e.g., State Dep’t of Highways v.
    Mahaffey, 
    697 P.2d 773
    , 775-76 (Colo. App. 1984) (highest and best
    use of property was gravel mining despite land currently being
    vacant and undeveloped). The four factors to be used in
    determining a property’s highest and best use are legal
    permissibility, physical possibility, financial feasibility, and
    maximal productivity. See Appraisal Institute, The Appraisal of
    Real Estate 280 (14th ed. 2013).
    ¶ 14   Although the admissibility of evidence regarding property
    value is “governed by an expansive, rather than restrictive, rule,”
    City of Englewood v. Denver Waste Transfer, 
    55 P.3d 191
    , 195 (Colo.
    
    6 Ohio App. 2002
    ), a district court will not consider evidence of a property’s
    highest and best use that is overly speculative, 
    Schulhoff, 167 Colo. at 75
    , 445 P.2d at 404.
    ¶ 15   Most of the Property’s 760 acres could only be used for
    agricultural or recreational purposes. The dispute between the
    parties centered on the highest and best use of 280 acres of the
    Property, comprising cells A, B, C, and D, which contained gravel
    deposits. The district court determined that the highest and best
    use of those acres was gravel mining, but not water storage as well.
    ¶ 16   The determination of a property’s highest and best use is
    generally a factual question for the jury unless the evidence of
    highest and best use is so improbable or speculative that it should
    be excluded from the jury as a matter of law. City of Quincy v.
    Diamond Constr. Co., 
    762 N.E.2d 710
    , 715 (Ill. App. Ct. 2002); cf.
    Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs v. Rodgers, 
    2015 CO 56
    , ¶¶ 13, 15-17
    (explaining that, after presentation of evidence, if the court finds
    that a reasonable jury would not have a legally sufficient evidentiary
    basis to find for the party on that issue, the court may resolve the
    issue against the party as a matter of law).
    7
    ¶ 17   After DPG’s experts testified about the Property’s highest and
    best use, the district court determined, as a matter of law, that the
    evidence was too speculative to support a finding that water storage
    was the highest and best use of Cell C.4 We review that legal
    conclusion de novo. See E-470 Pub. Highway Auth. v. 455 Co., 
    3 P.3d 18
    , 22 (Colo. 2000).
    ¶ 18   The district court’s determination was based on the following
    evidence:
     The construction of a slurry wall was integral to DPG’s
    water storage plan. (A slurry wall is a reinforced,
    concrete wall structure that lines a mining pit and
    provides a barrier for water storage.) According to DPG’s
    engineering expert, construction becomes more difficult
    and risky as the depth of the slurry wall increases. An
    irregular bottom and porous materials also make
    construction more difficult, and these elements were
    present in Cell C.
    4The highest and best use evidence submitted by DPG focused on
    Cell C.
    8
     The slurry wall would have to be built approximately 108
    feet deep, possibly 116 feet deep. DPG’s engineering
    expert testified that he thought a 108-foot wall was
    possible, but that the deepest slurry wall he had
    experience with was 55 feet deep.
     The usual installation cost for a slurry wall is $3 million
    to $5 million, but because of the bedrock depth, the
    nature of the soil and other underground materials, and
    the additional equipment necessary for construction, the
    cost of a slurry wall in Cell C was estimated at almost
    $14 million.
     Although DPG had an estimate for the cost of the slurry
    wall, the experts’ analysis was so preliminary that they
    did not know at the time of trial whether it was feasible to
    construct a slurry wall at all. For example, DPG’s
    experts had drilled four boreholes to determine the soil
    conditions in Cell C, but DPG would not know whether
    Cell C was suitable for a slurry wall until after its experts
    drilled an additional eighteen boreholes and analyzed the
    results. DPG’s engineering expert acknowledged that the
    9
    outcome of any further investigation could change his
    opinions.
     DPG’s geologist acknowledged that the experts did not
    have sufficient information to determine whether water
    storage on Cell C would be a “good idea” even though it
    might be “possible.”
    ¶ 19   We conclude that the district court did not err in determining,
    as a matter of law, that the evidence was too speculative to support
    a jury finding that water storage was the highest and best use of
    Cell C. See Denver Waste 
    Transfer, 55 P.3d at 197
    (Valuation
    depends on the “reasonable” future use of the property, but “merely
    possible or imaginary uses or speculative schemes of its proprietor
    are to be excluded.”) (alteration omitted) (quoting Twin Lakes
    Hydraulic Gold Mining Syndicate, Ltd. v. Colo. Midland Ry., 
    16 Colo. 1
    , 5, 
    27 P. 258
    , 260 (1891)).
    B.   Exclusion of DPG’s Lost Income Evidence
    ¶ 20   The district court allowed DPG’s appraiser and mining expert
    to testify, consistent with DPG’s mining plan, that gravel mining of
    10
    Cell C would generate income.5 That evidence was admissible, the
    court ruled, because it was relevant to determining the Property’s
    fair market value. But when DPG attempted to introduce the lost
    income figures as the actual amount of compensation due, the
    court excluded that evidence. It reasoned that, on their own and
    unconnected to a fair market valuation of the Property, the lost
    income figures amounted to a request for damages based on the
    frustration of a hypothetical development plan, a type of
    compensation barred in eminent domain cases.
    ¶ 21   On appeal, DPG insists that evidence of lost income was
    admissible pursuant to an income capitalization approach to
    valuing the Property. We disagree.
    1.    Valuation Methods in Eminent Domain Cases
    ¶ 22   In an eminent domain case, the landowner is entitled to be
    reimbursed for both the value of the condemned property and the
    reduced value of the remaining property.
    ¶ 23   The amount of compensation owed for the condemned
    property is “measured by the actual fair market value of the
    5The mining plan contemplated gravel mining of cells A, B, and D,
    but did not include specific income figures for those cells.
    11
    property” at the time of the taking. Palizzi v. City of Brighton, 
    228 P.3d 957
    , 962 (Colo. 2010); see also Denver Waste 
    Transfer, 55 P.3d at 195
    (Just compensation is the “present reasonable market value”
    of the property in light of its “highest and best use.”). Fair market
    value is what a willing buyer would pay for the property if the owner
    had voluntarily offered it for sale. 
    Palizzi, 228 P.3d at 962
    ; see also
    CJI-Civ. 36:3 (2017) (“‘Reasonable market value’ means the fair,
    actual, cash market value of the property. It is the price the
    property could have been sold for on the open market under the
    usual and ordinary circumstances . . . .”).
    ¶ 24   Compensation for damage to the remainder of the property is
    measured by the difference in the fair market value of the residue
    immediately before and immediately after the taking. 4A Julius L.
    Sackman et al., Nichols on Eminent Domain § 14.02(3) (3d ed.
    2015; see also Wassenich v. City & Cty. of Denver, 
    67 Colo. 456
    ,
    466-67, 
    186 P. 533
    , 537 (1919).
    ¶ 25   There are three general approaches to establishing the fair
    market value of real estate: the comparable sales approach, the
    income approach, and the cost approach. 
    Mahaffey, 697 P.2d at 775
    . Only the first two methods are relevant here.
    12
    ¶ 26   The comparable sales approach aims to identify sufficiently
    similar properties — in size, use or development, or location —to
    arrive at a reasonable estimate of the fair market value of the
    condemned property. See Goldstein v. Denver Urban Renewal Auth.,
    
    192 Colo. 422
    , 426, 
    560 P.2d 80
    , 84 (1977).
    ¶ 27   The income approach values the property based on projections
    of the “net income generated by the property during the remainder
    of its productive life.” Denver Urban Renewal Auth. v. Berglund-
    Cherne Co., 
    193 Colo. 562
    , 565-66, 
    568 P.2d 478
    , 480 (1977).
    Under this approach, an appraiser analyzes a property’s capacity to
    generate benefits, usually an income stream, and then, using
    various techniques and mathematical procedures, “convert[s] these
    benefits into an indication of present value.” Appraisal Institute at
    445. “Overall, the income approach converts the income that the
    real estate is expected to generate into a factor that a reasonable
    buyer or seller would consider in determining fair market value.”
    W. Va. Dep’t of Transp. v. W. Pocahontas Props., L.P., 
    777 S.E.2d 619
    , 639 (W. Va. 2015).
    ¶ 28   The goal of both methods is to determine just compensation
    based on the impact of the condemnation on the present,
    13
    reasonable market value of the property. Jagow v. E-470 Pub.
    Highway Auth., 
    49 P.3d 1151
    , 1157 (Colo. 2002); see also Appraisal
    Institute at 439. And, if performed correctly, the comparable sales
    and income approach calculations should result in similar fair
    market valuations for the same property, providing further
    assurances to the appraiser that the final value opinion is reliable.
    Appraisal Institute at 439. Utilizing more than one valuation
    approach may therefore be preferable because the approaches can
    then be used “simultaneously as cross-checks upon one another,”
    which can be particularly important for complex, mineral-bearing
    land appraisals. W. Pocahontas 
    Props., 777 S.E.2d at 635-36
    (quoting W. Va. Dep’t of Highways v. Sickles, 
    242 S.E.2d 567
    , 569
    (W. Va. 1978)).
    ¶ 29   In contrast to damages based on the fair market value of the
    property, losses suffered from the frustration of the landowner’s
    special plan for the property are not compensable. See 4A Nichols
    on Eminent Domain at § 14.02(5). The prohibition on frustration-
    of-plan damages is based on the idea that an anticipated
    development plan cannot be viewed as an “accomplished fact,”
    because such an approach ignores the substantial but unknown
    14
    costs involved in implementing the plan. See 
    Schulhoff, 167 Colo. at 77
    , 445 P.2d at 405.
    ¶ 30   The line between evidence of a hypothetical development plan,
    the frustration of which is not compensable in damages, and
    evidence of potential income generation, the admission of which is
    relevant to an income approach, is not always easy to draw. In
    general, an owner cannot recover damages suffered by reason of
    being prevented from carrying out a particular scheme of
    improvement that exists only in contemplation at the time of trial.
    “However, under certain circumstances, evidence that a proposed
    use would result in a profit is admissible not for the purpose of
    enhancing the damages by showing the loss to the owner of a
    particular plan of operation, but to show that such proposed plan is
    a feasible plan and should be considered in fixing market value.”
    4A Nichols on Eminent Domain at § 14.02(5). Thus, the
    hypothetical plan is only relevant to establish “the price on which a
    willing buyer and a willing seller would agree for the property in its
    present condition.” Bd. of Assessment Appeals v. Colo. Arlberg Club,
    
    762 P.2d 146
    , 154 (Colo. 1988).
    15
    2.     DPG’s Evidence of Lost Income Was Not Admissible as the
    Measure of its Damages
    ¶ 31        DPG says that the court erred in excluding its evidence of lost
    income as damages from frustration of a hypothetical plan. It
    contends that its evidence of lost income was admissible under its
    income capitalization approach.
    ¶ 32        The County argues that DPG failed to characterize its
    methodology at trial as an income approach and should not be
    permitted to switch gears on appeal. In any case, the County says,
    even if DPG purported to use an income approach at trial, the lost
    income evidence was nonetheless inadmissible because lost income
    itself is not the proper measure of damages in an eminent domain
    case.
    ¶ 33        We agree with the County’s second contention and, therefore,
    need not resolve its first, except to note that DPG’s appraiser
    testified that he used an income approach in part, and that the
    County’s attorney objected at various points during the trial to
    DPG’s reliance on a flawed income approach.
    ¶ 34        We review the district court’s ruling to exclude DPG’s lost
    income evidence for an abuse of discretion. See Bly v. Story, 241
    
    16 P.3d 529
    , 535 (Colo. 2010). An abuse of discretion occurs where
    the trial court’s ruling was manifestly arbitrary, unreasonable, or
    unfair, or was based on a misunderstanding or misapplication of
    the law. See Jackson v. Unocal Corp., 
    262 P.3d 874
    , 880 (Colo.
    2011); People v. Lopez, 
    2016 COA 179
    , ¶ 43. Whether the court
    misapplied the law in making evidentiary rulings is reviewed de
    novo. 455 
    Co., 3 P.3d at 22-23
    .
    ¶ 35   As we have explained, just compensation in an eminent
    domain case is measured by the fair market value of the
    condemned property at the time of the taking and, with respect to
    damage to the residue, by the difference in fair market value of the
    residue before and after the condemnation. 
    Palizzi, 228 P.3d at 962
    ; 4A Nichols on Eminent Domain at § 14.02(3).
    a.    Valuation of the Condemned Strip
    ¶ 36   DPG presented evidence of the fair market value of the
    condemned strip: its appraiser testified that each of the nineteen
    acres was worth $11,500; its mining expert testified that each of the
    gravel-producing acres was worth $10,000, and each non-income-
    producing acre was worth $5,000.
    17
    ¶ 37   But DPG did not seek compensation based on its evidence of
    fair market value. Instead, it calculated the total amount of income
    that might have been generated from the condemned property over
    ten years, applied a capitalization rate to arrive at a present value
    for the lost income, and then sought reimbursement for the
    prospective income.
    ¶ 38   The nineteen-acre strip, which contained seven-and-a-half
    minable acres and eleven-and-a-half agricultural acres had a fair
    market value, according to DPG’s own experts, of somewhere
    between $132,500 (per the mining expert) and $218,500 (per the
    appraiser) (not including the $14,500 for the easements). But DPG
    sought damages of approximately $1 million based on lost income.6
    ¶ 39   An “income approach” to valuation is not an exercise whereby
    an expert simply computes prospective income from the property
    and then requests reimbursement in that amount. An income
    approach uses potential income from the property, along with all
    other factors that would be considered by a buyer, as evidence of
    6 The results of the income approach should have aligned with the
    results of the experts’ comparable sales approach. But here, the
    nineteen-acre strip was 2.5% of the Property but represented about
    15% of the Property’s total value.
    18
    the fair market value of the property in its current condition. The
    principles underlying an income approach to valuation reflect the
    distinction “between income as a criterion of value and income as
    evidence of value.” 5 Nichols on Eminent Domain at § 19.01. Net
    income alone is not “controlling on the issue of value”; it is merely
    one factor to be considered by the jury in conjunction with all other
    material evidence of fair market value. Id.; see also De Freitas v.
    Town of Suisun, 
    149 P. 553
    , 555 (Cal. 1915) (“The actual market
    value is the thing to be determined, and while net revenue should
    be considered, it does not, in general, furnish a conclusive measure
    of such market value.”); W. Pocahontas 
    Props., 777 S.E.2d at 634
    (The future earning power of real estate is “a powerful tool for
    calculating a fair market valuation of the real estate.”).
    ¶ 40   Thus, DPG’s evidence of a potential income stream was
    admissible not as the measure of its damages but rather, as the
    district court made clear in its order on the motions in limine, as a
    factor that could inform the fair market value of the Property. See
    
    Mahaffey, 697 P.2d at 775
    (using income approach, appraiser
    considered other expert opinions regarding potential income stream
    from gravel mining and arrived at a fair market value of the entire
    19
    property). And indeed, both the appraiser and the mining expert
    testified that the potential income stream from mining did inform
    their fair market valuations. Though the experts primarily used a
    comparable sales approach, the comparable sales were of properties
    that had the potential to generate income.
    ¶ 41   DPG may believe, in hindsight, that the fair market valuations
    by its experts did not take adequate account of the Property’s
    potential income. But DPG was not entitled to present its lost
    income figures to the jury as an alternative to fair market value.
    The income approach is an alternative to the comparable sales
    approach, but neither method is an alternative to fair market
    valuation — as we have noted, both approaches simply use different
    techniques for arriving at the fair market value of the property. See
    
    Jagow, 49 P.3d at 1157
    .
    b.   Valuation of Damage to the Residue
    ¶ 42   The same methodological flaws plagued DPG’s valuation of the
    damage to the residue. DPG’s theory was that the new road, which
    bisected Cell C, rendered approximately twenty-one acres of Cell C
    unsuitable for mining. In its most simplified form, the mining
    expert’s testimony established that the condemnation resulted in a
    20
    decrease in mining profits from Cell C in the amount of $2.1 million
    (in present value).
    ¶ 43   There are two problems with DPG’s residue valuation method.
    First, compensation for damage to the residue is measured by the
    difference in fair market value of the entire residue immediately
    before and after the condemnation. See Mack v. Bd. of Cty.
    Comm’rs, 
    152 Colo. 300
    , 
    381 P.2d 987
    (1963) (determination of
    residue damages based upon diminution in value of the entire
    residue). So it was improper for DPG to attempt to show a
    diminution in value of the 113 acres in Cell C only, when it retained
    an additional 627 acres of residue. See 4A Nichols on Eminent
    Domain at § 14.02(3)(a) (“[T]he landowner is entitled to receive, in
    addition to the value of the part taken, separate severance damages
    in order to be fully compensated for the diminution in value of the
    property with which the landowner is left.”) (emphasis added); see
    also City of Jacksonville v. Nixon, 
    442 S.W.3d 906
    , 910 (Ark. Ct.
    App. 2014) (“In partial-takings cases, the landowner is entitled to
    the value of the lands taken, plus damages to the lands not taken.”)
    (emphasis added).
    21
    ¶ 44   Second, the measure of damages still turns on fair market
    value. DPG’s experts had to answer three questions: What was the
    fair market value of the entire residue immediately before the
    taking? What was the fair market value of the entire residue
    immediately after? And what was the difference? See W.
    Pocahontas 
    Props., 777 S.E.2d at 645
    . That 280 acres of the
    residue contained gravel deposits could have factored into the
    answer to those questions. But DPG could not ignore the questions
    altogether and simply request reimbursement for its $2.1 million in
    lost income from Cell C. Lost income is not a valid substitute for
    fair market value, whether the land at issue is the condemned
    property or the residue.
    ¶ 45   As we have noted, DPG offered evidence of the Property’s fair
    market value. Based on this admissible evidence, the jury
    determined that the nineteen-acre condemned strip had a fair
    market value of $183,795.
    ¶ 46   As for the diminution in value of the residue, DPG presented
    evidence that twenty-one acres of Cell C, which had been suitable
    for mining, was rendered non-income-producing as a result of the
    condemnation. Based on the mining expert’s testimony, the jury
    22
    could have determined that the twenty-one acres decreased in value
    from $10,000 per acre to $5,000 per acre, a diminution in value of
    $105,000. But the appraiser, who was offered as the expert in
    valuation, testified that each acre, regardless of its income
    potential, was worth about $11,500. If the jury credited the
    appraiser’s testimony, it could have reasonably concluded that each
    of the twenty-one acres was worth $11,500 both before and after
    the condemnation, resulting in no diminution in value to the
    residue. The jury apparently credited the appraiser. DPG does not
    challenge the verdict as inconsistent with the valuation evidence
    admitted at trial.
    c.   The Flawed Valuation Evidence Was Properly Excluded
    ¶ 47    We discern no error in the district court’s exclusion of DPG’s
    lost income figures. In the order on the motions in limine, the court
    explained that DPG’s evidence was admissible to show the effect
    that the mining income “would have on the property’s current fair
    market price.” DPG, though, sought to present the evidence of lost
    income as its actual measure of damages, separate from (and
    irreconcilable with) the fair market valuation evidence presented by
    its experts. Because the lost income evidence, on its own, did not
    23
    reflect the proper measure of damages, the district court correctly
    excluded it. See, e.g., City of Aurora ex rel. Util. Enter. v. Colo. State
    Eng’r, 
    105 P.3d 595
    (Colo. 2005), (expert evidence properly excluded
    where expert’s methodology was flawed); see also Williams v. State,
    
    406 S.W.3d 273
    , 283 (Tex. App. 2013) (appraiser’s testimony is
    unreliable and therefore inadmissible if the appraiser violated well-
    established rules of valuation).
    ¶ 48   To the district court, the lost income evidence, untethered to a
    fair market valuation, amounted to inadmissible frustration-of-plan
    damages. We need not decide whether we, too, would characterize
    the inadmissible evidence in the same way as the district court. It
    is enough to say that the district court was right to exclude the lost
    income evidence under these circumstances. See People v. Phillips,
    
    2012 COA 176
    , ¶ 63 (appellate court may affirm trial court’s
    evidentiary ruling on any ground supported by the record).
    C.    Order on DPG’s Costs
    ¶ 49   The district court declined to reimburse DPG for most of its
    expert witness fees, finding that DPG’s costs were disproportionate
    to the judgment and that it was not entitled to reimbursement for
    expert testimony that was ultimately excluded. We review an award
    24
    of costs for an abuse of discretion. First Citizens Bank & Tr. Co. v.
    Stewart Title Guar. Co., 
    2014 COA 1
    , ¶ 50. Therefore, we will only
    disturb the award if it is manifestly arbitrary, unreasonable, or
    unfair. 
    Id. Because we
    conclude that the income valuation
    evidence presented by DPG’s experts was properly excluded, we
    cannot conclude that the district court abused its discretion in
    limiting DPG’s award of costs on this basis.
    III.   Conclusion
    ¶ 50   The judgment and cost order are affirmed.
    JUDGE DAILEY and JUDGE MÁRQUEZ concur.
    25