State v. Gleannloch Commercial Development, LP ( 2018 )


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  • Opinion issued August 30, 2018
    In The
    Court of Appeals
    For The
    First District of Texas
    ————————————
    NO. 01-16-00427-CV
    ———————————
    THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellant
    V.
    GLEANNLOCH COMMERCIAL DEVELOPMENT, LP, Appellee
    On Appeal from the County Civil Court at Law No. 3
    Harris County, Texas
    Trial Court Case No. 1041442
    OPINION
    Appellant, the State of Texas, challenges the trial court’s judgment, entered
    after a jury trial, in favor of appellee, Gleannloch Commercial Development, L.P.
    (“Gleannloch”), for $19,486,940.00 in condemnation damages to real property. In
    four issues, the State contends that the evidence is legally insufficient to support
    the jury’s award of “remainder damages” to two tracts of Gleannloch’s real
    property and the trial court erred in admitting evidence regarding non-comparable
    sales, admitting evidence of non-compensable remainder damages, and excluding
    an expert’s opinion that one of the pertinent tracts of land suffered no remainder
    damages.
    We affirm.
    Background
    Gleannloch owned two vacant tracts of land, a 68.511-acre tract and a
    20.789-acre tract, located in the Gleannloch Farms master-planned community on
    Boudreaux Road near the city of Tomball, in Harris County, Texas. The State
    petitioned the county court to condemn two parcels and easements from these two
    tracts for construction of Segment F-2 of State Highway 99 (the “Grand
    Parkway”), which was to be built over a portion of Boudreaux Road.
    In regard to Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract, the State, in December 2013,
    petitioned the county court to condemn a 22.435-acre tract (“Parcel 208”) and a
    0.1885-acre temporary easement (“Parcel 208 TE”). The county court appointed
    three special commissioners to determine the fair market value of the land.
    Following a hearing, the commissioners awarded Gleannloch $9,250,00.00. Both
    the State and Gleannloch filed objections to the award and requested a jury trial.
    On May 14, 2014, the State deposited the full amount of the commissioners’ award
    2
    into the court’s registry, which established the date of the taking of Parcel 208
    from Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract. And Gleannloch withdrew those funds.
    In regard to Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre tract, the State, in March 2014,
    petitioned the county court to condemn an 8.966-acre tract (“Parcel 220”) and
    1.3359 acres comprising two temporary easements (“Parcel 220 TE 1 & 2”). The
    county court appointed three special commissioners to determine the fair market
    value of the land. Following a hearing, the commissioners awarded Gleannloch
    $3,289,596.00. Both the State and Gleannloch filed objections to the award and
    requested a jury trial. On September 3, 2014, the State deposited the full amount
    of the commissioners’ award into the court’s registry, which established the date of
    the taking of Parcel 220 from Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre tract. And Gleannloch
    withdrew those funds.
    Pre-trial motions
    The Parcel 208 suit and Parcel 220 suit were consolidated over the State’s
    objections. The State filed a pre-trial motion to exclude “non-comparable” sales
    data utilized by Matthew Deal, Gleannloch’s appraisal expert, in forming his
    opinion of the condemnation damages resulting from the taking of Parcel 208. The
    State argued that Deal’s reliance on sales of small properties, consisting of 3.0 or
    fewer acres, was improper because his appraisal for the Parcel 208 taking was
    based on a valuation of the entire 68.511-acre tract as a whole. The State further
    3
    argued that because the smaller properties were not comparable in size to the
    68.511-acre tract, the data concerning these sales was not proper for purposes of
    establishing the value of the tract. In response, Gleannloch asserted that the sales
    data concerning the smaller properties was not used as direct comparables, even
    though Deal did consider them in forming his opinion of the market value of the
    68.511-acre tract. Similarly, at a pre-trial hearing on the State’s motion, Deal
    testified that although he considered the sales in forming his valuation, he did not
    use them as direct comparables.        He explained that he did not make any
    adjustments to the sales data concerning the small properties and he considered
    that data because it is the type of market data that buyers and sellers would
    consider in valuing the subject property. At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial
    court denied the State’s motion to exclude the sales data concerning the small
    properties.
    The State also filed several pre-trial motions1 to exclude evidence of
    “non-compensable” damages to the remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511 and
    20.789-acre tracts.    Specifically, the State asserted that the testimony of
    Gleannloch’s witnesses concerned non-compensable damages for impairment of
    1
    The State filed three motions pertaining to their non-compensable damages
    argument: (1) a motion to exclude Deal’s testimony on remainder damages, (2) a
    motion to exclude evidence of community damages generally, and (3) a motion to
    exclude the opinions of David Bolton, Ron Dagley, and any other witness,
    regarding damages to the remainder properties based on community damages.
    4
    access and community damages to the remainder of the tracts, including circuity of
    travel, impaired visibility, diversion of traffic, or other inconveniences or changes
    in character to the property associated with the construction of the Grand Parkway.
    In response, Gleannloch asserted that its remainder damages were not community
    damages or incurred as a result of impaired access. Rather, the remainder damages
    arose from the change in character of the property resulting from the use of the part
    of the property taken.
    At a pre-trial hearing on the State’s motions, Deal testified that the taking of
    Parcel 208 changed the highest and best use of the northern remainder from
    “commercial” to “multifamily” because the Grand Parkway isolates the northern
    remainder from the rest of the Gleannloch Farms master-planned community. He
    noted that the nature of the change of the character of the remainder was primarily
    due to the elimination of “reciprocal access” or “cross accessibility” between the
    properties. In regard to the southern remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract,
    Deal explained that the State’s taking resulted in its loss of “synergy” and
    connectivity to the northern remainder, which was due to, among other things, the
    change in character of Boudreaux Road from a major thoroughfare to only a
    connector street. David Bolton, Gleannloch’s Parcel 220 appraisal expert, testified
    that the southwest remainder of Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre tract was damaged
    because it is no longer adjacent to property with a commercial “highest and best
    5
    use” that fronts on Boudreaux Road.         And Ron Dagley, a representative of
    Gleannloch, testified that the remainder to Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre tract was
    damaged because a freeway now runs “in front of it.” After the hearing, the trial
    court denied the State’s motions.
    Gleannloch filed a pre-trial motion to exclude the opinion of the State’s
    expert, Paul Hornsby, that the remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract
    suffered no damages. In its motion, Gleannloch asserted that Hornsby improperly
    applied the “project influence” rule in valuing the remainder property. The trial
    court granted Gleannloch’s motion, and Hornsby was not allowed to testify
    regarding the damage to the remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract.
    Gleannloch’s evidence at trial
    At trial, Deal testified that the highest and best use for Gleannloch’s
    68.511-acre tract before the State’s taking was as a commercial, mixed-use
    development. He explained that the area is a “significant growth area for Houston”
    and, due to the population increase, there has been significant development of
    commercial property in the area. He explained that the vacant 68.511-acre tract
    was part of Gleannloch’s commercial reserves—an area that had been designated
    from the beginning to be developed with commercial property to serve the
    residential population.
    6
    In forming his valuation opinion, Deal used the “sales comparison approach”
    and relied on the sales of eight different properties, which he asserted were
    comparable to Parcel 208 based on use, demographics, and traffic counts. The
    properties ranged in size from 4.5 to 35.7 acres and in price from $7.61 to $21.00
    per square foot.2 These comparables include a 21-acre tract across the street from
    Parcel 208, purchased by H.E.B. for $7.00 per square foot.              Deal performed
    adjustments to account for the differences between these properties and Parcel 208,
    taking into account, among other things, differences in income levels, population
    density, and traffic. Based on his analysis, Deal opined that the 68.511-acre tract
    as a whole was worth $8.00 per square foot, making the total pre-taking value of
    the tract, assuming no taking for the Grand Parkway project, $23,874,856.00.
    Accordingly, he opined that the value of Parcel 208 was $7,818,200.00.
    Deal also testified regarding the damage to the remainder of Gleannloch’s
    68.511-acre tract, after the taking of Parcel 208, which, as demonstrated in the
    illustration below, consists of a northern remainder of 37.788 acres and a southern
    2
    Deal also examined the sales of fifteen properties that were not comparable in size,
    for which he made no adjustments. He explained that he did not use them as
    comparable sales, but only in regard to his analysis of highest and best use
    considerations for the property as well as what type of commercial developments
    might be attracted to the area.
    7
    remainder of 8.210 acres.3 He opined that the total value of the remainder property
    before the taking was $16,056,656.00, based on the $8.00 per square foot
    valuation.
    Regarding the northern remainder, Deal explained that this portion of
    Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract is now completely cut off from Gleannloch Farms
    by the taking of the 400-foot wide Parcel 208 for the Grand Parkway, through
    which there is no direct access. And the taking eliminated a lighted intersection
    that once ran through the property on Boudreaux Road and connected the northern
    remainder to the rest of the community. Thus, the use of the northern remainder as
    3
    There is also a small, one-foot wide piece of land that is a totally landlocked third
    remainder which Deal testified essentially has no value, but to which he attributed
    damages of $100.00.
    8
    a commercial, mixed-use development in conjunction with Gleannloch Farms, with
    internal drive systems connecting the various parts of the tract, was removed by the
    taking. Additionally, Deal testified that the taking will result in decreased traffic
    on Boudreaux Road, which was once a major thoroughfare, because it is now cut
    off by the Grand Parkway and is only a connector street.
    Based on his analysis, Deal determined that the highest and best use for the
    northern remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract, after the taking, would be as
    a multifamily apartment development. And he valued the northern remainder at
    $4.50 per square foot. This reduced the northern remainder’s post-taking value to
    $7,407,239.00, resulting in damage of $5,761,185.00. Deal also used the “sales
    comparison approach” to value the remainder after the taking. His $4.50 per
    square foot value was based in part on an actual sale of approximately half of the
    northern remainder for that same value within a few months of the taking. He also
    considered an actual sale of a portion of the remainder of Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre
    tract, after the taking of Parcel 220, for approximately $5.00 per square foot for an
    apartment development.
    Regarding the southern remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract, Deal
    testified that the impact on it is less than the impact on the northern remainder
    because it is still connected to Gleannloch Farms. However, its value was still
    impacted by the taking of Parcel 208 because it no longer had the “synergy” it
    9
    would have had if it had cross-access to the northern remainder. Further, H.E.B.,
    after the taking, decided to orient its development adjacent to the southern
    remainder so that the back of its store, instead of its front, now faces the southern
    remainder, which makes it less attractive from a commercial-development
    perspective.
    Based on his analysis, Deal determined that the highest and best use for the
    southern remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract, after the taking of Parcel
    208, would be as a commercial retail development. And he valued the southern
    remainder at $7.50 per square foot.       This reduced the southern remainder’s
    post-taking value to $2,682,075.00, resulting in damage of $178,805.00. Deal also
    used the “sales comparison approach” to value the remainder after the taking. His
    $7.50 per-square-foot value was based in part on an actual contract for the sale of
    7.20 acres of the southern remainder for $7.50 per square foot to be used as a
    pharmacy and other retail purposes. He also considered an actual sale of 21.327
    acres, adjacent to the southern remainder, to H.E.B. for $7.00 per square foot.
    Thus, Deal opined that the total damage to the remainder of Gleannloch’s
    68.511-acre tract, after the taking, was $5,967,242.00.
    Deal also calculated the value of the State’s Parcel 208 TE taking from
    Gleannloch for a temporary construction easement of 8,211 square feet.            He
    applied a ten percent “rental rate” to the $8.00 per square foot value for a total of
    10
    $13,138.00 owed to Gleannloch by the State for its use of this property over a
    two-year period.
    In total, Deal opined that the just and adequate compensation due to
    Gleannloch for the taking of Parcel 208 and Parcel 208 TE from its 68.511-acre
    tract was $13,798,580.00, including damage to the remainder of the tract.
    Bolton testified that, in regard to the State’s taking of Parcel 220,
    Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre tract should be separated into two economic units for
    appraisal of its pre-taking value, as demonstrated in the illustration below. He
    identified these two units based on the “intended use in the land use plan” and
    because the portion fronting Boudreaux Road is “slated for commercial which is
    typical and usual for the frontage portion of reserves such as this property.”
    11
    Bolton explained that Economic Unit 1, the northernmost 8.517 acres
    fronting Boudreaux Road, had a highest and best use as a retail and small
    commercial (or “pad site”) development. Economic Unit 2, the remaining 12.272
    acres to the south, had a highest and best use as a multifamily development.
    In forming his opinion as to the pre-taking value of Parcel 220, Bolton also
    utilized the “sales comparison approach.” For Economic Unit 1, he used eleven
    comparable property sales, ranging in size from 1.15 to 6.4 acres and in price from
    $12.25 to $25.00 per square foot. Nine of these comparable sales are in close
    proximity to a grocery store, as Parcel 220 is located next to an H.E.B. Bolton
    made adjustments to account for the differences between the properties and
    Economic Unit 1, taking into account differences that might make each sale
    inferior or superior to the subject property. Based on his analysis, Bolton opined
    that the pre-taking market value of Economic Unit 1 was $13.75 per square foot, or
    $5,101,181.00.
    For Economic Unit 2, Bolton used four comparable property sales, ranging
    in size from 15.063 to 23.533 acres and in price from $5.45 to $7.93 per square
    foot.    He then made adjustments to account for the differences between the
    properties and Economic Unit 2. Based on his analysis, Bolton opined that the
    pre-taking market value of Economic Unit 2 was $5.50 per square foot, or
    $2,940,295.00.     Thus, he opined that the total market value of the entire
    12
    20.789-acre tract, before the taking, was $8,041,476.00, the sum of his value for
    both Economic Unit 1 and Economic Unit 2. Because the State’s taking of Parcel
    220 encompassed all of Economic Unit 1, but only 19,547 square feet of Economic
    Unit 2, Bolton valued the part actually taken at $5,208,690.00.
    Bolton also testified regarding the damage to the remainder of Gleannloch’s
    20.789-acre tract, which, as demonstrated in the illustration below, consists of a
    southwest remainder and a northeast remainder.
    He conducted a second appraisal of post-taking comparable sales including
    an actual sale of a portion of the northern remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre
    tract and the actual sale of the southwest remainder itself, which sold three months
    after the taking for $5.00 per square foot. Bolton valued the southwest remainder
    at $5.00 per square foot, and he valued the northeast remainder at zero because it
    was unusable and cut off from the rest of the property by the State’s easements.
    13
    Thus, Bolton opined that the total damage to the remainder of Gleannloch’s
    20.789-acre tract, post-taking, was $415,661.00. And, he valued the damage for
    the taking of Parcel 220 TE 1 & 2 at $64,000.00. In total, Bolton opined that the
    just and adequate compensation due to Gleannloch for the taking of Parcel 220 and
    Parcel 220 TE 1 & 2 from its 20.789-acre tract was $5,688,360.00, including
    damage to the remainder of the tract.
    The State’s evidence at trial
    Hornsby testified that to determine the pre-taking value of Gleannloch’s
    68.511-acre tract, he divided it into two economic units because it was large and
    unlikely to be developed as one tract.        He explained that Economic Unit 1,
    approximately 40 acres on the west side of the tract, had a highest and best use as a
    multifamily development. Economic Unit 2, the remaining 28.5 acres on the east
    side of the tract bordering the former intersection of Boudreaux Road and
    Gleannloch Forest Drive, had a highest and best use as a commercial or retail
    development.
    For Economic Unit 1, Hornsby used three comparable sales, ranging in price
    from $6.00 to $6.50 per square foot. He made adjustments to account for the
    differences between the properties and Economic Unit 1. Based on his analysis,
    Hornsby opined that the pre-taking market value of Economic Unit 1 was $6.10
    per square foot, or $10,594,096.00.       For Economic Unit 2, he used three
    14
    comparable sales, ranging in price from $5.15 to $9.50 per square foot. He made
    adjustments to account for the differences between those properties and Economic
    Unit 2. Based on his analysis, Hornsby opined that the pre-taking market value of
    Economic Unit 2 was $7.30 per square foot, or $9,107,626.00. Applying these
    values, he determined the value for Parcel 208, the 22.44-acre tract taken by the
    State, was $6,296,964.00, and the value of Parcel 208 TE, taken by the State for a
    temporary construction easement, was $10,017.00. In total, Hornsby opined that
    the just and adequate compensation due to Gleannloch for the taking of Parcel 208
    and Parcel 208 TE from its 68.511-acre tract was $6,306,981.00.
    As noted above, the trial court precluded Hornsby from testifying about the
    damage to the remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract after the taking of
    Parcel 208. However, the State did make an offer of proof as to the testimony
    Hornsby would have given on remainder damages had he been permitted to testify.
    Michael Urban, the State’s Parcel 220 expert, testified that, in regard to the
    State’s taking of Parcel 220, Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre tract should be separated
    into two economic units for appraisal of its pre-taking value. And he divided the
    units up in the same manner as Gleannloch’s expert, Bolton. Using comparable
    sales and adjustments, Urban valued Economic Unit 1 at $7.50 per square foot and
    Economic Unit 2 at $5.25 per square foot, opining that Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre
    15
    tract had a total pre-taking value of $5,589,108.00. Applying these values, he
    determined that the value of the 8.97-acre tract actually taken was $2,885,085.00.
    Urban further testified that the southwest remainder had the same market
    value post-taking and, thus, suffered no damage. However, he explained that the
    northeast remainder of Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre tract was 97% damaged because
    it was cut off from the rest of the property by the State’s easement and suffered
    $161,061.00 in damages. He also assessed the value of the damage for the taking
    of Parcel 220 TE 1 & 2 at $42,770.00. In total, Urban opined that the just and
    adequate compensation due to Gleannloch for the taking of Parcel 220 and Parcel
    220 TE 1 & 2 from its 20.789-acre tract was $3,088,916.00, including damage to
    the remainder of the tract.
    Jury charge and judgment
    After the parties rested, the trial court presented its charge to the jury. It
    included the following instructions and definitions:
    JURY INSTRUCTION NO. 1
    Market Value
    You are instructed that “market value” means the price that the
    property would bring when it is offered for sale by one who desires to
    sell, but is not obligated to sell, and is bought by one who desires to
    buy, but is under no necessity to buy, taking into consideration all
    uses of which the property is reasonably adaptable and for which it
    either is or in all reasonable probability will become available in the
    marketplace within the reasonably foreseeable future. In making your
    16
    determination of “market value[,”] you will consider the highest and
    best use of the property involved.
    JURY INSTRUCTION NO. 2
    Highest and Best Use
    You are instructed that “highest and best use” means the reasonably
    probable and legal use of the property, which is physically possible,
    appropriately supported, financially feasible, and that results in the
    highest value.
    JURY INSTRUCTION NO. 3
    (a) The Market Value “Before the Taking”: You are instructed
    that in determining the market value of the property taken from
    Gleannloch and Gleannloch’s remainder property “before the
    taking[,”] the market value in each instance shall be determined as
    if there were never a Grand Parkway toll road project.
    (b) The Market Value “After the Taking”: You are instructed that
    in determining the market value of Gleannloch’s remainder
    property “after the taking[,”] you shall consider the effects, if any,
    that the State’s taking, and the State’s proposed use of the property
    taken for its toll road project, may have had on the market value of
    Gleannloch’s remainder property “after the taking.”
    After hearing the arguments of counsel and retiring to consider its verdict,
    the jury awarded Gleannloch its damages in accord with the testimony of its
    experts.   It awarded Gleannloch $7,818,200.00 for the taking of Parcel 208,
    $5,967,242.00 for damage to the remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract, and
    $13,138.00 for the taking of Parcel 208 TE.           And it awarded Gleannloch
    $5,208,690.00 for the taking of Parcel 220, $415,661.00 for damage to the
    remainder of Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre tract, and $64,009.00 for the taking of
    17
    Parcel 220 TE 1 & 2. Thus, the jury awarded Gleannloch $13,798,580.00 for the
    taking of and damage associated with Parcel 208 and $5,688,260.00 for the taking
    of and damage associated with Parcel 220.             In total, it awarded damages to
    Gleannloch in the amount of $19,486,940.00. The trial court entered judgment in
    accordance with the verdict. And the State filed a motion for new trial, which was
    overruled by operation of law.
    Sufficiency of the Evidence
    In its fourth issue, the State argues that the evidence is legally and factually
    insufficient to support the jury’s verdict of $5,967,242.00 in remainder damages
    regarding Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract after the taking of Parcel 208 and
    $415,661.00 in remainder damages regarding the Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre tract
    after the taking of Parcel 220 because “the majority of the evidence of
    compensation for remainder damages” for both tracts “was irrelevant, unreliable
    and incompetent.” In regard to both its legal and factual-sufficiency challenges,
    the State asserts that it is “entitled to a new trial.”
    When a party challenges the legal sufficiency relative to an adverse finding
    on which it did not bear the burden of proof,4 it must show that no evidence
    4
    “While the burden of proof regarding the right to condemn and certain other
    matters is generally on the condemnor, the ‘burden as to the value is on the
    condemnee.’” Religious of the Sacred Heart of Tex. v. City of Houston, 
    836 S.W.2d 606
    , 613 (Tex. 1992) (quoting Miers v. Housing Auth. of Dallas, 266
    18
    supports the finding. See Exxon Corp. v. Emerald Oil & Gas Co., 
    348 S.W.3d 194
    ,
    215 (Tex. 2011). We will sustain a legal-sufficiency or “no-evidence” challenge if
    the record shows one of the following: (1) a complete absence of evidence of a
    vital fact, (2) rules of law or evidence bar the court from giving weight to the only
    evidence offered to prove a vital fact, (3) the evidence offered to prove a vital fact
    is no more than a scintilla, or (4) the evidence establishes conclusively the opposite
    of the vital fact. City of Keller v. Wilson, 
    168 S.W.3d 802
    , 810 (Tex. 2005). In
    conducting a legal-sufficiency review, a “court must consider evidence in the light
    most favorable to the verdict, and indulge every reasonable inference that would
    support it.” 
    Id. at 822.
    The term “inference” means,
    [i]n the law of evidence, a truth or proposition drawn from another
    which is supposed or admitted to be true. A process of reasoning by
    which a fact or proposition sought to be established is deduced as a
    logical consequence from other facts, or a state of facts, already
    proved . . . .
    Marshall Field Stores, Inc. v. Gardiner, 
    859 S.W.2d 391
    , 400 (Tex. App.—
    Houston [1st Dist.] 1993, writ dism’d w.o.j.) (quoting Inference, BLACK’S LAW
    DICTIONARY (5th ed. 1979)). For a fact finder to infer a fact, “it must be able to
    deduce that fact as a logical consequence from other proven facts.” 
    Id. If there
    is more than a scintilla of evidence to support the challenged finding,
    we must uphold it.        Formosa Plastics Corp. USA v. Presidio Eng’rs &
    S.W.2d 842, 845 (Tex. 1954)). Here, Gleannloch bore the burden of proof at trial
    on the issue of valuation.
    19
    Contractors, Inc., 
    960 S.W.2d 41
    , 48 (Tex. 1998). “[W]hen the evidence offered
    to prove a vital fact is so weak as to do no more than create a mere surmise or
    suspicion of its existence, the evidence is no more than a scintilla and, in legal
    effect, is no evidence.” Ford Motor Co. v. Ridgway, 
    135 S.W.3d 598
    , 601 (Tex.
    2004) (quoting Kindred v. Con/Chem, Inc., 
    650 S.W.2d 61
    , 63 (Tex. 1983)).
    However, if the evidence at trial would enable reasonable and fair-minded people
    to differ in their conclusions, then fact finders must be allowed to do so. City of
    
    Keller, 168 S.W.3d at 822
    . “A reviewing court cannot substitute its judgment for
    that of the trier-of-fact, so long as the evidence falls within this zone of reasonable
    disagreement.” 
    Id. When an
    appellant challenges the factual sufficiency of the evidence on an
    issue, we view all of the evidence in a neutral light and set aside the finding only if
    it is so contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence as to be clearly wrong
    and manifestly unjust. See Dow Chem. Co. v. Francis, 
    46 S.W.3d 237
    , 242 (Tex.
    2001). The fact finder is the sole judge of the witnesses’ credibility, and it may
    choose to believe one witness over another; a reviewing court may not impose its
    own opinion to the contrary. See Zenner v. Lone Star Striping & Paving, L.L.C.,
    
    371 S.W.3d 311
    , 314 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2012, pet. denied).
    20
    In Question No. 2 of its charge, the trial court asked the jury:
    What do you find from a preponderance of the evidence are the
    damages, if any, to Gleannloch’s 46.076 acre (2,007,082 square feet)
    remainder property?
    The jury answered: $5,967,242.00. In Question No. 5 of its charge, the trial court
    asked the jury:
    What do you find from a preponderance of the evidence are the
    damages, if any, to Gleannloch’s 11.824 acre (515,052 square feet)
    remainder [p]roperty?
    The jury answered: $415,661.00. In both questions, the trial court included the
    following instruction:
    You are instructed that the remainder damages should be determined
    based on the difference in the market value of the remainder property
    immediately before the taking and the market value of the remainder
    property immediately after the taking.
    The State argues that “the majority of evidence of compensation for
    remainder damages regarding Parcels 208 and 220 was irrelevant, unreliable and
    incompetent” because “[i]njury due to nonmaterial impairment of access is not
    compensable.” However, “the measure of compensation in a partial-takings case is
    ‘the market value of the part taken plus damage to the remainder caused by the
    condemnation.’” State v. Petropoulos, 
    346 S.W.3d 525
    , 530 (Tex. 2011) (quoting
    Westgate, Ltd. v. State, 
    843 S.W.2d 448
    , 456 (Tex. 1992)). And, “a change in a
    property’s use due to condemnation is relevant to the fair market value of the
    property.”   State v. Dawmar Ptrs., Ltd., 
    267 S.W.3d 875
    , 878 (Tex. 2008).
    21
    Accordingly, the trial court appropriately instructed the jury in regard to its
    answering of Questions 2 and 5 of its charge.
    Regarding the northern remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract, after
    the taking of Parcel 208, Deal, Gleannloch’s expert, testified that the condemnation
    changed its highest and best use. Specifically, he explained that the remaining
    acreage would no longer, as previously planned, be marketable as a commercial,
    mixed-use development servicing Gleannloch Farms because it is no longer
    connected or directly accessible to the community due to the taking. He also
    attributed the change in highest and best use to the decrease in traffic on
    Boudreaux Road, which is no longer a major thoroughfare. Based on his analysis,
    Deal determined that the highest and best use for the northern remainder, after the
    taking of Parcel 208, would be as a multifamily apartment development. And he
    valued the northern remainder at $4.50 per square foot, an adjustment reduction
    from the pre-condemnation value of $8.00 per square foot. Deal used the “sales
    comparison approach” to value the remainder after the taking. His $4.50 per
    square foot value was based in part on an actual sale of approximately half of the
    northern remainder for that same value within a few months of the taking. He also
    considered an actual sale of a portion of the remainder of Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre
    tract, after the taking of Parcel 220, for approximately $5.00 per square foot. In
    22
    sum, Deal explained that the total value of the northern remainder was reduced,
    resulting in damage of $5,761,185.00.
    In regard to the southern remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract after
    the taking of Parcel 208, Deal testified that it was less impacted by the taking than
    the northern remainder because it was still connected to the Gleannloch Farms
    development. However, its value was still impacted by the taking of Parcel 208
    due to the loss of “synergy” it would have had with the northern remainder and
    because H.E.B., after the taking, decided to orient its development adjacent to the
    southern remainder so that the back of its store now faces the southern remainder,
    which is less desirable for prospective commercial tenants. Based on his analysis,
    Deal determined that the highest and best use for the southern remainder of
    Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract, after the taking of Parcel 208, would be as
    commercial retail development. As part of his analysis, he used comparable sales
    to value the southern remainder at $7.50 per square foot, including the nearby sale
    of land to H.E.B. for $7.00 per square foot. This reduced the southern remainder’s
    value to $2,682,075.00, resulting in damage of $178,805.00.          Thus, the total
    damage to the remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract, after the taking of
    Parcel 208, was $5,967,242.00.
    In regard to the southwest remainder of Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre tract, after
    the taking of Parcel 220, Bolton, Gleannloch’s expert, testified that he used
    23
    comparable sales including an actual sale of a portion of the southwest remainder,
    which sold post-taking for $5.00 per square foot. Bolton valued the southwest
    remainder at $5.00 per square foot, reduced from his pre-taking appraisal of $5.50
    per square foot, resulting in damage in the amount of $241,712.50. Because the
    northeast remainder of Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre tract, after the taking of Parcel
    220, was completely cut off from the rest of the property by the State’s two
    temporary easements, Bolton assessed its value at $0.00 per square foot, resulting
    in damage in the amount of $173,948.50. In total, Bolton opined that the damage
    to the remainder of Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre tract, after the taking of Parcel 220,
    was $415,661.00.
    Urban, the State’s Parcel 220 expert, testified that the southwest remainder
    of Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre tract suffered no damages, but that the northeast
    remainder was 97% damaged since it was cut off from the rest of the property.
    Accordingly, he attributed a total of $161,061.00 in damage to the remainder of
    Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre tract after the taking of Parcel 220.
    In sum, the jury awarded $5,967,242.00 in damages to the remainder of
    Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract after the taking of Parcel 208 and $415,661.00 in
    damages to the remainder of Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre tract after the taking of
    Parcel 220. As set forth above, these amounts are supported by the testimony
    presented by Gleannloch’s experts at trial, both of whom relied upon the
    24
    widely-accepted comparable sales approach in formulating their opinions. See City
    of Harlingen v. Estate of Sharboneau, 
    48 S.W.3d 177
    , 182 (Tex. 2001) (“Courts
    have long favored the comparable sales approach when determining the market
    value of real property.”). Therefore, we cannot say that the jury findings in regard
    to damages to the remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre and 20.789-acre tracts,
    after the taking of Parcels 208 and 220, are not supported by more than a scintilla
    of evidence or that they are against the great weight and preponderance of the
    evidence so as to be manifestly unjust. Accordingly, we hold that the evidence is
    legally and factually sufficient to support the jury’s award of remainder damages in
    this case.5
    We overrule the State’s fourth issue.
    Admission of Evidence
    In its first, second, and third issues, the State asserts that the trial court erred
    in admitting evidence and opinions of non-compensable sales, admitting evidence
    of non-compensable damages, and excluding the opinions of Hornsby, its appraisal
    expert, that “Parcel 208 suffered no damages, including his opinions regarding the
    value of the remainder before and after the State’s acquisition, and the difference
    in those two values.”
    5
    Because we overrule the State’s challenges to the use of alleged non-comparable
    sales and non-compensable damages by Gleannloch’s appraisal experts, these
    arguments do not impact our holding on the State’s challenge to the sufficiency of
    the evidence to support Gleannloch’s remainder damages.
    25
    The decision to admit or exclude evidence lies within the sound discretion of
    the trial court. Bay Area Healthcare Grp., Ltd. v. McShane, 
    239 S.W.3d 231
    , 234
    (Tex. 2007).    A trial court abuses its discretion if it acts in an arbitrary or
    unreasonable manner or without reference to guiding rules or principles. Bowie
    Mem’l Hosp. v. Wright, 
    79 S.W.3d 48
    , 52 (Tex. 2002). We will uphold a trial
    court’s evidentiary ruling if any legitimate ground supports the ruling, even if the
    ground was not raised in the trial court. Hooper v. Chittaluru, 
    222 S.W.3d 103
    ,
    107 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2006, pet. denied). And we will not reverse
    an erroneous evidentiary ruling unless the error probably caused the rendition of an
    improper judgment or prevented a proper presentation of the appeal. See TEX. R.
    APP. P. 44.1(a); Sw. Elec. Power Co. v. Burlington N. R.R., 
    966 S.W.2d 467
    , 474
    (Tex. 1998). In determining if the excluded evidence probably resulted in the
    rendition of an improper judgment, we review the entire record, and, “[t]ypically, a
    successful challenge to a trial court’s evidentiary rulings requires the complaining
    party to demonstrate that the judgment turns on the particular evidence excluded or
    admitted.” Interstate Northborough P’ship v. State, 
    66 S.W.3d 213
    , 220 (Tex.
    2001). Ordinarily, we will not reverse a judgment because a trial court erroneously
    excluded evidence if the evidence in question is cumulative and not controlling on
    a material issue dispositive to the case. 
    Id. 26 Non-comparable
    sales
    In its first issue, the State argues that the trial court erred in admitting Deal’s
    testimony about “fifteen small-acreage sales” to support his valuation of the
    entirety of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract because “such sales were not
    comparable” and “Deal’s opinions regarding them were not reliable or relevant.”
    Gleannloch argues that admission of Deal’s testimony about the additional sales
    was proper because he relied on them to support his determination of the
    property’s highest and best use and not as direct comparisons. It further argues
    that any error in the admission of this evidence was harmless because Deal’s
    valuation opinion is also supported by eight comparable sales that the State does
    not challenge.
    The “sales comparison approach” used by Deal in forming his valuation
    opinion for Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract is a well-accepted “means for
    determining the market value of land.” Houston Unltd., Inc. Metal Processing v.
    Mel Acres Ranch, 
    443 S.W.3d 820
    , 829 (Tex. 2014). “Under this approach, ‘the
    appraiser finds data for sales of similar property’ that are ‘voluntary,’ ‘near in
    time,’ ‘in the vicinity,’ and ‘involve land with similar characteristics.’”           
    Id. (quoting Sharboneau,
    48 S.W.3d at 182). “The appraiser then uses the prices from
    the comparison sales, which establish the market value of similar properties, to
    27
    determine the market value of the subject property, by adjusting the price upward
    or downward to account for differences between the properties.” 
    Id. at 829–30.
    Although the State argues at length that the trial court erred in admitting
    Deal’s testimony about the non-comparable land sales, it has not demonstrated that
    this alleged error actually caused harm or the rendition of an improper judgment.
    See State v. Chana, 
    464 S.W.3d 769
    , 786–87 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.]
    2015, no pet.).    Rather, the State merely asserts that Gleannloch sought to
    impermissibly “bolster” Deal’s value opinion and “stack the deck in favor of its
    own opinions” because the non-comparable sales had an “unadjusted average sales
    price of $17.73 per square foot.”
    However, the eight comparable sales upon which Deal relied as direct
    comparisons to the subject property, and to which the State did not object, ranged
    in size from 4.5 to 35.7 acres and in price from $7.61 to $21.00 per square foot.
    Deal’s ultimate opinion that Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract’s pre-taking value was
    $8.00 per square foot is well-within, and even on the lower end of, the range of his
    unchallenged comparables. Therefore, we cannot say that the trial court’s alleged
    error in admitting Deal’s testimony about the fifteen additional, non-comparable
    sales probably caused the rendition of an improper judgment. See, e.g., Tex. Pipe
    Line Co. v. Hunt, 
    228 S.W.2d 151
    , 156 (1950) (expert opinion on market value of
    real property “does not cease to have probative force when impropriety attaches
    28
    only to some, rather than all, of its underlying reasons”); Harris Cty. Flood
    Control Dist. v. Taub, 
    502 S.W.3d 320
    , 338 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
    2016, pet. denied) (holding abuse of discretion in admitting non-comparable sales
    did not result in improper verdict “because evidence of remaining comparable
    sales” supported expert’s testimony and jury verdict); 
    Chana, 464 S.W.3d at 785
    –
    87 (assuming evidence of five of ten comparable sales relied upon inadmissible,
    but holding error harmless because five remaining comparable sales, ranging from
    $7.70 per square foot to $19.50 per square foot, supported jury’s finding in
    accordance with expert’s opinion of $9.50 per square foot); but see State v.
    Schaefer, 
    530 S.W.2d 813
    , 817 (Tex. 1975) (erroneous admission of evidence
    harmful where it “put before the jury the only possible basis for the award that was
    made”).
    Accordingly, we hold that the trial court’s error, if any, in admitting Deal’s
    testimony about the “fifteen small-acreage,” non-comparable sales was harmless.
    We overrule the State’s first issue.
    Non-compensable damages
    In its second issue, the State argues that the trial court erred in admitting
    evidence of “[i]njury due to nonmaterial impairment of access” and “community
    injuries” because such injuries are “not compensable.” It asserts that the jury
    “awarded remainder damages of $5,967,242.00 regarding Parcel 208, and
    29
    remainder damages of $415,661.00 regarding Parcel 220, based on elements of
    damages that are clearly not compensable.”
    “[T]he measure of compensation in a partial-takings case is ‘the market
    value of the part taken plus damage to the remainder caused by the
    condemnation.’” 
    Petropoulos, 346 S.W.3d at 530
    (quoting 
    Westgate, 843 S.W.2d at 456
    ). And, “a change in a property’s use due to condemnation is relevant to the
    fair market value of the property.” 
    Dawmar, 267 S.W.3d at 878
    . However, not all
    diminished value to remainder property is compensable. Cty. of Bexar v. Santikos,
    
    144 S.W.3d 455
    , 459 (Tex. 2004). “[D]iminished value is compensable only when
    it derives from constitutionally cognizable injury.” 
    Dawmar, 267 S.W.3d at 878
    .
    Therefore, “[w]hether damages can be recovered depends on what kind of damage
    is involved.” 
    Santikos, 144 S.W.3d at 459
    .       Compensability of damages to a
    remainder property is a question of law subject to de novo review. 
    Id. One limitation
    on the compensability of remainder damages is that the injury
    must be peculiar to the owner of the land taken and not an injury experienced in
    common with the general community.           TEX. PROP. CODE. ANN. § 21.042(d)
    (Vernon 2014); 
    Santikos, 144 S.W.3d at 463
    . “It is the nature of the injury rather
    than its location that is critical in determining whether it is [a] community”
    damage, and therefore not compensable. State v. Schmidt, 
    867 S.W.2d 769
    , 781
    (Tex. 1993); see also Padilla v. Metro. Transit Auth. of Harris Cty., 
    497 S.W.3d 30
    78, 84 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2016, no pet.) (community damages
    include “noise, dust, increased traffic, diversion of traffic, circuity of travel, and
    other inconveniences incident to road or highway construction”). Also, while not
    barred by the concept of community damages, diminished value resulting from
    impaired access is compensable only when a material and substantial impairment
    exists as a matter of law. 
    Dawmar, 267 S.W.3d at 878
    ; see also TEX. PROP. CODE
    ANN. § 21.042(d). Diminution in the value of property due to diversion of traffic,
    diminished exposure to traffic, altered accessibility to the roadway, or circuity of
    travel does not amount to a material and substantial impairment of access.
    
    Petropoulos, 346 S.W.3d at 532
    ; 
    Schmidt, 867 S.W.2d at 774
    .
    The State asserts that Gleannloch’s evidence of damages to the remainder of
    its 68.511-acre and 20.789-acre tracts, after the taking of Parcels 208 and 220, is
    based on non-compensable community or impairment-of-access damages. This is
    not supported by the evidence in the record. Instead, the evidence presented at trial
    establishes that Gleannloch’s remainder damages arise out of the State’s use of the
    condemned land and they are unique to the remainder properties, not shared by the
    community at large.
    In regard to the northern remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract, after
    the taking of Parcel 208, the evidence introduced at trial in support of diminished
    value was based on Deal’s testimony. He explained that the damages to the
    31
    northern remainder necessarily followed from the fact that the State completely cut
    it off from the southern remainder and the Gleannloch Farms master-planned
    community.          This severance, according to Deal, resulted in a change of the
    northern remainder’s highest and best use from a commercial, mixed-use
    development that would service the Gleannloch Farms community to a stand-alone
    multifamily development, which is significantly less valuable.
    And Deal specifically explained that his damages appraisal did not focus on
    access to the northern remainder and he found no material impairment of access to
    it after the taking of Parcel 208. He further confirmed that his valuation opinion
    was not based on community damages, but instead on “damages specific to the
    property and specific to the use of the property by the State and the impact of that
    use on the remainder property.” Thus, Deal’s discussion about lack of direct
    access and “synergy” in regard to the northern remainder is relevant and essential
    to explaining how its highest and best use changed from predominantly
    commercial to multifamily. See Dawmar, 
    267 S.W.3d 878
    (“We have long held
    that a change in a property’s use due to condemnation is relevant to the fair market
    value . . . .”).6
    The record also demonstrates that Deal’s testimony about the damage to the
    southern remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.5110-acre tract, after the taking of Parcel
    6
    Similarly, the evidence does not support the State’s assertion that Gleannloch
    sought damages for lack of access to the Grand Parkway.
    32
    208, was not based on evidence of non-compensable damages.            Although its
    highest and best use did not change, as Deal explained, the southern remainder
    became less valuable as a result of the taking of Parcel 208 and the change in
    character of the surrounding property.       Specifically, the disconnection of the
    northern remainder negatively impacted the southern remainder, even though it is
    still attached to Gleannloch Farms, because it lost the value of being part of a
    larger, integrated commercial development.
    Finally, the jury’s award of damages regarding the southwest remainder of
    Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre tract, after the taking of Parcel 220, is not based on
    evidence of non-compensable damages. Bolton, Gleannloch’s appraisal expert,
    explained that his post-condemnation appraisal of the value of the southwest
    remainder was based on a sale, which occurred within months of the taking of
    Parcel 220, of a portion of the southwest remainder itself, for a multifamily
    development at $4.50 per square foot.         Further, Dagely, a representative of
    Gleannloch, attributed the slight reduction in value of the southwest remainder to
    the loss of the planned commercial development by the taking of Parcel 220,
    adjacent to the southwest remainder, which would have fronted Boudreaux Road.
    Instead, any multifamily development that is constructed on the southwest
    remainder will now be adjacent to the Grand Parkway, which is less attractive.
    33
    In sum, the record establishes that the damage to the remainder of
    Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre and 20.789-acre tracts resulted from the State’s taking of
    Parcels 208 and 220 and that the Grand Parkway project bisected the remainder,
    causing a change in its highest and best use; thus, the remainder property was
    affected in a “special and unique way” that decreased its overall market value.
    Interstate 
    Northborough, 66 S.W.3d at 222
    (explaining “record establishe[d] that
    the damages due to [remainder property’s] increased proximity to frontage road,
    resulting   in   loss   of   curb   appeal,    green   space,   and     ‘buffer   zone,’
    affected . . . remainder property in a special and unique way” because, among other
    reasons, building lost tenant interest and, therefore, market value).
    Accordingly, we hold that the trial court did not err in admitting
    Gleannloch’s evidence of the change in the fair market value of the remainder of
    its 68.511-acre and 20.789-acre tracts that resulted from the State’s taking of
    Parcels 208 and 220. We further note that even assuming that the trial court erred
    in admitting evidence of non-compensable damages, such error would be harmless
    because comparable sales support the remainder value opinions presented by
    Gleannloch’s experts at trial. As previously discussed, Deal supported his $4.50
    per square foot value for the northern remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract
    after the taking of Parcel 208, in part, with an actual sale of part of the northern
    remainder. And, Deal supported his $7.50 per square foot value for the southern
    34
    remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract, after the taking of Parcel 208, with a
    contract for sale of that remainder as well as the nearby purchase of land to
    develop an H.E.B. for $7.00 per square foot. Similarly, Bolton supported his $5.00
    per square foot value for the southwest remainder of Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre
    tract, after the taking of Parcel 220, with a sale from the southwest remainder itself
    for multifamily use as well as the sale of a part of the northern remainder of
    Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract, after the taking of Parcel 208, for $4.50 per square
    foot for the same type of development.7 Thus, the trial court’s judgment does not
    “turn[] on the particular evidence . . . admitted” and there could be no harm.
    Interstate 
    Northborough, 66 S.W.3d at 220
    .
    We overrule the State’s second issue.
    Hornsby’s remainder damages
    In its third issue, the State argues that the trial court erred in excluding
    “Hornsby’s opinions that Parcel 208 suffered no damages, including his opinions
    regarding the value of the remainder before and after the State’s acquisition, and
    the difference in those two values” because “there was nothing improper about
    [his] valuation.”
    7
    The State does not challenge the evidence admitted at trial regarding the damages
    to the northeast remainder of Gleannloch’s 20.789-acre tract after the taking of
    Parcel 220.
    35
    Market value is typically established through expert testimony. See, e.g.,
    Reid Rd. Mun. Util. Dist. No. 2 v. Speedy Stop Food Stores, Ltd., 
    337 S.W.3d 846
    ,
    851–52 (Tex. 2011). As with any other testifying expert, an expert appraisal
    witness in a condemnation suit must not only be qualified, but his opinions must be
    relevant and based upon a reliable foundation. TXI Transp. Co. v. Hughes, 
    306 S.W.3d 230
    , 234–35 (Tex. 2010); see also TEX. R. EVID. 702.            An expert’s
    testimony is relevant when it assists the jury in determining an issue or in
    understanding other evidence. TEX. R. EVID. 702. And a court assesses an expert
    opinion’s reliability by examining the principles, research, and methodology
    underlying the expert’s conclusions. Exxon Pipeline Co. v. Zwahr, 
    88 S.W.3d 623
    ,
    629 (Tex. 2002); 
    Chana, 464 S.W.3d at 776
    .
    “[E]xpert testimony is unreliable if it is not grounded ‘in the methods and
    procedures of science’ and is no more than ‘subjective belief or unsupported
    speculation.’” 
    Zwahr, 88 S.W.3d at 629
    (quoting E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co.,
    Inc. v. Robinson, 
    923 S.W.2d 549
    , 557 (Tex. 1995)). “If the foundational data
    underlying opinion testimony are unreliable, an expert will not be permitted to base
    an opinion on that data because any opinion drawn from that data is likewise
    unreliable.” Merrell Dow Pharm., Inc. v. Havner, 
    953 S.W.2d 706
    , 714 (Tex.
    1997).
    36
    The trial court granted Gleannloch’s motion to exclude Hornsby’s opinion
    testimony about damage to the remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.51-acre tract, after
    the taking of Parcel 220, because it found that his opinion was “not based on
    credible evidence . . . facts[,] or data,” explaining that “surmising and guessing” is
    not “good enough to support his opinion.” Gleannloch based its motion to exclude
    Hornsby’s opinion primarily on the fact that he assumed that Boudreaux Road,
    after the taking, would still be expanded to a four-lane road and there would be
    increased development along this road, resulting in a misapplication of the project-
    influence rule. The State argues that Hornsby’s opinion was proper because he
    specifically excluded non-compensable damages such as community and
    impairment-of-access damages.
    The project-influence rule “provides that any change in property value that
    results from the government manifesting a definite purpose to take property as part
    of a governmental project must be excluded from an award of adequate
    compensation” and “ensures that the condemnee is made whole, not placed in
    either a better or worse position than he or she would have enjoyed had there been
    no condemnation.” Caffe Ribs, Inc. v. State, 
    487 S.W.3d 137
    , 142–43 (Tex. 2016).
    Thus, it follows that any assessment of the remainder property’s value after the
    taking must reflect the effect of the condemnation. See 
    Westgate, 843 S.W.2d at 456
    (reaffirming well-established law “measure of compensation in a partial-
    37
    takings case is the market value of the part taken plus damage to the remainder
    caused by the condemnation”); see also TEX. PROP. CODE. ANN. § 21.042(c)
    (explaining, in context of condemnation proceedings in partial-takings cases,
    special commissioners should “determine the damage to the property owner after
    estimating the extent of the injury and benefit to the property owner, including the
    effect of the condemnation on the value of the property owner’s remaining
    property”).
    Here, the evidence regarding the status of Boudreaux Road before and after
    the taking is largely undisputed. Before the taking, Boudreaux Road was a major
    thoroughfare in the area and on track to be expanded to four lanes had the taking
    not occurred. As a result of the taking, the Grand Parkway now runs over a portion
    of Boudreaux Road, cutting it off without through access. And what remains of
    that portion of Boudreaux Road is now a connector street. Despite these facts,
    Hornsby, in forming his valuation opinion, still assumed that the remaining
    portions of Boudreaux Road would be expanded to four lanes and experience the
    benefit of increased traffic and development. Yet, he admitted that he was made
    aware that Harris County had no plans to expand Boudreaux Road after the taking.
    Although the facts relied upon by an expert “need not be undisputed,” an expert’s
    testimony is unreliable if it is “contrary to actual, undisputed facts.” Caffe 
    Ribs, 487 S.W.3d at 144
    . The State’s argument that Hornsby’s valuation opinion is
    38
    proper because it excludes non-compensable, community damages is without merit
    because it fails to address the inherent foundational reliability issue presented by
    Hornsby’s assumption of speculative facts that are contrary to the current
    undisputed reality.
    The State asserts that even if Hornsby’s opinion as to the value of the
    remainder of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract, after the taking of Parcel 208, was
    inadmissible, the trial court still should have allowed him to testify about his
    opinion as to the value of the remainder properties before the taking. However,
    Hornsby’s pre-taking valuation of the remainder property was only relevant to his
    remainder analysis. Therefore, excluding this portion of his testimony was within
    the trial court’s broad discretion. See 
    Chana, 464 S.W.3d at 775
    –76. Regardless,
    the trial court permitted Hornsby to testify as to his opinion about the pre-taking
    value of the entire 68.511-acre parcel as a whole. Thus, any error would be
    harmless because the jury was, in effect, allowed to hear his per-square-foot
    pre-taking valuation of the remainder properties. See Caffe 
    Ribs, 487 S.W.3d at 144
    –45.
    Accordingly, we hold that the trial court did not err in excluding Hornsby’s
    opinion testimony as to the damage to the northern and southern remainder
    properties of Gleannloch’s 68.511-acre tract.
    We overrule the State’s third issue.
    39
    Conclusion
    We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    Terry Jennings
    Justice
    Panel consists of Justices Jennings, Keyes, and Higley.
    40