San Diego Assn of Governments v. Vanta CA4/1 ( 2016 )


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  • Filed 7/20/16 San Diego Assn of Governments v. Vanta CA4/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SAN DIEGO ASSOCIATION OF                                            D065476, D066560
    GOVERNMENTS,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    (Super. Ct. No. 37-2012-00101950-
    v.                                                         CU-EI-CTL)
    RAMON S. VANTA,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    CONSOLIDATED APPEALS from a judgment and postjudgment order of the
    Superior Court of San Diego County, Randa Trapp, Judge. Judgment affirmed;
    postjudgment order reversed.
    The Affinity Law Group and Gregory P. Goonan for Defendant and Appellant.
    Best, Best & Krieger and Bruce W. Beach for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    In this eminent domain case involving partial condemnation of defendant Ramon
    S. Vanta's land, Vanta and plaintiff San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG)
    both appeal from the judgment on a jury verdict awarding Vanta compensation for the
    land taken and a postjudgment order on Vanta's motion for attorney fees. Vanta contends
    the trial court prejudicially erred by (1) granting SANDAG's motion in limine to prohibit
    him from presenting evidence of the increased cost to develop access to his remaining
    land as part of his severance damages; (2) refusing to give his proffered special jury
    instruction regarding the calculation of severance damages in an impaired access case;
    and (3) not including in his attorney fee award the contingent fee portion of the attorney
    fees he paid. SANDAG contends (1) the court should have excluded the testimony of
    Vanta's valuation expert based on Vanta's failure to properly exchange valuation data;
    (2) the court should not have awarded Vanta any attorney fees; and (3) Vanta's actions
    throughout the case prejudiced SANDAG. We affirm the judgment and reverse the
    postjudgment order awarding Vanta attorney fees.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    SANDAG filed a complaint in eminent domain on August 7, 2012, to acquire a
    portion of Vanta's property located on East Beyer Boulevard in San Ysidro (the property)
    for the San Ysidro Rail Yard Improvement Project (the project). In October 2012, Vanta
    filed an answer to the complaint and the parties stipulated to his withdrawal of probable
    compensation in the amount of $781,000 that SANDAG had deposited. The court issued
    an order for possession authorizing SANDAG to take possession of the condemned
    property in November 2012.
    The condemned property consists of approximately 4.92 acres of a 21.93 acre
    parcel owned by Vanta, leaving approximately 17.01 acres as his remaining property
    after the take. Because the area SANDAG acquired from Vanta included all of the
    2
    parcels that provided legal and physical access to his remaining property from East Beyer
    Boulevard, the adjoining road, SANDAG restored access to East Beyer Boulevard by
    acquiring an ingress-egress easement (the replacement easement) over adjoining property
    to the northwest owned by Charles Pipitone. The replacement easement crossed
    unimproved land and was not developed into a passable road. Constructing a road on the
    replacement easement was not included in the project for which SANDAG acquired
    Vanta's property.
    At a case management conference (CMC) in April 2013, the court set trial for
    September 27, 2013, and ordered a first expert witness exchange to be completed by
    July 5, 2013, and a second expert witness exchange to be completed by July 19, 2013.
    SANDAG served a list of experts and a statement of valuation data under Code of Civil
    Procedure section 1258.2601 on July 3, 2013. Vanta served an initial expert witness
    designation on July 5, 2013, that stated the designation was in accordance with section
    2034.210, which provides for the exchange of expert witness information in civil actions
    generally but not in eminent domain proceedings.2 Vanta served a second expert
    designation "in accordance to Section 2034.280" on July 19, 2013. Vanta did not serve
    any valuation data with either of his expert witness designations.
    1      All further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise
    noted.
    2      Section 2034.010 states: "This chapter does not apply to exchanges of lists of
    experts and valuation data in eminent domain proceedings under Chapter 7 (commencing
    with Section 1258.010) of Title 7 of Part 3."
    3
    SANDAG filed written objections to both of Vanta's expert witness designations
    on the ground the exchanges failed to comply with sections 1258.250 and 1258.260,
    which govern the statements of valuation data that are required to be exchanged for each
    expert witnesses a party in an eminent proceeding intends to call to testify on valuation
    and just compensation issues. Vanta did not respond to SANDAG's objections.
    Before trial, Vanta served on SANDAG his final demand for just compensation
    and SANDAG served on Vanta its final offer of compensation under section 1250.410.
    Vanta demanded $3,250,000 and SANDAG initially offered $687,830. SANDAG later
    served an amended offer in the amount of $805,800. SANDAG's offer was "inclusive of
    interest, costs of suit . . . , and attorneys' fees and litigation expenses." Vanta's demand
    stated it did "not include, and specifically exclude[d], payment for attorneys' fees, costs,
    litigation expenses, or interest."
    At the beginning of trial, the court ruled on the parties' motions in limine, two of
    which are at issue in this appeal. The court denied SANDAG's motion in limine to
    exclude the expert opinions of Vanta's designated valuation expert Gerry Van Tassel on
    the ground Vanta failed to exchange valuation data with his expert witness designation as
    required under sections 1258.250 and 1258.260. The court granted SANDAG's motion in
    limine to exclude Vanta's evidence of the "cost to cure"–i.e., the cost to construct a road
    over the replacement easement ($915,960), which Vanta intended to add to his figure for
    4
    the diminution in value of his remaining property ($886,594) to arrive at $1,802,554 as
    the total amount of his severance damages.3
    The case was tried to a jury, which returned a special verdict finding the fair
    market value of the property taken as of August 7, 2012, was $676,049.20, and the
    amount of severance damages was $765,046. The court entered judgment consistent with
    the jury's verdict, awarding Vanta compensation in the total amount of $1,441,095.20.
    The court granted Vanta's postjudgment motion for attorney fees as litigation expenses
    under section 1250.410 and awarded him attorney fees in the amount of $122,650 and
    expert fees in the amount of $61,007.34.
    We will include additional relevant facts in our discussion of the legal issues.
    DISCUSSION
    VANTA'S APPEAL
    I. Exclusion of Evidence of the Cost to Develop Access to the Remaining Property as
    Severance Damages
    Vanta contends the trial court prejudicially erred by granting SANDAG's motion
    in limine to prohibit him from presenting evidence of the increased cost to develop access
    to his remaining land as part of his severance damages.
    " '[A]n appellate court reviews any ruling by a trial court as to the admissibility of
    evidence for abuse of discretion.' [Citation.]" (Dart Industries, Inc. v. Commercial
    Union Ins. Co. (2002) 
    28 Cal.4th 1059
    , 1078; Boston v. Penny Lane Centers, Inc. (2009)
    3      Van Tassel's estimate of total severance damages was $1,802,554 at one point in
    his written appraisal, and was $1,807,400 at the conclusion of the appraisal.
    5
    
    170 Cal.App.4th 936
    , 950.) "The court's exercise of discretion will be upheld on appeal
    unless a clear error of law or manifest abuse of discretion is demonstrated." (Michail v.
    Fluor Mining & Metals, Inc. (1986) 
    180 Cal.App.3d 284
    , 286-287.) If the exclusion of
    evidence is proper on any theory, it must be sustained regardless of the particular
    considerations that motivated the trial court to exclude it. (Philip Chang & Sons
    Associates v. La Casa Novato (1986) 
    177 Cal.App.3d 159
    , 173.) Further, a judgment will
    not be reversed for erroneous admission or exclusion of evidence unless the reviewing
    court concludes it is reasonably probable that a result more favorable to the appealing
    party would have been reached in the absence of the error. (Evid. Code, §§ 353, 354;
    Saxena v. Goffney (2008) 
    159 Cal.App.4th 316
    , 334-335; Huffman v. Interstate Brands
    Corp. (2004) 
    121 Cal.App.4th 679
    , 692.)
    Vanta argues the exclusion of his evidence of the increased cost to develop access
    to his remaining land was an error of law because he was entitled to recover both the
    diminution in value of his remaining land after the taking and the increased cost to
    develop an access road to the remainder over the cost to develop access to the land in its
    condition before the taking as severance damages. We conclude the court properly
    excluded evidence of the cost to build a road over the replacement easement.
    By statute, the owner of private property taken by eminent domain is entitled to
    just compensation in the amount of the fair market value property taken. (§§ 1263.010,
    1263.310.) "When the property taken is part of a larger parcel, in addition to being
    compensated for the part taken, the owner is compensated for the injury, if any, to the
    remainder. (§ 1263.410, subd. (a).) Compensation for injury to the remainder is the
    6
    amount of the damage to the remainder, or severance damages, reduced by the amount of
    benefit to the remainder. (§ 1263.410, subd. (b).)" (Los Angeles County Metropolitan
    Transportation Authority v. Continental Development Corp. (1997) 
    16 Cal.4th 694
    , 698
    (Continental).) "Severance damages are not limited to special and direct damages, but
    can be based on any factor, resulting from the project, that causes a decline in the fair
    market value of the property." (Id. at p. 712.) "[I]n determining a landowner's
    entitlement to severance damages, the fact finder . . . shall consider competent evidence
    relevant to any conditions caused by the project that affect the remainder property's fair
    market value, insofar as such evidence is neither conjectural nor speculative." (Id. at
    p. 718, fn. omitted; City of Livermore v. Baca (2012) 
    205 Cal.App.4th 1460
    , 1466
    (Livermore) [Severance damages "may not be based on ' " 'speculative, remote,
    imaginary, contingent, or merely possible' " ' events."].)
    As noted, the trial court granted SANDAG's motion in limine to exclude evidence
    of the cost ($915,960) to construct a road to Vanta's remaining property in the after
    condition, which evidence SANDAG referred to as "cost to cure" evidence. The Court of
    Appeal in People ex rel. Department of Public Works v. Hayward Bldg. Materials Co.
    (1963) 
    213 Cal.App.2d 457
     (Hayward) explained that there are two classes of evidence
    of severance damages. The first is evidence of the diminution in value of the landowner's
    remaining property as a result of the condemnation and public work; the second is " 'cost
    to cure' " evidence–i.e., " '[e]vidence of the cost of restoring the injured property to the
    same relative position to the public work in which it stood before its construction.' "
    (Id. at p. 465.)
    7
    Because the measure of severance damages is the decrease in the market value of
    the remaining property, if the cost of restoring the remaining property as far as possible to
    its position before the taking is less than the increase in the market value the restoration
    would bring to the property, the condemner is entitled to adopt the restoration cost (cost
    to cure) as the measure of severance damages if it is less than the decrease in the
    unrestored property's market value as a result of the taking. (Hayward, supra,
    213 Cal.App.2d at pp. 465-466.) Consequently, when the property owner offers evidence
    of the cost to cure, the evidence is " 'admissible only when there is also evidence that
    such cost is no greater in amount than the decrease in market value of the property if it is
    left as it stood.' " (Id. at p. 466.) Conversely, when the owner relies on evidence of the
    decrease in the market value of the property as it is left by the taking, the condemner is
    entitled to present evidence of the cost to cure if that measure of severance damages
    would result in a lesser award than the diminution in market value. (Ibid.)
    In short, the cost to cure is a proper measure of severance damages "only when it
    is no greater in amount than the decrease in the market value of the property if left as it
    stood." (People ex rel. Department of Public Works v. Flintkote Co. (1968)
    
    264 Cal.App.2d 97
    , 106.) Accordingly, Vanta was not entitled to recover both the
    diminution in the market value of his remaining property and the cost of "curing" his loss
    of direct access to the property by developing access to the property over the replacement
    easement; he was entitled to recover one or the other, whichever was less, and was not
    entitled to present cost to cure evidence in the absence of evidence that the cost to cure
    8
    was not greater than the decrease in the remaining property's market value. (Hayward,
    supra, 213 Cal.App.2d at p. 466.)
    In his reply brief, Vanta asserts that the road construction costs he sought to
    present to the jury do not constitute "cost to cure" evidence and that he is not arguing that
    the cost to cure is an additional element of severance damages or should be used as a
    substitute for the calculation of fair market value. He explains that his argument is that
    the cost of constructing a road over the replacement easement should have been admitted
    as evidence of the fair market value of the remaining property–i.e., as evidence that the
    fair market value of the remainder was further reduced by the increased cost of
    constructing the road.
    Vanta's characterization of his argument as not seeking the cost to cure as an
    additional element of severance damages is inaccurate.4 Vanta is plainly arguing that he
    has the right to recover the increased cost of building a road over the replacement
    easement to "cure" the loss of direct access to his property in the before condition as an
    element of his severance damages. Although he characterizes this cost to cure as a
    dollar-for-dollar reduction in the property's fair market value, it effectively constitutes an
    4       To argue that severance damages in the amount of the cost of constructing a road
    over the replacement easement would not constitute "cost to cure" damages is quibbling
    over semantics. Vanta's valuation expert Van Tassel referred to the cost of constructing
    an access road over the replacement easement as "Cost to Cure." Vanta in his opening
    brief argues that real estate appraisers in calculating the fair market value of a property
    with a deficiency "will factor in the cost to cure the deficiency." (Italics added.) He also
    cites Olson v. Shasta (1970) 
    5 Cal.App.3d 336
    , 342 for the proposition that, in his words,
    "damages to cure problems caused by the taking is not a separate, unrelated measurement
    of damages but merely evidence of loss of market value."
    9
    additional element of severance damages over and above the reduction in fair market
    value he contends the property suffered as a result of his loss of the right to directly
    access his property and his exclusive control of such direct access.
    In any event, regardless of whether evidence of the cost to build a road over the
    replacement easement is properly viewed as "cost to cure" evidence, the court's exclusion
    of that evidence was not an abuse of discretion for the additional reason that the evidence
    was speculative and conjectural evidence of a specific plan of future access development
    that did not presently exist and might never exist. As noted, severance damages "may not
    be based on ' " 'speculative, remote, imaginary, contingent, or merely possible' " ' events."
    (Livermore, supra, 205 Cal.App.4th at p. 1466) In the same vein, "[a] condemnation
    award cannot be based upon a speculative projected use for the property claimed by the
    owner. (Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Zuckerman (1987) 
    189 Cal.App.3d 1113
    , 1146
    (Zuckerman).)
    The Court of Appeal in Zuckerman reversed an award of severance damages that
    was based on evidence that in the event "wildcat" (exploratory) wells would be drilled in
    the future to explore the earth beneath a condemned oil and gas storage reservoir, they
    would have to be "slant drilled" from outside the condemned property at a greater cost
    than if they could be drilled from straight above the condemned reservoir. (Zuckerman,
    supra, 189 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1145-1146.) The Zuckerman court concluded that the
    severance damage award was conjectural because, among other reasons, there was no
    evidence that any future oil and gas exploration would occur in the remainder property
    (mineral rights) beneath the condemned reservoir. (Id. at p. 1146.) Similarly, the court in
    10
    the present case properly excluded evidence of the increased cost of building an access
    road to Vanta's remaining property over the replacement easement because there was no
    evidence of any plan to develop legal access to Vanta's property in the before condition.5
    Vanta did not lose existing legal access; he lost only the potential to construct legal
    access across the condemned parcels due to the taking.6
    Regarding severance damages for loss of potential access, one court noted, "A
    plaintiff in a takings case cannot recover damages for lost potential access unless the
    plaintiff establishes that there was a reasonable probability that access would have been
    provided in the before taking scenario in the reasonably near future." (Childers v. United
    States (Fed.Cl. 2013) 
    116 Fed.Cl. 486
    , 553, citing United States ex rel. TVA v. Powelson
    (1943) 
    319 U.S. 266
    , 275-276 [Special or higher use of land is too remote and speculative
    to be considered for purposes of compensation in an eminent domain case absent a
    showing of a reasonable probability that the land will be developed for such use in the
    reasonably near future.] and Board of County Supervisors v. United States (Fed.Cir.
    2002) 
    276 F.3d 1359
    , 1365 [To establish the highest and best use of the property, a party
    must show a "reasonable probability that, at the time of the taking, the land was both
    physically adaptable for such use and that there was a need or demand for such use in the
    5      The record shows that Vanta had access to his property in the before condition
    over a rough graded dirt road, but the access was not legal access because a portion of the
    road ran outside of Vanta's property such that he would trespass on adjoining property by
    using the road. The court granted a motion in limine by SANDAG to exclude testimony
    regarding access to Vanta's property in the before condition over the dirt road.
    6      Vanta's valuation expert Van Tassel testified that Vanta did not have any permits
    or approvals or a specific development plan for his property–"just concepts."
    11
    reasonably near future."].) Here, the evidence did not show a reasonable probability that
    Vanta would have developed access to his property in the before condition in the
    reasonably near future, or that the property itself would have been developed for any
    particular use in the reasonably near future. Consequently, Vanta was not entitled to
    compensation for the cost of building a road over the replacement easement that might
    never be built; he was entitled only to the reduction in the fair market value of the
    remainder as it was left by the taking. The court did not abuse its discretion in excluding
    evidence of the cost to develop access to Vanta's remaining land as part of his severance
    damages.
    II. Refused Special Instruction Regarding the Calculation of Severance Damages for
    Impaired Access
    Vanta contends the court prejudicially erred by refusing to give the special jury
    instruction he proffered regarding the calculation of severance damages in an impaired
    access case. Vanta requested and the court refused the following instruction designated
    "Defendant's Proposed Instruction No. 1": "Mr. Vanta had a right of access, or a right to
    go to and from his property, over the land taken by the plaintiff. [¶] You must determine
    whether Mr. Vanta's access to the property he still owns after the taking was lost or
    impaired by the taking and, if so, whether the fair market value of Mr. Vanta's remaining
    property has been decreased by reason of any loss or impairment of access you may find.
    This should be considered in determining the amount of severance damages, if any."
    "A party is entitled to an instruction on each viable legal theory supported by the
    pleadings and substantial evidence if the party requests a proper instruction. [Citations.]
    12
    'A court may refuse a proposed instruction that incorrectly states the law or is
    argumentative, misleading, or incomprehensible to the average juror, and ordinarily has
    no duty to modify a proposed instruction. [Citations.] A court may refuse a proposed
    instruction if other instructions given adequately cover the legal point. [Citations.]'
    [Citation.] Because an appealed judgment is presumed correct and an appellant has the
    burden to show error, we cannot conclude that the refusal to give an instruction was error
    absent an adequate showing that the proposed instruction was proper." (Bell v. H.F. Cox,
    Inc. (2012) 
    209 Cal.App.4th 62
    , 80.)
    "The giving of an instruction argumentative in form is error [citations], although it
    is not always cause for reversal. [Citations.] An instruction that goes too elaborately into
    the particular facts relied on by one of the parties is an argumentative instruction. An
    instruction should state rules of law generally, rather than elaborate matters of evidence.
    [Citation.] Any attempt to stress, over emphasize, or unduly make prominent selected
    portions of the evidence is in violation of the rule that instructions should not focus the
    jury's attention on particular items of evidence; '[The] vice in any such instruction is that
    it unduly emphasizes one portion of the evidence, puts the court in the position of making
    an argument to the jury, and misleads the jury into thinking that because the court has
    specifically mentioned certain testimonial facts they are of undue importance or that the
    court believed them to be true.' [Citation.]" (Slayton v. Wright (1969) 
    271 Cal.App.2d 219
    , 238.)
    We conclude that the court correctly refused to give Vanta's proffered instruction
    regarding impairment of access because the instruction was legally incorrect. Under
    13
    California law, a landowner possesses an easement of access to "the street upon which
    the landowner's property abuts and from there, in a reasonable manner, to the general
    system of public streets." (Breidert v. Southern Pac. Co. (1964) 
    61 Cal.2d 659
    , 663
    (Breidert).) However, "[n]ot every interference with the property owner's access to the
    street upon which his property abuts and not every impairment of access, as such, to the
    general system of public streets constitutes a taking which entitles him to compensation.
    Such compensation must rest upon the property owner's showing of a substantial
    impairment of his right of access to the general system of public streets." (Id. at pp. 663-
    664.)
    The trial court determines as a question of law whether the interference with the
    property owner's access constitutes a substantial or unreasonable impairment. (Breidert,
    supra, 61 Cal.2d at p. 664.) If the court determines there is substantial impairment, the
    jury determines the extent of the impairment. (Ibid.) "Substantial impairment cannot be
    fixed by abstract definition; it must be found in each case upon the basis of the factual
    situation. . . . '[E]ach case must be considered upon its own facts.' " (Id. at pp. 664-665,
    fns. omitted.) In determining whether there is a substantial impairment of a property
    owner's access to the general system of public streets and public highways, the essential
    inquiry is whether the taking has unreasonably interfered with the property owner's right
    of access. (People ex rel. Department of Public Works. v. Romano (1971) 
    18 Cal.App.3d 63
    , 72-73.)
    "[T]he trial court is required to compare the access available to the particular
    property before and after the impairment and then decide if the impairment is substantial.
    14
    This determination requires the consideration of extensive evidence of the effect of the
    impairment of access to the property which existed before the impairment. Although
    many appellate courts have stated they are treating the issue of substantial access
    impairment as one of law, it appears that if there is an impairment of access to the
    abutting street and from there to the general system of public streets the trial court
    findings of 'substantial' impairment have been reviewed using a substantial evidence
    test. . . . Because of the factual nature of the inquiry, which is unique to each property,
    we view the trial court's determination of 'substantial' impairment as a determination to
    be sustained if it is supported by substantial evidence. [Citations.] The characterization
    of the issue of substantial impairment as one of law means only that the compensability
    issue is a court issue and not a jury issue; the jury issue is limited to the amount of
    damages." (San Diego Metropolitan Transit Development Bd. v. Price Co. (1995) 
    37 Cal.App.4th 1541
    , 1547-1548 (Price), fn. omitted.)
    In contravention of this authority, Vanta's rejected jury instruction asked the jury
    to determine whether Vanta's access to his remaining property "was lost or impaired by
    the taking" and whether any loss or impairment the jury might find decreased the
    property's fair market value—i.e., was compensable. Thus, the instruction effectively
    would have called upon the jury rather than the court to decide the legal question of
    whether SANDAG's taking substantially impaired Vanta's access to his remaining
    property. Whether the taking substantially impaired Vanta's access such that it was
    15
    compensable was a question for the court to decide.7 The only proper question for the
    jury to decide regarding impairment of access would have been the extent of the
    impairment—i.e., the amount of damages–had the court found substantial impairment.8
    Thus, the court properly rejected Vanta's proffered instruction because it was legally
    incorrect.
    We conclude the record supports an implied finding that SANDAG's taking did
    not substantially impair Vanta's access. "The doctrine of implied findings requires the
    appellate court to infer the trial court made all factual findings necessary to support the
    judgment. [Citation.] The doctrine is a natural and logical corollary to three fundamental
    principles of appellate review: (1) a judgment is presumed correct; (2) all intendments
    and presumptions are indulged in favor of correctness; and (3) the appellant bears the
    7      At trial, Vanta's counsel acknowledged the rule that the court rather than the jury
    decides whether a taking substantially impairs access but requested the instruction
    anyway. After close of evidence and during reported discussion of proposed jury
    instructions, Vanta's counsel stated that "normally with this instruction, the Court would
    make a finding . . . as to whether or not there was substantial access. But . . . because this
    is a mixed question, the jury will make the finding. So I still believe it's appropriate to
    instruct them that if you find that there has been substantial impairment of access, that
    could be a factor that may be considered in severance damages."
    8       Vanta states that the source of his proffered special instruction is BAJI No. 11.87,
    which instructs the jury to determine the extent of severance damages caused by
    impairment of access. However, BAJI No. 11.87 applies only after the court has
    determined there is substantial impairment of access, stating, in relevant part: "The court
    has determined that defendant's right of access [has been] [will be] impaired by reason of
    plaintiff's [proposed] acquisition and the construction of the improvement thereon [in the
    manner proposed]. You must determine the extent, if any, to which defendant's
    remaining property has been decreased in market value by reason of this impairment of
    access. This should be considered in determining the amount of severance damages, if
    any."
    16
    burden of providing an adequate record affirmatively proving error." (Fladeboe v.
    American Isuzu Motors Inc. (2007) 
    150 Cal.App.4th 42
    , 58.)
    SANDAG filed written opposition to Vanta's proffered instruction in which it
    cited the rule that only substantial impairment of access is compensable and argued there
    was no evidence of substantial impairment. The trial court orally ruled that
    "[SANDAG's] objection to proposed instruction No. 1 is sustained. I will not give
    [Vanta's] proposed special instruction No. 1." The court's rejection of Vanta's proffered
    instruction and sustaining of SANDAG's objection to the instruction on the ground there
    was no evidence of substantial impairment of access constitutes an implied finding that
    the taking did not substantially impair Vanta's access to his remaining property.
    Substantial evidence supports that finding.
    As noted, "[t]he right of access is not unlimited. 'Not every interference with the
    property owner's access to the street upon which his property abuts and not every
    impairment of access, as such, to the general system of public streets constitutes a taking
    which entitles him to compensation.' [Citation.] As long as there is access to the
    abutting road and from there to the next intersecting street in at least one direction, there
    is no legally cognizable impairment of access." (Border Business Park, Inc. v. City of
    San Diego (2006) 
    142 Cal.App.4th 1538
    , 1557, quoting Breidert, supra, 61 Cal.2d at
    pp. 663-664.) A property owner is not entitled to compensation for access impairment
    that is not substantial, "even though the action of the public body may impede the
    convenience with which ingress and egress may thereafter be accomplished and may
    17
    necessitate circuity of travel to reach a given destination." (People ex rel. Department of
    Public Works v. Becker (1968) 
    262 Cal.App.2d 634
    , 641.)
    In Price, as a result of construction of a rail transit line in the center of a north-
    south street (Cuyamaca Street), direct vehicular access to the appellant's corner property
    became unavailable from the street's southbound lanes, but remained available from the
    street's northbound lanes and from an east-west street abutting the property. (Price,
    supra, 37 Cal.App.4th at p. 1543.) This court noted that the trial court in Price
    "considered evidence that the access impairment only increased the distance of travel
    from the property to the southbound lanes of Cuyamaca Street, that the highest and best
    use of the property before and after the impairment remained the same, and that the
    property could be used for the same purposes before and after the impairment. There was
    no evidence that the impairment would prevent or deter access to any particular type of
    vehicle, like a delivery truck, or decrease the number of vehicles to which the property is
    available." (Id. at p. 1548.) The Price court concluded this evidence was substantial and
    sufficient to support the trial court's determination that the rail line project did not
    substantially impair access to the appellant's property. (Id. at p. 1549.)
    Here, the evidence was similarly sufficient to support the trial court's implied
    finding that Vanta's access to his remaining land was not substantially impaired. The
    court could reasonably find there was no substantial impairment of Vanta's access to his
    property in the before condition because SANDAG provided Vanta reasonable
    replacement access. (See Williams Place, LLC v. State ex rel. Dep't of Transp.
    (Wash.Ct.App. 2015) 
    348 P.3d 797
    , 815 [landowner is not entitled to compensation for
    18
    impairment of access resulting from street vacation if the landowner still retains an
    alternate mode of egress from or ingress to his land, even if less convenient]; State ex rel.
    Commissioner of Transportation v. Dikert (N.J.Super.Ct.App.Div. 1999) 
    725 A.2d 119
    ,
    124 [property owners were not entitled to compensation for loss of access to their
    property as a result of condemnation of their easement because the State provided a
    reasonable alternative means of access].) There was no evidence that replacing Vanta's
    potential direct access with potential access over the replacement easement affected the
    highest and best use of the remaining property—whatever that use may be—and there
    was no evidence that the change in potential access would prevent or deter access to any
    particular type of vehicle or decrease the number of vehicles to which the property is
    available.
    Moreover, there was evidence supporting a reasonable inference that building a
    road over the replacement easement would not be more burdensome than building an
    access road over Vanta's property in the before condition. Robert Caringella, a real estate
    appraiser called by SANDAG, was asked whether Vanta was "better off having that
    replacement easement than owning the strips that were taken from him[.]" Caringella
    testified: "I think that once you pay for the fee strip, that easement provides adequate
    access to the remainder parcel. So it's - - it's as good - - or in some cases, it might be a
    little bit better because of shared cost. It's already partway up the hill. [¶] One of the
    problems with the lower access road [Vanta could have built over the condemned
    property in the before condition] is that you have to chase it up the steep slope. At least
    with the replacement road, we're partway up the hillside already." Caringella explained
    19
    that condemned strip of land "doesn't really help much getting up . . . to the upper level
    unless you provide a steep road or you grade it down." He did not think it would be more
    difficult to build a road over the replacement easement than it would have been over the
    land taken, and concluded that the access SANDAG provided to Vanta's remaining
    property over the replacement easement did not change the value of the remainder.
    Jeffrey Barfield, a certified land use planner that SANDAG called, testified that
    the access road Vanta would have built but for the taking would not have been a simple
    driveway but rather an "access roadway" that would have to meet various standards—
    e.g., fire access standards. Barfield further testified that the conceptual development plan
    prepared by Vanta's expert for access to Vanta's upper 7.7 acre flat pad would require
    access with a steepness of 18 percent, and that the City would not approve a driveway or
    industrial street with an 18 percent grade.
    There was also evidence supporting a reasonable inference that the cost to Vanta
    of building a road over the replacement easement would not be greater than the cost of
    building a road over the land taken from Vanta because the cost of constructing the
    former would be borne by all of the property owners who shared the replacement
    easement. As noted, Caringella testified that access over the replacement easement
    "might be a little bit better because of shared cost." Vanta's valuation expert Van Tassel
    acknowledged that Vanta would have borne the entire cost of constructing a road in the
    before condition but, by statute, other easement holders would share in the cost of a road
    over the after-condition easement. Roberto de Gregorio, one of a number of owners of
    other property served by the replacement easement, testified that SANDAG improved
    20
    prospects for developing the property by providing the easement. He stated that
    "[SANDAG] allowed a road in for us[,]" and that notwithstanding the project, "we are
    still able to do a development that will be feasible for us in the future."
    The evidence that constructing an access road over the replacement easement
    would not be more burdensome or costly to Vanta than constructing access over the
    condemned property would have been supports the court's implied finding that
    SANDAG's partial taking of Vanta's property did not substantially impair his access to
    his remaining property. In light of that finding, the court did not err in refusing to
    instruct the jury to determine whether the fair market value of Vanta's remaining property
    had been decreased by impairment of access.
    To the extent the court's refusal to specifically instruct the jury to consider
    impairment of access in determining severance damages was error, the error was
    harmless because Vanta presented evidence to the jury that the taking impaired access to
    his remaining land and the jury's verdict reflects that its award of severance damages
    included compensation for impairment of access. The court instructed the jury with
    CACI No. 3511, a general instruction on severance damages that directed the jury to
    determine the fair market value of Vanta's remaining property on the valuation date
    (Aug. 7, 2012) by subtracting the fair market value of the part taken from the fair market
    value of the entire property, determine the fair market value of the remaining property
    after completion of the project, and then subtract the fair market value of remaining
    property after project completion from the fair market value of the remaining property on
    August 7, 2012. The court also instructed the jury that "[i]n determining fair market
    21
    value you must consider any condition that affects the value of the property if the
    condition existed on August 7, 2012 but was discovered after that date." (Italics added.)
    One of Vanta's two theories of severance damages was that the remainder lost
    value, in Vanta's words, "because of the loss of exclusive management and control of the
    access to the remainder caused by the impairment of access from access over fee simple
    land to access over the non-exclusive easement." (Italics added.) Under that theory
    Vanta sought severance damages of $764,903. Vanta presented evidence that
    development of an access road on the replacement easement would be more difficult and
    expensive than developing one in the before condition would have been. The jury visited
    the site and presumably viewed firsthand both the area of the replacement easement and
    the area of potential access to Vanta's property in the before condition. The jury
    submitted a question during its deliberations that showed the jurors were considering the
    cost of constructing access over the replacement easement.9 Vanta acknowledges that
    the jury accepted his impaired-access theory of severance damages in awarding him
    severance damages in the amount of $765,046.
    Thus, even though the court impliedly found there was no substantial impairment
    of access, the jury's verdict shows that it considered the effect of the taking on Vanta's
    access to the remainder in determining the reduction on the market value of the remainder
    as a result of the taking. Vanta was allowed to put on evidence that the taking and
    9      The jury sent a written note asking for a copy of the testimony of SANDAG's
    right-of-way expert, Jane Wiggans, "regarding cost of replacement easement as a dirt
    road[.]"
    22
    replacement easement impaired his access to his remaining property and the jury
    presumably took that into consideration in assessing severance damages. Even assuming
    the court erred in refusing Vanta's proposed instruction regarding impairment of access,
    we conclude the error was harmless because the jury's verdict reflects that the jury
    considered the effect of the taking on Vanta's access to his remaining property in
    awarding severance damages. The judgment is not subject to reversal for instructional
    error.
    III. Attorney Fee Award
    Vanta's contention that the court erred by not including his counsel's contingency
    fee in his attorney fee award is moot in light of our reversal of the attorney fee award,
    discussed below.
    SANDAG'S APPEAL
    I. Denial of SANDAG 's Motion In Limine to Exclude the Opinions of Vanta's Valuation
    Expert
    As noted, the court denied SANDAG's motion in limine to exclude the expert
    opinions of Vanta's designated expert Van Tassel regarding (1) the value of the property
    being taken; (2) the amount of damage to the remainder of the larger parcel from which
    the property was taken; (3) the amount of benefit to the remainder; and (4) the amount of
    any other compensation required to be paid. SANDAG contends the court abused its
    discretion and caused SANDAG prejudice by denying its motion in limine. SANDAG
    asks that we reverse the judgment and remand with directions to exclude Van Tassel's
    opinions and testimony on valuation and severance damages on retrial because Vanta
    23
    failed to provide a statement of valuation data with his designation of Van Tassel as an
    expert witnesses.
    Considering the circumstances surrounding the parties' exchange of expert witness
    information in this case, including apparent confusion as to whether the expert witness
    exchanges the court ordered at the CMC were under the Eminent Domain Law
    (§ 1230.010 et seq.) or the Civil Discovery Act (§ 2016.010 et seq.), we conclude the
    court did not abuse its discretion in denying SANDAG's motion in limine to exclude Van
    Tassel's opinions.
    The statutes that govern exchanges of lists of experts in civil actions other than
    eminent domain cases (§ 2034.210 et seq.) do not apply to expert exchanges in eminent
    domain cases. (§ 2034.010.) "The discovery statutes applicable to an eminent domain
    action require each party to serve upon the opposing party its list of expert witnesses and
    a statement of valuation data not later than the date set for exchange of this information.
    (See §§ 1258.230, 1258.250.) Section 1258.220 provides that, unless another date is
    agreed to by the parties or set by court order on good cause shown, the parties to a
    condemnation proceeding are to exchange statements of valuation data 90 days before
    trial. (§ 1258.220, subd. (a).) A statement of valuation data must be exchanged for each
    witness who will testify to his opinion regarding the value of the land and any other
    amount of compensation required under the Eminent Domain Law. (§ 1258.250,
    subds. (a), (d).) Among other items, the statements must disclose: (1) the witness's
    opinion of value; (2) the date of valuation used by the witness; (3) all comparable sales,
    replacement cost calculations, and net income projections supporting the expert's opinion;
    24
    and (4) the names of all other experts on whom the expert is relying. (§ 1258.260,
    subds. (a)-(c).)
    "Absent relief from the court, a designated expert cannot testify for a party in its
    case-in-chief unless the party timely served a statement of valuation data, and the expert
    cannot testify as to any opinion or data that was required to be included in the statement
    pursuant to section 1258.250, but was omitted. (§ 1258.280, subd. (c).) The intent
    behind providing a sanction is 'to insure that the parties make a good faith exchange of
    lists of expert witnesses and essential valuation data.' [Citation.] [¶] Section 1258.290
    authorizes the court to relieve a party from its default under the eminent domain
    discovery provisions if: (1) the party made a good faith effort to comply by the date of
    exchange and gave written notice of any changes necessary in its statement thereafter
    (see § 1258.270); and (2) either the party could not in the exercise of reasonable diligence
    have determined that changes were necessary in its expert's opinion or data, or the failure
    to provide a complete valuation statement was the result of mistake, inadvertence,
    surprise, or excusable neglect. (§ 1258.290, subd. (a).) Section 1258.290 further
    provides that in determining whether to provide relief under the statute, the court must
    take into account the extent to which the opposing party relied upon the original
    statement of valuation data and would be prejudiced by allowing the expert's testimony.
    (§ 1258.290, subd. (b).)" (Escondido Union School Dist. v. Casa Suenos De Oro, Inc.
    (2005) 
    129 Cal.App.4th 944
    , 977.)
    As noted, at the CMC in this case, the court ordered a first expert witness
    exchange to be completed by July 5 and a second expert witness exchange to be
    25
    completed by July 19, 2013. SANDAG served a list of experts and a statement of
    valuation data under section 1258.260 on July 3, 2013. Vanta served an initial expert
    witness designation on July 5, 2013, that stated the designation was in accordance with
    section 2034.210 and a second expert designation "in accordance to Section 2034.280"10
    on July 19, 2013, but did not serve valuation data with either designation.
    In its order awarding Vanta attorney fees, the court made the following findings
    regarding the exchange of expert information and valuation data, which are largely
    undisputed: "The court held a Case Management Conference on April 19, 2013 and set
    dates, including dates for the trial and expert exchanges. [SANDAG] interpreted this to
    include the exchange of valuation under Eminent Domain Law because [its] counsel
    asked the court to set dates 'per code,' meaning under Eminent Domain Law. . . . [Vanta]
    apparently interpreted the order for exchange of expert witness information only. There
    is no evidence presented that either the parties or the court specifically indicated at the
    CMC that the expert exchange set by the court included valuation data. [SANDAG] did
    not serve a demand for statements of valuation data [under section 1258.210] within ten
    days after the trial date was selected. . . . [¶] Instead, on July 3, 2013, [SANDAG] timely
    served its expert exchange and included a Statement of Valuation Data, indicating that
    10     Unlike section 2034.280, which applies to civil actions other than eminent domain
    actions and allows a party to submit a second or "supplemental" expert witness list to
    designate experts on a subject to be covered by an adverse party's expert that was not
    covered by an expert on the party's initial expert witness list, the Eminent Domain Law
    provides for a single exchange of expert witnesses and statements of valuation data
    (§§ 1258.210-1258.260), although a party may amend an expert witness list under
    circumstances specified in section 1258.270.
    26
    [SANDAG's] expert valued the take at $625,300. . . . [Vanta] timely provided both the
    first and second expert designations, but did not provide valuation information.
    [SANDAG] objected to both expert witness designations because valuation data was not
    included.
    "On August 2, 2013, [SANDAG] served a notice of deposition for [Vanta's]
    appraisal expert, Gerry Van Tassel, with the deposition to be held on August 26, 2013.
    On August 20, 2013, [SANDAG] was informed that Mr. Van Tassel would not be
    available on that date. [SANDAG] reset the date to August 30, 2013, although [Vanta]
    had proposed September 6, 2013. On August 30, 2013, the day the deposition was to be
    held, [Vanta's] counsel notified [SANDAG's] counsel that Mr. Van Tassel had the flu.
    [SANDAG] reset the deposition to September 4, 201[3]. . . . This date was two days
    before [SANDAG's] offer was due on September 6, 2013 pursuant to CCP § 1250.410(a).
    "Apparently, Mr. Van Tassel's expert appraisal report was not completed until
    August 29, 2013. At the September 4, 2013 deposition, [SANDAG] was provided with a
    September 3, 2013 appraisal report. . . .
    "Once [SANDAG] received [Vanta's] valuation offer, which included severance
    damages, [SANDAG] made its initial offer of $687,830 on its opinion of value at
    $625,300. The offer included attorney fees, but not severance damages. After further
    review of [Vanta's] September 3, 2013 appraisal report, [SANDAG] increased its offer to
    $805,800 on September 16, 2013. This amount still did not include severance damages
    but exceeded the $781,000 [SANDAG] had on deposit. . . . [¶] Although [SANDAG]
    argues that it did not have sufficient time to prepare its offer, the court is not convinced
    27
    that it is the sole fault of [Vanta]. There was confusion about the expert exchange. The
    parties could have come to the court for clarification and/or resolved it themselves.
    However, this was not done by either party."
    During oral argument on motions in limine, the court explained its tentative
    decision to deny SANDAG's motion to exclude Van Tassel's expert testimony as follows:
    "And the reason for that one is, at the case management conference, I did not specify that
    the statement of valuation was to be exchanged when I set the dates for expert exchange.
    So the Court is taking partial fault for that." Counsel for SANDAG stated to the court,
    "You were informed [at the CMC] that this was an eminent domain case. And at that
    particular time, you set the requirements for the exchange, for first exchange and the
    second exchange." The court responded, "Just like I do with any regular case." The
    court added, "Nobody said anything special about eminent domain, and I didn't key in on
    anything special." The court later stated, "Well, again, the Court bears some
    responsibility here because I was not specific when I gave the [expert exchange] dates
    and talked about the designation."
    The court stated it was "willing to make some accommodation" for any prejudice
    SANDAG suffered as a result of the timing of its receipt of Vanta's valuation data.
    SANDAG's counsel responded that "we will be revisiting this issue during the course of
    the trial because of Mr. Van Tassel's appraisal approaches." After counsel reiterated that
    he was going to bring up issues regarding Van Tassel's appraisal during the course of
    trial, the court asked, "So you're not interested in delaying the trial to do the –" and
    SANDAG's counsel interjected, "Not at all." The court stated, "All right. I just wanted
    28
    to give you that opportunity. Okay. All minds clear on that one?" Vanta's counsel
    responded, "Yeah, that's fine."
    The court's comments on the record show that at the CMC, the court was not
    mindful that because this was an eminent domain case, the exchange of expert witness
    information should have been in accordance with the eminent domain statutes. The
    parties bear some responsibility for the court's oversight because neither raised the point
    at the CMC. Had the court been reminded that this was an eminent domain case and been
    asked whether statements of valuation should accompany parties' expert witness lists as
    required by the relevant eminent domain statutes, it is highly probable that the court
    would have put the case on the proper eminent domain track and ordered the parties to
    exchange expert information in compliance with sections 1258.240 through 1258.270.
    SANDAG cannot be heard to complain on appeal that it was prejudiced by Vanta's
    untimely submission of valuation data because the court offered to cure any such
    prejudice by continuing the trial and SANDAG declined the offer. Further, as the trial
    court noted in its attorney fee order, Vanta provided the valuation data to SANDAG on
    September 4, 2013, which was 41 days before the first day of trial (Oct. 15, 2013) and 54
    days before SANDAG's counsel cross-examined Van Tassel. SANDAG filed an
    amended statutory offer of just compensation on September 16, 2013, after receiving
    Vanta's valuation data. Based on these circumstances, the trial court could reasonably
    find that SANDAG was not prejudiced by the timing of Vanta's provision of valuation
    29
    data. The court did not abuse its discretion in denying SANDAG's motion in limine to
    exclude Van Tassel's expert opinions.11
    II. Award of Attorney Fees to Vanta
    SANDAG contends the court erred in awarding Vanta any attorney fees under
    section 1250.410. SANDAG essentially argues the award to Vanta under
    section 1250.410 should be reversed because there was insufficient evidence to support
    the trial court's findings that SANDAG's final offer was unreasonable and Vanta's final
    demand was reasonable.
    Section 1250.410 is intended to protect the property owners from unnecessary
    litigation over the value of the property sought to be condemned. (Tracy Joint Unified
    School Dist. v. Pombo (2010) 
    189 Cal.App.4th 889
    , 895 (Pombo).) Section 1250.410
    provides, in pertinent part: "(a) At least 20 days prior to the date of the trial on issues
    relating to compensation, the plaintiff shall file with the court and serve on the defendant
    its final offer of compensation in the proceeding and the defendant shall file and serve on
    the plaintiff its final demand for compensation in the proceeding. . . . These offers and
    demands shall be the only offers and demands considered by the court in determining the
    entitlement, if any, to litigation expenses. . . . [¶] (b) If the court, on motion of the
    11      We do not specifically address SANDAG's separately headed argument that
    Vanta's actions throughout the case prejudiced SANDAG, because that argument
    essentially rehashes SANDAG's argument that the court prejudicially erred by not
    excluding Van Tassel's expert opinion testimony based on Vanta's failure to exchange
    valuation data. We also do not address the parties' arguments regarding whether the
    court's decision to deny SANDAG's motion in limine and allow Van Tassel to give expert
    testimony was proper under section 1258.290 because the record does not indicate that
    the court granted relief under that statute.
    30
    defendant made within 30 days after entry of judgment, finds that the offer of the plaintiff
    was unreasonable and that the demand of the defendant was reasonable viewed in the
    light of the evidence admitted and the compensation awarded in the proceeding, the costs
    allowed pursuant to Section 1268.710 shall include the defendant's litigation expenses.
    [¶] . . . [¶] (d) If timely made, the offers and demands as provided in subdivision (a) shall
    be considered by the court on the issue of determining an entitlement to litigation
    expenses."
    Thus, section 1250.410 "requires the trial court to find 'both that the owner's
    demand was reasonable and that the agency's offer was unreasonable.' " (Inglewood
    Redevelopment Agency v. Aklilu (2007) 
    153 Cal.App.4th 1095
    , 1117 (Inglewood).)
    "Several factors have emerged as general guidelines for determining the reasonableness
    or unreasonableness of offers. They are ' "(1) the amount of the difference between the
    offer and the compensation awarded, (2) the percentage of the difference between the
    offer and award . . . and (3) the good faith, care and accuracy in how the amount of offer
    and the amount of demand, respectively, were determined." ' [Citation.] Thus, the
    mathematical relation between the condemner's highest offer and the award is only one
    factor that should enter into the trial court's determination." (Continental, supra,
    16 Cal.4th at p. 720.) The California Supreme Court in Continental disapproved "any
    pronouncement purporting to find unreasonableness as a matter of law based purely on
    mathematical disparity, and to commend the lower courts in every case to consider not
    only the numerical figures, but also ' " 'the good faith, care and accuracy in how the
    amount of the offer and the amount of the demand, respectively, were determined.' " ' "
    31
    (Id. at pp. 720-721.) The factors specified in Continental for determining whether a
    condemner's offer is reasonable also apply to the court's determination of whether a
    condemnee's demand is reasonable. (County of Contra Costa v. Pinole Point Properties,
    Inc. (1994) 
    27 Cal.App.4th 1105
    , 1115 (Pinole).)
    "The question of reasonableness is addressed to the court's discretion, to be
    exercised 'after weighing all the evidence and assessing witness credibility independently
    of the jury.' " (People ex rel. Dept. of Transportation v. Yuki (1995) 
    31 Cal.App.4th 1754
    , 1763.) "On appeal the trial court's decision must be upheld if supported by
    substantial evidence." (Id. at p. 1765.) "While the question of reasonableness is typically
    one of fact, as with any finding by a trial court, 'if the uncontradicted evidence permits
    only one conclusion, the issue is legal, not factual [citation].' " (Pinole, supra,
    27 Cal.App.4th at p. 1115.)
    Regarding SANDAG's offer, the court in its written order noted the jury awarded
    Vanta $1,441,95.20 of which $765,046 was severance damages. The court stated:
    "[SANDAG's] final offer was $805,800 for the property taken and included attorneys'
    fees and expenses. . . . [SANDAG] did not offer severance damages, although [Vanta]
    claimed severance damages. [SANDAG's] final offer was 55% of the jury's verdict and
    is thus unreasonable unless [SANDAG] produces significant countervailing evidence that
    its offer was nonetheless made in good faith and with reasonable care."
    The court found that SANDAG's offer was not made in good faith and with
    reasonable care because it did not specifically include severance damages. The court
    stated: "[SANDAG] argues it did not include severance damages because [Vanta]
    32
    received replacement access to his property comparable to his proposed access. But this
    did not take into account the fact that the jury might not agree and the difference between
    its offer and [Vanta's] demand. [¶] The difference between [SANDAG's] final offer and
    [Vanta's] demand was $2.44 million. [SANDAG's] offer included attorneys' fees while
    [Vanta's] demand did not. [Vanta] included severance damages; [SANDAG] did not
    specifically include severance damages. Under these facts, it appears a reasonable
    condemner would have submitted an offer that, at minimum, took into account the
    differences between their positions and the risk that the jury will not accept [SANDAG's]
    expert's testimony that there were no severance damages. . . . [¶] Taken with the fact
    that the offer was less than 60% of the jury verdict, the court does not find [SANDAG]
    has produced substantial evidence that its offer was nonetheless made in good faith and
    with reasonable care."
    The court explained its finding that Vanta's demand was reasonable as follows:
    "[Vanta's] final demand was $3,250,000 for the taking and severance damages, but did
    not include[] attorneys' fees, costs, expenses or interest. . . . The jury verdict was 44% of
    [Vanta's] final demand, exclusive of attorneys' fees, litigation expenses and costs. [¶] At
    trial, the court excluded some of [Vanta's] evidence for damages, which eliminated some
    of the severance damages that were included in the offer, so the percentage of the jury
    verdict alone is not indicative of [Vanta's] good faith, care, and accuracy in the method of
    determination of the demand. In making the demand, [Vanta] relied on his expert and
    while those amounts had to be recalculated during trial, at the time the demand was
    made, it appears to have been made in good faith and with reasonable care."
    33
    The record does not support the trial court's finding that Vanta's demand was
    reasonable. We conclude the demand was unreasonable as a matter of law "viewed in the
    light of the evidence admitted and the compensation awarded in the proceeding . . . ."
    (§1250.410, subd. (b).) SANDAG's offer was much closer to the jury's award than was
    Vanta's demand. While the jury's award of $1,441,095 was approximately 79 percent
    above SANDAG's offer of $805,800, Vanta's demand of $3,250,000 was more than
    double (approximately 126 percent above) the jury's award.
    In New Haven Unified School Dist. v. Taco Bell Corp. (1994) 
    24 Cal.App.4th 1473
     (New Haven), the Court of Appeal concluded that the trial court erred by, among
    other things, awarding litigation expenses under section 1250.410 to a condemnee whose
    demand was about double the trial court's award and had to be reduced further in
    conformance with the Court of Appeal's decision. (New Haven, supra, at pp. 1485-
    1486.) The Court of Appeal stated that it had "found no precedent for awarding litigation
    expenses where the demand is so disproportionate to the actual award. (Id. at pp. 1486.)
    In Pinole, the Court of Appeal reversed an award of litigation expenses to a condemnee
    whose "1 million demand was a staggering $800,000 more than the actual award."
    (Pinole, supra, 27 Cal.App.4th at p. 1115.) Noting the demand was five times greater
    than the award, the Pinole court stated that "[t]his alone suggests the demand was
    unreasonable." (Ibid.) Although the California Supreme Court has directed trial courts
    "to consider not only the numerical figures but also ' " 'the good faith, care and accuracy
    in how the amount of the offer and the amount of the demand, respectively, were
    determined[,]' " ' " (Continental, supra, 16 Cal.4th at pp. 720-721), New Haven and
    34
    Pinole illustrate that a demand can be so highly disproportionate to the ultimate award
    that it may be viewed as presumptively unreasonable.
    We conclude that the great mathematical disparity between Vanta's demand and
    the jury's award warrants a finding that the demand is unreasonable unless there is
    significant countervailing evidence of good faith, care and accuracy in the calculation of
    the demand. (See Pombo, supra, 189 Cal.App.4th at p. 898 ["[W]here mathematical
    comparisons would ordinarily dictate an award to the owner, a trial court may properly
    deny litigation expenses where there is significant countervailing evidence that the
    condemner's offer was nonetheless made in good faith and with reasonable care."].) We
    conclude there is insufficient countervailing evidence of care and accuracy in the
    preparation of Vanta's demand to overcome the presumption of unreasonableness arising
    from the mathematical disparity between the demand and the jury's award.
    The lack of care and accuracy in the calculation of Vanta's demand is primarily
    evidenced by the demand's inclusion of $915,960 in "cost to cure" severance damages
    that the trial court properly ruled in limine were not available. As noted, the trial court
    excused Vanta's inclusion of these inadmissible severance damages in his demand by
    reasoning that because it had excluded "some of the severance damages that were
    included in the [demand], . . . the percentage of the jury verdict alone is not indicative of
    [Vanta's] good faith, care, and accuracy in the method of determination of the demand.
    In making the demand, [Vanta] relied on his expert and while those amounts had to be
    recalculated during trial, at the time the demand was made, it appears to have been made
    in good faith and with reasonable care."
    35
    Thus, the court effectively ruled that although Vanta's demand was highly inflated
    based on its use of improper appraisal methodology and inadmissible evidence, the
    demand was nevertheless reasonable because Vanta relied on his expert's use of the
    improper methodology and was ignorant of its impropriety. Generally, however, a
    demand for compensation to which the condemnee is not legally entitled is unreasonable.
    (Inglewood, supra, 153 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1118-1119 [demand of business owner that
    included amounts for moveable equipment and fixtures was unreasonable because owner
    was not entitled to compensation for moveable equipment and did not own most of the
    fixtures on the property]; City of San Leandro v. Highsmith (1981) 
    123 Cal.App.3d 146
    ,
    159 [condemner's expert's declaration revealed clear evidence that condemnee's demand
    was not based on proper factual foundation and legal theory and was therefore
    unreasonable].) We conclude that because Vanta's demand was based on inadmissible
    evidence and improper methodology, it fails the reasonableness test under the factor of
    the care and accuracy in determining the demand, even though Vanta may in good faith
    have believed the demand was reasonable due to his reliance on his expert's valuation of
    the property.
    Lack of care and accuracy in the determination of Vanta's demand is also
    evidenced by Van Tassel's use of inadmissible evidence of the listing prices of
    comparable properties to arrive at his valuation figure for Vanta's remaining property of
    $4 per square foot, reduced slightly to $3.83 per square foot based on the property's
    requiring "a longer than typical access road for the highest and best use." At trial, out of
    the presence of the jury, SANDAG's counsel objected that the listing price of a
    36
    comparable property is inadmissible under Evidence Code section 822 to determine the
    subject property's value.12 The court observed that Van Tassel had in fact used the
    listings to adjust the value of Vanta's remaining property from $3.49 per square foot to $4
    per square foot in his appraisal report. When the court indicated it would exclude
    evidence of the listings, Vanta's counsel stated that Van Tassel in his trial testimony
    would recalculate the value of the property as being $3.55 per square foot.13 Lack of
    care and accuracy in Vanta's demand is further evidenced by the fact that the demand of
    $3,250,000, which Vanta made on September 6, 2013, was $628,200 more than the
    combined values of the land taken ($820,800) and severance damages ($1,807,400) stated
    in the appraisal report that Vanta had provided to SANDAG only two days earlier on
    September 4, 2013.
    We conclude there was insufficient evidence to support the finding that Vanta's
    demand was reasonable within the meaning of section 1250.410. All three factors to be
    considered in determining whether a demand is reasonable–the amount of the difference
    12     Under Evidence Code section 822, subdivision (a)(2), the following is
    inadmissible and not properly considered as a basis for an opinion on the value of
    property: "The price at which an offer or option to purchase or lease the property or
    property interest being valued or any other property was made, or the price at which the
    property or interest was optioned, offered, or listed for sale or lease, except that an
    option, offer, or listing may be introduced by a party as an admission of another party to
    the proceeding; but nothing in this subdivision permits an admission to be used as direct
    evidence upon any matter that may be shown only by opinion evidence under
    Section 813."
    13     Van Tassel in his appraisal report adjusted the figure of $3.49 per square foot to
    $3.55 based on information regarding the sale of one of the comparable properties, and
    then adjusted the $3.55 figure to $4 based on the listing prices of three other comparable
    properties.
    37
    between the demand and compensation awarded, the percentage of the difference
    between the demand and award, and the good faith, care and accuracy in how the amount
    of the demand was determined–weigh against a finding that Vanta's demand was
    reasonable. Because Vanta's demand was unreasonable as a matter of law, the court
    abused its discretion in awarding Vanta litigation expenses under section 1250.410.14
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. The order awarding Vanta attorney fees and expert fees
    under section 1250.410 is reversed. The parties shall bear their own costs on appeal.
    HUFFMAN, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    MCCONNELL, P. J.
    NARES, J.
    14     Vanta filed a motion to strike portions of SANDAG's reply brief as being in
    violation of California Rules of Court, rule 8.216(b)(3) because it addresses issues raised
    in Vanta's appeal in addition to the issues raised in SANDAG's own appeal. We deny
    Vanta's motion to strike in the interest of judicial economy, because California Rules of
    Court, rule 8.204(e)(2)(B) requires an appellate court to give a party who has filed a
    nonconforming brief " 'leave to file a new brief within a specified time.' " However, we
    have disregarded the discussion in SANDAG's reply brief that does not comply with
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.216(b)(3). (Hawran v. Hixson (2012) 
    209 Cal.App.4th 256
    , 268.)
    38