Filed 4/21/15Sacramento Area Flood Control Agency v. Dhaliwal CA3
                                           NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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.




              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
                                      THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
                                                     (Sacramento)


SACRAMENTO AREA FLOOD CONTROL AGENCY,                                                            C073098

                   Plaintiff and Respondent,                                               (Super. Ct. No.
                                                                                          34-2010-0070156)
         v.

BRINDERJIT S. DHALIWAL, as Co-executor, etc., et al.,

                   Defendants and Appellants.


         In this eminent domain proceeding, plaintiff Sacramento Area Flood Control
Agency (SAFCA) acquired a fee simple interest in, a roadway easement over, and a
temporary construction easement over a portion of defendant Ranjit S. Dhaliwal’s
roughly 131-acre property in the Natomas Basin for use in connection with the Natomas
Levee Improvement Program. The jury awarded Dhaliwal $178,703 for the property
taken and $29,100 in severance damages. Brinderjit S. Dhaliwal and Gurdeep S.
Dhaliwal, as co-executors of Dhaliwal’s estate, appeal.1



1 The notice of appeal was filed on behalf of Ranjit S. Dhaliwal. On August 29, 2013,
this court ordered that Brinderjit S. Dhaliwal and Gurdeep S. Dhaliwal, as co-executors
of the Estate of Ranjit S. Dhaliwal, be substituted as appellants in place of Ranjit S.
Dhaliwal, deceased, in this matter. Ranjit, Brinderjit, and Gurdeep Dhaliwal are referred
to herein as “Dhaliwal” for ease of reference.

                                                             1
       Dhaliwal does not contest SAFCA’s right to take the property. Rather, his
challenge is limited to the compensation award. His principal contention on appeal is
that the trial court prejudicially erred in allowing SAFCA to introduce evidence
concerning “future access” to the property. He claims that such evidence is speculative
because “[a]fter this case is concluded, the County and SAFCA would be able to deny
Dhaliwal access to the property,” leaving him landlocked. We shall conclude that the
trial court did not err in admitting the challenged evidence because such evidence had the
potential to affect the property’s market value, and was not conjectural, speculative, or
remote (Metropolitan Water Dist. of So. California v. Campus Crusade for Christ, Inc.
(2007) 41 Cal.4th 954, 972-973 (Campus Crusade)) and did not contradict the scope of
the taking as defined by the resolution of necessity (County of San Diego v. Bressi (1986)
184 Cal.App.3d 112, 123 (Bressi); Coachella Valley Water Dist. v. Western Allied
Properties, Inc. (1987) 190 Cal.App.3d 969, 978-979 (Coachella)).
       Dhaliwal also contends that the trial court erred in allowing SAFCA’s appraiser to
critique his appraiser’s valuation of the property, and that SAFCA’s counsel committed
misconduct during closing argument by commenting on Dhaliwal’s absence and referring
to SAFCA’s inability to pay more than fair market value for the property. We shall
conclude that neither contention has merit, and thus, affirm the judgment.
                  FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. The Natomas Levee Improvement Program
       The Natomas Basin is a large flood plain bordered by the American and
Sacramento Rivers and includes portions of the City of Sacramento and the Sacramento
International Airport. Because the existing levees are not adequate to protect the basin
from a severe flood, SAFCA is repairing approximately 35 of the existing 42 miles of
levees to provide the basin with at least a 100-year level of flood protection. This project
is known as the Natomas Levee Improvement Program.



                                             2
       At all relevant times herein, there has been a de facto building moratorium in the
basin. The first floor of any new building in the basin must be built above the base flood
elevation, which generally speaking is not economically feasible. The de facto
moratorium can be lifted once the project is complete and SAFCA is able to certify that
the levee provides 100-year flood protection.
       On December 10, 2009, SAFCA’s board of directors adopted a resolution of
necessity declaring that the public interest and necessity required the project. SAFCA
also determined that it was necessary for it to acquire a fee simple interest in
approximately 10.94 acres, a roadway easement over approximately 0.499 acres, and a
temporary construction easement over approximately 8.796 acres, including all riparian
and water rights appurtenant to the fee acquisition portion, for the “construction,
operation, reconstruction, repair and maintenance of improvements for present and future
flood control, infrastructure relocations, habitat mitigation and other purposes in
connection with the Project.”
B. The Property Before SAFCA’s Acquisition
       Prior to SAFCA’s acquisition, the property consisted of two legal lots totaling just
over 131-acres. It was (and is) zoned “AG-80,” meaning it is approved for all
agricultural uses and requires a minimum parcel size of 80 acres. It is located in the
basin, on the land-side of the levee directly east of Garden Highway, north of Interstate 5,
and west of the Sacramento International Airport. It was (and is) used for farming.
There were three buildings on the property, a vacant single-family house, a small storage
shed, and a barn. The house was 80 years old, had not been occupied since 2008, and
was in fair to poor condition. The shed and barn were also in disrepair. There was a
driveway leading to the house off Garden Highway.
       In addition to Garden Highway, the property was accessible from North Bayou
Road, a public road that runs along the south side of the property, and Schoolhouse Road,
a private dirt road that runs along the east and southeast border of the property.

                                              3
C. SAFCA’s Acquisition
       SAFCA acquired three interests in the subject property: (1) a fee simple interest in
an approximately 10.94-acre strip of land along Garden Highway, which included the
house and other buildings; (2) an approximately 0.499-acre roadway easement along the
southern border of the property; and (3) an approximately 8.796-acre temporary
construction easement with a term of three years. Following SAFCA’s acquisition, the
property no longer is accessible via Garden Highway, but it continues to be accessible via
North Bayou and Schoolhouse Roads.
D. Dhaliwal’s Appraisal
       1. Fair Market Value
       At trial, Dhaliwal presented the testimony of appraiser Arthur Gimmy to establish
the fair market value of the property, along with severance damages and benefits, if any.
Gimmy found that the highest and best use of the property prior to SAFCA’s acquisition
was as rural residential property-- a combination of agricultural and residential living.
Using February 22, 2010, as the date of value, he determined that the fair market value
for the subject property before SAFCA’s acquisition was $2.3 million or $17,500 an acre.
In making his determination, he used comparable sales, including two in the basin,
namely: (1) a 275-plus acre property directly east of the subject property that sold in
2004 for $10,665 an acre; and (2) a 96.83 acre property along Garden Highway that sold
in 2005 for $10,699 per acre. He then adjusted those figures for time and other factors.
He opined that since 2004 and 2005 on the one hand, and 2010 (the date of valuation) on
the other, prices for this type of property, which has the potential to be used as mitigation
land for future development, increased 40 to 50 percent. In reaching this conclusion,
Gimmy relied on “trends in prices,” but not on any one specific sale. He explained that
this type of property was exempt from the recent downturn in real estate prices due to its
potential for use as mitigation land for future development in the basin.



                                              4
       After determining the value of the whole, Gimmy allocated the appraised value
between what he deemed “the key components of the property”-- a 3-acre homestead and
128 acres of agricultural land. Using comparable sales of small parcels comprised of 5
acres or less, he valued the 3-acre homestead at $375,000 ($215,000 for the land and
$160,000 for the improvements). During cross-examination, he acknowledged that
smaller properties sell for much more per acre than larger properties and that the fictitious
3-acre homestead could not legally be bought and sold since the property, as zoned, could
not be divided into parcels of less than 80 acres. He valued the remaining 128 acres of
agricultural land at $15,000 an acre.
       Gimmy used the same methodology to value the 10.94-acre strip of land acquired
by SAFCA. He divided the area into a 3-acre homestead and 7.9 acres of agricultural
land, valued the 3-acre homestead at $375,000 and the 7.9 acres of agricultural land at
$90,000, for a total of $465,000.2 He valued the permanent roadway easement at $3,600
and the temporary construction easement at $39,100. In sum, he determined that the fair
market value for the property SAFCA acquired is $507,700, which he then rounded up to
$510,000.
       2. Severance Damages and Benefits
       Gimmy opined that the highest and best use of the property following SAFCA’s
acquisition is “[f]or agricultural purposes only” because the property lost its access to
Garden Highway and the most desirable location for a house, and “[t]he rest of the access
to the property is . . . in a gray area.” Comparing the sales of what he described as three
“problem” properties, Gimmy determined that the remainder was worth $1.17 million, or
$10,000 per acre, which represented a $620,000 reduction in value. He further concluded
that there would be no benefit to the remainder from the project. Thus, in addition to the



2 Gimmy discounted the value of 2.125 of the 7.9 acres 90 percent because it is
encumbered by a roadway easement.

                                              5
$510,000 for the property SAFCA acquired, Gimmy found that Dhaliwal was entitled to
$620,000 in severance damages, for a total of $1.13 million in just compensation.
       On cross-examination, Gimmy acknowledged that farmers did not use the Garden
Highway access for heavy equipment, such as a combine, and that they primarily
accessed the property along North Bayou and Schoolhouse Roads. He further
acknowledged that the access point on the corner of North Bayou and Schoolhouse Roads
“physically” exists following SAFCA’s acquisition but stated that “legally we don’t
know what its status is.” He explained that he had been told by Dhaliwal’s counsel that
Dhaliwal must apply for an encroachment permit to access North Bayou Road and that
“there is no legal guarantee of access.” He also indicated there was “no guarantee”
Dhaliwal or his tenants would be able to use Schoolhouse Road once the project was
completed. While he acknowledged that Dhaliwal did not have any legal right to use
Schoolhouse Road prior to SAFCA’s acquisition and that his use “was just custom,” he
asserted that the situation was different now because SAFCA owns an interest in the fee
under Schoolhouse Road, along with several other private owners. When asked if
Dhaliwal had any less legal right to use the road after SAFCA’s acquisition, Gimmy
responded, “It’s -- not legally. But in terms of who you’re dealing with, it’s different.
Before, you had local farmers that you knew and, by custom, you allowed each other to
use each other’s property. [¶] In the after condition, you have a county agency owning
this farm road that was used, just customarily, by local farmers. It’s a different
situation.” In other words, “it’s a risk because now SAFCA owns the property instead of
some private property owner.”
E. SAFCA’s Appraisal
       1. Fair Market Value
       At trial, SAFCA presented the testimony of appraiser Brent Blaesi to establish the
fair market value of the property, along with severance damages and benefits, if any.
Blaesi found that the highest and best use for the property prior to SAFCA’s acquisition

                                              6
was as agricultural property. Using February 22, 2010, as the date of value, Blaesi
determined that the fair market value for the subject property prior to SAFCA’s
acquisition was $1,234,822, or $9,400 per acre. In making his determination, Blaesi
compared the sales of six properties, including two in the basin --the same two used by
Gimmy. Unlike Gimmy, Blaesi found that the value of potential mitigation land in the
basin, like the subject property, had declined in value at an average rate of 0.8 percent per
month between 2005 and 2012 due to declining demand. He explained that the real estate
market “tanked” in 2005 and was followed by the de facto building moratorium in 2008.
As a result, development in the basin came to a halt, and there was no demand for
mitigation land.
       Using the $9,400 per acre figure, Blaesi determined that the value of the 10.94-
acre strip of land acquired by SAFCA was $99,841, and the value of the permanent road
easement was $4,703. Blaesi concluded that the house contributed no value to the
property because the buyer who would pay the highest price for the property would be an
investor who would hold the property for its future use as mitigation land, while
continuing to lease the property for row-crop farming, and thus, would have little use for
a house on the property. Using agricultural rental figures on the property over the past
few years, he found that the value of the temporary construction easement was $3,450. In
sum, he determined the fair market value of the property acquired by SAFCA was
$108,000.
       2. Severance Damages and Benefits
       Blaesi calculated severance damages as the cost of replacing the functions served
by the lost Garden Highway access, namely access to a public road and to a portion of the
property where the irrigation ditch is located. He determined that a new access driveway
out to North Bayou Road and a new farm road along the west side of the property would
cost $28,600.



                                             7
       Blaesi found that access to the remainder essentially remained the same both
before and after SAFCA’s acquisition. He explained that farmers preferred to access the
property via North Bayou Road or Schoolhouse Road as opposed to Garden Highway.
Moreover, there is an easement along the west side of the property that granted
Reclamation District (RD) 1000 “the exclusive [and] perpetual rights to use th[e]
easement for” flood control. According to Blaesi, that easement would have allowed RD
1000 to cut off Dhaliwal’s Garden Highway access at anytime. Thus, that access was not
guaranteed.
       Blaesi found that there was no difference in the property’s access via North Bayou
Road following SAFCA’s acquisition because North Bayou Road is a public road. He
agreed that Dhaliwal would need to obtain an encroachment permit if he decided to
install a driveway connecting the property to North Bayou Road but said the process for
obtaining such a permit was “straightforward,” explaining that such permits are granted
on a regular basis and typically cost $300 to $500.
       Blaesi likewise determined that there was no difference in the property’s access
via Schoolhouse Road following SAFCA’s acquisition. He explained that Schoolhouse
Road is a private road reservation that was created as part of the Natomas Elkhorn
subdivision. In another eminent domain action, SAFCA acquired the east side of
Schoolhouse Road, subject to others’ rights to use the road. According to Blaesi, a
knowledgeable buyer would not believe that SAFCA could cut off access to Schoolhouse
Road because “all the property owners in that subdivision [have] the right to use that
road. So SAFCA has no more right to cut it off than anybody else that uses that road
does.”3 Blaesi noted that SAFCA had constructed a giant garter snake canal through the




3Blaesi’s statement is consistent with applicable law. (See Hocking v. Title Ins. & Trust
Co. (1951) 37 Cal.2d 644, 650 [“It is established law in [California] that the title to [a lot

                                              8
area and went to considerable trouble to build it away from Schoolhouse Road so as not
to interfere with anyone’s use of the road. SAFCA also wrote a letter to Dhaliwal
indicating that it had no intention of interfering with his right to use the road.
       Finally, Blaesi found that the remainder would benefit from the project in that the
completion of the project would result in the lifting of the de facto building moratorium,
and thereby increase the value of the remainder by $266,833. Blaesi explained that under
the draft joint vision plan that is expected to govern future development in the area, the
county will require that all developers mitigate for the loss of undeveloped land by
conserving one acre of land for each acre developed. Without the joint vision plan,
properties like the subject property would only have value as agricultural land. Blaesi
further explained that once the de facto moratorium is lifted and building in the basin
resumes, there will be a demand for agricultural land, such as the subject property, for use
as mitigation land. Because the project’s benefit exceeded the amount of severance
damages, Blaesi concluded Dhaliwal was not entitled to any severance damages. In sum,
Blaesi determined Dhaliwal was entitled to just compensation in the amount of $108,000.
F. The Jury’s Verdict
       The jury awarded Dhaliwal $207,803 in just compensation, consisting of $170,000
for the 10-plus acres acquired by SAFCA, $4,703 for the roadway easement, $4,000 for
the temporary construction easement, and $29,100 in severance damages. The jury found
that there were no project benefits.
                                        DISCUSSION
       Before we address the issues raised on appeal, a brief overview of eminent domain
law and procedure is in order. Article I, section 19 of the California Constitution requires




created by a subdivision map] embraces an easement to use all of the streets disclosed on
a subdivision map.].)

                                               9
that the owner whose property is taken for a public use be paid “just compensation,
ascertained by a jury unless waived.”
        “The Legislature has defined the measure of just compensation as ‘the fair market
value of the property taken.’ (Code Civ. Proc., § 1263.310.)[4] ‘The fair market value of
the property taken is the highest price on the date of valuation that would be agreed to by
a seller, being willing to sell but under no particular or urgent necessity for so doing, nor
obliged to sell, and a buyer, being ready, willing, and able to buy but under no particular
necessity for so doing, each dealing with the other with full knowledge of all the uses and
purposes for which the property is reasonably adaptable and available.’ (§ 1263.320,
subd. (a).) ‘As section 1263.320 indicates, the fair market value of property taken has not
been limited to the value of the property as used at the time of the taking, but has long
taken into account the “highest and most profitable use to which the property might be
put in the reasonably near future, to the extent that the probability of such a prospective
use affects the market value.” ’ [Citation.] This prospective use ‘is to be considered, not
necessarily as the measure of value, but to the full extent that the prospect of demand for
such use affects the market value while the property is privately held.’ [Citation.]
        “When[, as here,] the property taken is part of a larger parcel, the owner is
compensated not merely for the injury to the part taken but also for the injury, if any, to
the remainder. (§ 1263.410, subd. (a).) Compensation for injury to the remainder is the
amount of the damage to the remainder caused by the taking, reduced by the amount of
the benefit to the remainder caused by the taking. (§ 1263.410, subd. (b).) Such
compensation is commonly called ‘severance damages.’ [Citation.]
        “The procedures governing eminent domain actions differ in some respects from
those governing other actions. For example, ‘all issues except the sole issue relating to




4   Further undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.

                                              10
compensation . . . are to be tried by the court.’ [Citation.] The defendant (i.e., the
property owner) shall present evidence on the issue of compensation first and shall
commence and conclude the argument. (§ 1260.210, subd. (a).) And, ‘[e]xcept as
otherwise provided by statute, neither the plaintiff nor the defendant has the burden of
proof on the issue of compensation.’ (§ 1260.210, subd. (b).)” (Campus Crusade, supra,
41 Cal.4th at pp. 965-966, fn. omitted.) With these general principles in mind, we turn to
the issues raised in this appeal.
                                           I
     The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Admitting SAFCA’s Evidence
                             Concerning “Future Access”
       Dhaliwal contends that the trial court abused its discretion in allowing SAFCA to
introduce “speculative evidence of future access.” He asserts that following SAFCA’s
acquisition, all access via Garden Highway is lost, and access via North Bayou and
Schoolhouse Roads is speculative because “each of them requires future encroachment
permits from either the County of Sacramento and/or SAFCA,” which, if denied, would
leave him landlocked. He argues that “[b]ecause the County and SAFCA can deny him
access now that the trial is over, preventing him from installing this speculative
replacement driveway, [he] has not received his constitutional right to just
compensation.” As we shall explain, at the time the trial court ruled on Dhaliwal’s
motion to exclude SAFCA’s evidence of future access,5 it had before it evidence that the
property remained accessible via both North Bayou and Schoolhouse Roads and
conflicting evidence as to whether such access could be cut off in the future. As we shall
further explain, there is nothing in SAFCA’s resolution of necessity that reasonably can
be construed as preventing Dhaliwal from continuing to access his property via North



5 In reviewing the trial court’s ruling, we must consider the facts before the court at the
time of its ruling, and not by reference to evidence produced at a later date. (People v.
Welch (1999) 20 Cal.4th 701, 739.)

                                             11
Bayou and Schoolhouse Roads following SAFCA’s acquisition. Under these
circumstances, we conclude that the trial court did not err in allowing SAFCA to
introduce evidence of future access that had the potential to affect market value (Campus
Crusade, supra, 41 Cal.4th at pp. 972-973) and was necessary to refute Dhaliwal’s claim
that such access was uncertain.
       Prior to trial, Dhaliwal filed various motions in limine. In his motion in limine
No. 2, he moved “[t]o exclude any evidence of possible access to the subject property via
School House [sic] Road or North Bayou Road” on the grounds that such evidence
contradicts the resolution of necessity and is speculative in that each of those “potential
access points . . . requires future encroachment permits from either the County of
Sacramento and [sic] plaintiff SAFCA.” Citing to the deposition transcript of SAFCA’s
chief engineer John Bassett and the notes of SAFCA’s appraiser Brent Blaesi, Dhaliwal
made the following proffer: “In the ‘before’ condition . . . the SUBJECT PROPERTY
enjoyed access over 1) the Garden Highway; 2) North Bayou Road; and 3) School House
[sic] Road. [¶] As part of this eminent domain action and the Levee Project, the access
to the Garden Highway has been completely eliminated.” “As part of this Levee Project,
plaintiff has condemned the access from School House [sic] Road in another eminent
domain action entitled SAFCA v. Pacific Terrace, Sacramento County Superior Court
No. 34-2009-00054924.” SAFCA “ ‘purchased underlying fee with [the] understanding
there was a private road easement . . . that would allow property owners [in the Natomas
Elkhorn Subdivision] to use it.’ ” Because the subject property is not part of the
subdivision, Dhaliwal “ ‘doesn’t have the right to use the private road legally at this
point. He would have to prove he has prescriptive rights.’ ” “ ‘SAFCA won’t prohibit
[Dhaliwal] from using . . . [Schoolhouse Road], but they will not grant [him a] formal
right’ ” to do so. “As a part of [the] Levee Project, SAFCA is condemning all access of
the SUBJECT PROPERTY along North Bayou Road. SAFCA will take ownership of
Dr. Dhaliwal’s land from Dr. Dhaliwal, and then will transfer the property to the County

                                             12
of Sacramento.” “[A]ccess to . . . [the property] would continue across that roadway
easement,” but Dhaliwal “would need to get an encroachment permit from Sacramento
County” if he wants to have access through the roadway easement.
       Dhaliwal argued that SAFCA’s evidence concerning access to the property
following its acquisition was speculative because the property “might be landlocked in
the future.” Dhaliwal explained, however, that his appraiser “did not appraise the
property as if landlocked (which would have increased damages), but instead testified [at
deposition] that the access cloud would decrease the value of the remaining property
from $17,500 per acre to $10,000 per acre.”
       SAFCA opposed Dhaliwal’s motion to exclude evidence of possible access via
North Bayou and Schoolhouse Roads, arguing that “the jury is entitled to consider all
evidence relevant to valuation so long as it doesn’t contradict the RON [(resolution of
necessity)].”6 SAFCA asserted that Dhaliwal “failed to cite to a single contradiction
between the RON and SAFCA’s evidence of post-Project access to the remainder. . . .
Therefore, SAFCA should be permitted to introduce evidence showing that Dhaliwal will
be able to access the Remainder from both Schoolhouse and North Bayou Roads . . . .
Whether or not that access is adequate and the amount Dhaliwal should be compensated
for any perceived change in access is a question of fact for the jury.” Citing to Bassett’s
deposition transcript and Blaesi’s declaration, SAFCA made the following proffer: “In
the before and after condition, Dhaliwal is and will be able to access the Property directly
from Schoolhouse [Road].” “Schoolhouse [Road] is a private road that was created as
part of the Natomas Elkhorn Subdivision. . . . In the before condition, Dhaliwal’s tenant-
farmers accessed the Property from multiple locations along Schoolhouse [Road] . . . .



6 On our own motion, we augment the record on appeal to include SAFCA’s opposition
to Dhaliwal’s motions in limine, filed October 29, 2012. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule
8.155(a)(1)(A).)

                                             13
No part of SAFCA’s acquisition affects Dhaliwal’s access from Schoolhouse
[Road] . . . .” There was “no need for SAFCA to reserve . . . rights for Dhaliwal [over
Schoolhouse Road] because [its] acquisition does not affect the access that Dhaliwal has
enjoyed previously from Schoolhouse [Road].” There was no need for Dhaliwal to
obtain an encroachment permit from the County or SAFCA in order to continue to use
Schoolhouse Road because such permits are issued by the County to allow construction
activities in a public right away, and Schoolhouse Road is a private road. “SAFCA is
acquiring a 0.5-acre roadway easement that parallels Dhaliwal’s border with North
Bayou” and “will grant the roadway easement to the County . . . to widen the public
road. After SAFCA’s acquisition, Dhaliwal will continue to have a lengthy frontage on
N. Bayou Road and will be able to continue accessing the Remainder from N. Bayou as
he has in the past.” Blaesi “investigated the likelihood that Dhaliwal could obtain an
encroachment permit from the County, if required, to connect his driveway to N. Bayou.
Based on his experience in previous cases and his investigation in this case, he concluded
that the likelihood of obtaining a permit was very high, if not guaranteed.” SAFCA
asserted that it “did not need to reserve any rights for Dhaliwal because he will have
rights to use the public road, just like anyone else.”
       At the hearing on Dhaliwal’s motion in limine No. 2, the trial court agreed with
Dhaliwal that SAFCA could not “offer speculative testimony” but found there was “a
dispute about what kind of access is presently or was available to that property from
[North Bayou and Schoolhouse] roads. That’s a factual determination.” The court then
asked: “You disagree about that, right? So isn’t that something the jury is going to have
to decide based upon whatever testimony comes up?” Both parties responded in the
affirmative. Dhaliwal’s counsel then asked the court, “Denied without prejudice to raise
later if I deem it appropriate,” and the court responded, “Denied without prejudice.”
       With limited exceptions discussed below, Dhaliwal failed to renew his objection at
trial, and thus forfeited his challenge to SAFCA’s evidence concerning future access to

                                              14
the property on appeal.7 (People v. Mills (2010) 48 Cal.4th 158, 170.) In any event,
Dhaliwal’s claim is without merit.
       In determining the fair market value of a property, the jury is entitled to consider
any factor having “the potential of affecting the market value” so long as the effect of the
factor on market value is not conjectural, speculative, or remote (Campus Crusade, 41
Cal.4th at pp. 972-973), and does not contradict the scope of the taking as defined by the
resolution of necessity (Bressi, supra, 184 Cal.App.3d at p. 123; Coachella, supra, 190
Cal.App.3d at pp. 978-979). “An owner of land that abuts a street (or road) has an
easement in that street for the purposes of ingress and egress to and from his property and
from the street to the next intersecting public roadway in either direction.” (1 Matteoni &
Veit, Condemnation Practice in Cal. (Cont.Ed.Bar 3d ed. 2009) § 5.20, p. 280; see also
Bacich v. Board of Control (1943) 23 Cal.2d 343, 352.) “It is the owner’s private right as
distinguished from the owner’s right as a member of the public to travel on the street.
Compensation is due if the taking directly extinguishes the abutting owner’s right of
ingress and egress to the public street.” (1 Matteoni & Veit, Condemnation Practice in
Cal. (Cont.Ed.Bar 3d ed. 2009) § 5.22, p. 283; see also People v. Al. G. Smith Co. (1948)


7  For example, at trial Bassett testified, without objection, that Dhaliwal’s tenant farmers
used an “access point . . . from North Bayou Road to drive onto Schoolhouse Road” in
both the before and after conditions. The county has not required owners affected by the
project to obtain encroachment permits where, as here, SAFCA constructed the road in
question. Dhaliwal had no recorded rights in the eastern portion of Schoolhouse Road
either before or after SAFCA’s acquisition of a portion thereof. The project would have
no “affect on the access of farmers using the subject property to Schoolhouse Road”
because “the area that the farmers use in the dirt road is on . . . the Dhaliwal property.” If
SAFCA wanted to close off the portion of Schoolhouse Road that it had acquired, it
would have to “condemn the rights of the people [who own property in the Natomas
Elkhorn Subdivision] who use that road.” An encroachment permit would be required if
Dhaliwal decided to construct a driveway connecting his property to North Bayou Road;
however, “a buyer of the property would [not] believe that an encroachment permit like
that would be difficult to get” because with minimal effort the buyer would discover that
such permits are granted on a regular basis and cost between $300 and $500.

                                             15
86 Cal.App.2d 308, 311.) In addition, “[a] substantial, unreasonable interference with the
property owner’s easement of access to the general system of public roadways is a
deprivation of a property right; when such interference results in connection with a partial
taking in eminent domain, the condemnee must be compensated for the depreciation in
the value of his or her remainder.” (1 Matteoni & Veit, Condemnation Practice in Cal.
(Cont.Ed.Bar 3d ed. 2009) § 5.20, p. 280; see also Breidert v. Southern Pac. Co. (1964)
61 Cal.2d 659, 663-667.)
       As in any other judicial proceeding, the court determines the admissibility of
evidence and the scope of admissible evidence. (City of Ripon v. Sweetin (2002) 100
Cal.App.4th 887, 900-901.) The trial court is vested with considerable discretion in
admitting or rejecting evidence of value. (City of San Diego v. Barratt American, Inc.
(2005) 128 Cal.App.4th 917, 936.)
       Dhaliwal’s claim that the evidence is speculative is premised on the assumption
that SAFCA and/or the county may cut off access to the property in the future, leaving it
landlocked. At the time the trial court denied Dhaliwal’s motion to exclude evidence
concerning future access, it had been presented with an offer of proof, supported by a
declaration and deposition testimony, that contradicted that assumption. Among other
things, SAFCA presented evidence that “Dhaliwal will continue to have a lengthy
frontage on N. Bayou Road [(a public road)] and will be able to continue accessing the
Remainder from N. Bayou as he has in the past.” While Dhaliwal will have to obtain an
encroachment permit should he decide to construct a driveway connecting his property to
North Bayou Road, SAFCA’s proffer included evidence that the likelihood of obtaining
such a permit was “high, if not guaranteed,” and in any event, the lack of a driveway
would not preclude Dhaliwal or his tenants from accessing the property from other points
along North Bayou Road. SAFCA’s proffer also included evidence that all owners of
property within the Natomas Elkhorn subdivision have a legal right to use Schoolhouse
Road because it is shown as a road on the subdivision map creating the subdivision.

                                            16
Thus, “as merely one owner of the land underlying half of Schoolhouse” Road, SAFCA
“has no legal right to close it to traffic.” SAFCA also cited to Hocking v. Title Ins. &
Trust Co., supra, 37 Cal.2d at page 650, which provides: “It is established law in
[California] that the title to [a lot created by a subdivision map] embraces an easement to
use all of the streets disclosed on the subdivision map.” In sum, at the time the trial court
ruled on the admissibility of the challenged evidence, SAFCA and/or the county’s ability
to cut off access via North Bayou and Schoolhouse Roads was far from settled. As the
trial court observed, and the parties agreed, there was “a dispute about what kind of
access is presently or was available to that property from those roads,” which presented a
“factual determination” for the jury. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in
admitting the challenged evidence, which “at least arguably ha[d] the potential of
affecting the market value of the remaining property” and was necessary to refute
Dhaliwal’s claim that the property could be left landlocked in the future. (Campus
Crusade, supra, 41 Cal.4th at p. 972, fn. omitted.)
       The Court of Appeal, Fourth Appellate District, Division One’s decisions in Bressi
and Coachella, relied on by Dhaliwal, are readily distinguishable. Bressi stands for the
unremarkable proposition that the condemning agency may not introduce evidence
pertaining to a proposed, intended, or future use which contradicts the scope of the taking
as set forth in the resolution of necessity. (Bressi, supra, 184 Cal.App.3d at p. 123.)
There, the County of San Diego sought to acquire avigation easements over the
defendant’s property and adopted a resolution of necessity allowing such easements to be
used by “ ‘every type of aircraft which is now in existence or which may be developed in
the future for both commercial and noncommercial flights . . . .’ ” (Id. at pp. 115-116.)
The Court of Appeal ruled that on retrial “the County may not offer evidence that an
airport accommodating jumbo jets will not be built” because such evidence contradicts
the resolution of necessity. (Id. at p. 123.)



                                                17
       Here, the resolution of necessity provides that SAFCA seeks to acquire a fee
simple interest, a roadway easement, and a temporary construction easement for the
“construction, operation, reconstruction, repair and maintenance of improvements for
present and future flood control, infrastructure relocations, habitat mitigation and other
purposes in connection with the Project” and provides a legal description of such land.
Nothing in the resolution of necessity can be construed as allowing SAFCA or the county
to cut off access via North Bayou or Schoolhouse Roads in the future, and Dhaliwal does
not contend otherwise. Rather, relying on Coachella, he asserts that SAFCA’s evidence
that access was not impaired along North Bayou and Schoolhouse Roads “conflicts with
the Resolution of Necessity because neither the Resolution of Necessity nor the
Complaint reserved any rights to [Dhaliwal] over either North Bayou Road or
Schoolhouse Road.” He misconstrues Coachella.
       In Coachella, the plaintiff water district condemned 30 acres of the defendant’s
680-acre parcel for construction of a flood control channel. (Coachella, supra, 190
Cal.App.3d at p. 978.) The channel bisected the defendant’s property, leaving a portion
of the remainder completely landlocked. (Ibid.) The resolution of necessity did not
expressly provide for access across the channel, and it was undisputed that the
defendant’s access to its remaining 530-acre parcel was contingent upon the plaintiff’s
discretionary approval. (Ibid.) The defendant argued that the trial court erred in
“permitt[ing] the jury to determine whether there was a reasonable probability the
[defendant] property owner would be granted access across the channel at some time in
the future.” (Ibid.) Citing Bressi, supra, 184 Cal.App.3d 112, the defendant urged that
“evidence of the reasonable probability the Water District will grant access improperly
limits the scope of the taking as defined in the resolution of necessity.” (Coachella, at p.
978.) In dicta, the Court of Appeal observed, “Here, as in Bressi, the issue raised by [the
defendant] is easily eliminated by formal amendment to the resolution of necessity before
retrial of the valuation phase” (ibid.) and offered the following “guidance” to the trial

                                             18
court on retrial: “Absent action by the Water District to amend the complaint, on remand
the court should follow the principles set forth in Bressi in determining the evidence to be
presented to the jury.” (Id. at pp. 977, 979.)
       Unlike Coachella, SAFCA’s acquisition, as set forth in the resolution of necessity,
did not leave any portion of the remainder landlocked. While Dhaliwal argued that
SAFCA and/or the county could cut off his access via North Bayou and Schoolhouse
Roads in the future, leaving him landlocked, as detailed above, the parties proffered
conflicting evidence in support of and in opposition to Dhaliwal’s motion in limine No. 2.
Accordingly, SAFCA’s evidence of future access did not contradict the scope of the
taking, as Dhaliwal contends. Absent such a contradiction, SAFCA’s failure to “carve[]
out an exception” for Dhaliwal to “cross the permanent roadway easement to his
property” or to “provide[] Dhaliwal with access rights” via Schoolhouse Road is of no
consequence.
       Finally, we turn to the evidence to which Dhaliwal did renew his objection at trial:
(1) testimony that SAFCA had no intention of closing Schoolhouse Road; (2) a letter
from SAFCA’s executive director to Dhaliwal, stating, among other things, that SAFCA
“does not intend, by virtue of the Pacific Terrace acquisition, to alter any rights,
prescriptive or otherwise, that you or your tenants may have to use School House [sic]
Road to access your property”; and (3) testimony that a knowledgeable buyer would not
believe that SAFCA could cut off access to Schoolhouse Road because “this is a recorded
subdivision map that gives all the property owners in that subdivision the right to use that
road. So SAFCA has no more right to cut it off than anybody else that uses that road
does.” 8 We need not decide whether the trial court abused its discretion in admitting this



8 In his opening brief, Dhaliwal complains that “. . . Mr. Bassett was permitted to tell the
jury that in his opinion Dhaliwal might have prescriptive rights over School House [sic]
Road, even though it would mean that Dhaliwal would have to sue his neighbors to assert

                                              19
evidence because its admission was harmless given the undisputed evidence presented at
trial that SAFCA lacked the power to cut off all access via North Bayou Road, a public
road, or unilaterally cut off access to Schoolhouse Road, where it is one of several parcel
owners in the subdivision.
                                         II
        The Trial Court Properly Allowed Blaesi to Critique Gimmy’s Appraisal
       Dhaliwal next contends that the trial court erred in permitting SAFCA’s valuation
expert, Blaesi, to criticize Gimmy’s appraisal, opinions, and sales data because (1)
section 2034.310 prohibits an expert witness from offering testimony that contradicts the
opinion of an opposing party’s expert, (2) SAFCA failed to disclose that Blaesi would
offer an opinion concerning Gimmy’s appraisal, (3) Blaesi based his criticism in part on
undisclosed sales data, and (4) Blaesi testified that Gimmy “violated appraisal standards
despite the trial court having already ruled that he did not violate those appraisal
standards.” We discern no error.
       Prior to trial, SAFCA moved in limine to prohibit Gimmy from testifying about
the “cost approach” method, which SAFCA claimed Gimmy used to inflate the value of
the property. More particularly, SAFCA “object[ed] to [Gimmy] creating [a] fictitious
three-acre homesite and using separate comparables to value that in order to get a higher
value for the entire property.” Dhaliwal disputed SAFCA’s claim that Gimmy utilized a
cost-approach method in valuing the property. According to Dhaliwal, Gimmy “valued



those rights, and that SAFCA would not try to stop Dhaliwal from trying to perfect his
rights.” That portion of Bassett’s testimony was elicited during Dhaliwal’s redirect
examination. Dhaliwal also asserts that “[o]ver objection, Mr. Bassett testified that
owners of lots in the subdivision have a legal right to use School House [sic] Road.”
Dhaliwal objected to the introduction of such evidence as calling for a legal conclusion,
not as speculative, and the objection was sustained. Thereafter, Bassett was permitted to
testify, over Dhaliwal’s objection that the question called for a legal conclusion, that it
was his understanding that owners of lots in these subdivisions have a right to use
Schoolhouse Road because “it’s shown on a subdivision map.”

                                             20
the property as a whole as if it sold to a single buyer on a single date. . . . Then after he
got the value as a whole, then, . . . he allocated into different segments.” Following an
evidentiary hearing, the trial court denied SAFCA’s motion to limit Gimmy’s testimony,
but noted that its ruling did not preclude SAFCA “in any way from fully exploring [its]
concerns in front of the jury by way of cross-examination.” At trial, over Dhaliwal’s
objection, Blaesi was permitted to critique Gimmy’s per acre valuation of the property in
the before condition, and SAFCA was allowed to introduce undisclosed sales data to
rebut Gimmy’s valuation of the property.
       Citing section 2034.310, Dhaliwal claims that “[t]he law does not allow an expert
to comment on the opinions of another expert.” While Dhaliwal is correct that section
2034.310 prohibits an expert called as a witness to impeach the testimony of an expert
witness offered by another party from offering “testimony that contradicts the opinion” of
the other party’s expert witness (§ 2034.310, subd. (b)), section 2034.310 and related
provisions of the Civil Discovery Act do not apply in eminent domain proceedings
(§ 2034.010 [“This chapter does not apply to exchanges of lists of experts and valuation
data in eminent domain proceedings . . . .”).
       The exchange of expert witness lists and statements of valuation data in eminent
domain proceedings is governed by section 1258.010 et seq. Pursuant thereto, parties are
required to exchange lists of expert witnesses and statements of valuation data 90 days
prior to the commencement of trial. (§§ 1258.210, 1258.220.) In addition to naming
each proposed expert witness, the list of expert witnesses must identify the subject matter
of his testimony. (§ 1258.240.) A party’s statement of valuation need only include
evidence that supports the witness’s opinion. (§ 1258.260.) The penalty for failure to
comply with these requirements is “exclusion of [such] evidence . . . at least from the
offering party’s case-in-chief. (§ 1258.280.)” (County of Monterey v. W.W. Leasing
Unlimited (1980) 109 Cal.App.3d 636, 642 (W.W. Leasing), italics added.)



                                              21
       Section 1258.280, cited by the court in W.W. Leasing, provides that “upon
objection of a party who has served his list of expert witnesses and statements of
valuation data in compliance with section 1258.230: [¶] (a) No party required to serve a
list of expert witnesses on the objecting party may call an expert witness to testify on
direct examination during his case in chief unless the information required by Section
1258.240 for such witness is included in the list served. [¶] (b) No party required to
serve statements of valuation data on the objecting party may call a witness to testify on
direct examination during his case in chief to his opinion on any matter listed in Section
1258.250 unless a statement of valuation data for such witness was served. [¶] (c) No
witness called by a party required to serve statements of valuation data on the objecting
party may testify on direct examination during the case in chief of the party who called
him to any opinion or data required to be listed in the statement of valuation data for such
witness unless such opinion or data is listed in the statement served except that testimony
that is merely an explanation or elaboration of data so listed is not inadmissible under this
subdivision.” (Italics added.)
       The Law Revision Commission’s Comment confirms that “[s]ection 1258.280
limits only the calling of a witness, or the presentation of testimony, during the case in
chief of the party calling the witness or presenting testimony. The section does not
preclude a party from calling a witness in rebuttal or having a witness give rebuttal
testimony that is otherwise proper. [Citations.]” (Cal. Law Revision Com. com., 19
West’s Ann. Code Civ. Proc. (2007 ed.) foll. § 1258.280, p. 612, italics added.) The
comment further explains that “[t]he section also does not preclude a party from bringing
out additional data on redirect examination where it is necessary to meet matters brought
out on the cross-examination of his witness. However, the court should take care to
confine a party’s rebuttal case and his redirect examination of his witnesses to their
purpose of meeting matters brought out during the adverse party’s case or cross-
examination of his witnesses. A party should not be permitted to defeat the purpose of

                                             22
this article by reserving witnesses and valuation data for use in rebuttal where such
witnesses should have been called and such valuation data presented on the direct
examination during the case in chief.” (Id. at p. 613.)
       In W.W. Leasing, the defendant landowner attempted to introduce undisclosed
comparable sales during the direct examination of its valuation expert, and the trial court
sustained the plaintiff county’s objection thereto. (W.W. Leasing, supra, 109 Cal.App.3d
at p. 643.) Thereafter, the defendant attempted to persuade the trial court that the data
was admissible on cross-examination of the plaintiff’s valuation expert and in rebuttal.
(Ibid.) The court allowed limited cross-examination of the plaintiff’s expert as to
whether he had considered the subject sales data but refused to allow testimony
concerning the data in rebuttal. (Ibid.) In affirming the trial court’s ruling, the Court of
Appeal acknowledged that the exclusionary provisions of section 1258.280 apply only to
the presentation of undisclosed data during the offering party’s case-in-chief, but found
that it was “clear from [the Law Revision Commission’s] comments . . . that the concept
of ‘rebuttal’ is not to be used in derogation of the requirement that data be exchanged
pursuant to the prescribed procedures.” (W.W. Leasing, at pp. 643-644.) The court
further explained that “[i]t is well established that rebuttal evidence does not properly
consist of additional opinion evidence concerning valuation. Rather, it must be
concerned with and address new matter brought out by the opposing party. [Citations.]”
(Id. at pp. 644-645.) The court concluded that the “comparables” the defendant sought to
introduce constituted “improper rebuttal evidence in that they were simply additional
evidence on the question of value.” (Id. at p. 645.)
       Here, we conclude that the trial court properly allowed Blaesi to testify as to why
he disagreed with Gimmy’s valuation, even though that subject was not identified in
SAFCA’s list of expert witnesses. (§§ 1258.240, 1258.280.) We likewise find that the
trial court properly allowed SAFCA to introduce undisclosed sales data to rebut Gimmy’s
valuation. (W.W. Leasing, supra, 109 Cal.App.3d at p. 645.) Unlike the data at issue in

                                             23
W.W. Leasing, the testimony and the sales data at issue were offered in response to
Gimmy’s valuation and not in support of Blaesi’s own valuation.
       Contrary to Dhaliwal’s assertion, SAFCA was not required to supplement its
expert witness disclosure after it determined that Blaesi would critique Gimmy’s
appraisal at trial. A party is required to supplement or amend its expert witness list only
if it “[d]etermines to call an expert witness not included in [its] list of expert witnesses to
testify on direct examination during [its] case in chief.” (§ 1258.270, subd. (a)(1), italics
added.) Because neither the challenged testimony nor the challenged data was presented
in SAFCA’s case-in-chief, SAFCA was not required to supplement or amend its expert
witness list to include it.9
       Finally, neither the introduction of the challenged testimony nor the challenged
sales data violated the trial court’s earlier ruling denying SAFCA’s motion to prohibit
Gimmy from testifying about what it deemed the “cost approach” method. First, contrary
to Dhaliwal’s assertion, the trial court did not find, implicitly or otherwise, that Gimmy
had “not violat[ed] . . . appraisal standards.” The trial court simply denied SAFCA’s
motion and noted that SAFCA was not precluded “in any way from fully exploring [its]
concerns in front of the jury by way of cross-examination.” Second, Blaesi did not testify
that Gimmy violated any appraisal standards. SAFCA’s trial counsel asked Blaesi
whether Gimmy’s methodology constituted a “proper appraisal technique.” Dhaliwal
objected, and the objection was sustained. Thereafter, Dhaliwal’s counsel asked Blaesi



9 “Application of the concept of ‘case in chief’ to the presentation of evidence by the
plaintiff requires particular attention. The defendant presents his case in chief first in the
order of the trial. Therefore, the following presentation by the plaintiff may include
evidence of two kinds; i.e., evidence comprising the case in chief of the plaintiff and
evidence in rebuttal of evidence previously presented by the defendants. If the evidence
offered in rebuttal is proper as such, this section does not prevent its presentation at that
time.” (Cal. Law Revision Com. com., 19 West’s Ann. Code Civ. Proc. (2007 ed.) foll.
§ 1258.280, p. 613.)

                                              24
whether he was “telling this jury that Mr. Gimmy violated appraisal practices in reaching
his opinions and conclusions in this case,” and Blaesi responded, “He didn’t use proper
appraisal methodology. It isn’t proper. And violated would have to be decided by a
committee or by the National Appraisal Institute Board that reviews that.” Moments
later, Dhaliwal’s trial counsel stated: “Let’s talk about why you think his appraisal
violated appraisal standards. Tell me why,” and Blaesi again explained, “It didn’t violate
a specific standard in USPAP [(Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice)],
but USPAP says that you need, when you develop your appraisal, you need to follow the
generally-accepted appraisal practices.” When asked which practice Gimmy violated,
Blaesi responded that Gimmy “created a hypothetical lot.” Blaesi later clarified, “I’m
saying his methodology is improper by arbitrarily carving up the property into two
separate pieces, a three-acre parcel and a 128 acre parcel.” Such testimony was proper
and did not violate the trial court’s prior ruling.
                                        III
   The Record on Appeal Does Not Support Dhaliwal’s Claim That SAFCA’s Counsel
    Engaged in Misconduct, and Any Potential Misconduct Did Not Warrant a Retrial
       Lastly, Dhaliwal contends that SAFCA’s counsel committed misconduct during
closing argument by (1) commenting on Dhaliwal’s absence when he knew Dhaliwal was
unable to attend the trial for medical reasons, and (2) stating that “SAFCA can’t afford to
pay more than the fair market value of the property.” We discern no misconduct on the
record before us, and in any event, Dhaliwal was not prejudiced by challenged remarks.
       During his closing argument, SAFCA’s counsel argued, “I think it’s obvious in
this case that SAFCA can’t afford to pay more than the fair market value of the property.
If it had to pay property owners ten times the value of their property every time they
acquired property for this project, it would be very difficult to build this project.”
SAFCA’s counsel also told the jury, “I think it’s offensive and insulting for the process
that there’s a property owner who wants you to give him more than $1 million of



                                               25
SAFCA’s money for this property west of the airport, and he doesn’t even show up in the
process, didn’t show you the respect . . . [¶] . . . [¶] . . . to participate in the process.”
       “ ‘In conducting closing argument, attorneys for both sides have wide latitude to
discuss the case. “ ‘ “ ‘The right of counsel to discuss the merits of a case, both as to the
law and facts, is very wide, and he has the right to state fully his views as to what the
evidence shows, and as to the conclusions to be fairly drawn therefrom. The adverse
party cannot complain if the reasoning be faulty and the deductions illogical, as SUCH
matters are ultimately for the consideration of the jury.’ ” ’ [Citations.] ‘Counsel may
vigorously argue his case and is not limited to “Chesterfieldian politeness.” ’ [Citations.]
‘An attorney is permitted to argue all reasonable inferences from the evidence, . . .’
[Citation.] ‘Only the most persuasive reasons justify handcuffing attorneys in the exercise
of their advocacy within the bounds of propriety.’ [Citation.]” [Citation.] The same
rules apply in a criminal case. [Citation.] [¶] An attorney who exceeds this wide latitude
commits misconduct. For example, “[w]hile a counsel in summing up may indulge in all
fair arguments in favor of his client’s case, he may not assume facts not in evidence or
invite the jury to speculate as to unsupported inferences.” [Citation.] Nor may counsel
properly make personally insulting or derogatory remarks directed at opposing counsel or
impugn counsel’s motives or character. [Citation.] Additional examples abound; these
are but a few.’ [Citation.]” (Garcia v. ConMed Corp. (2012) 204 Cal.App.4th 144, 147-
148 (Garcia), fn. omitted.)
       “But it is not enough for a party to show attorney misconduct. In order to justify a
new trial, the party must demonstrate that the misconduct was prejudicial. [Citation.] As
to this issue, a reviewing court makes ‘an independent determination as to whether the
error was prejudicial.’ [Citation.] It ‘must determine whether it is reasonably probable
[that the appellant] would have achieved a more favorable result in the absence of that
portion of [attorney conduct] now challenged.’ [Citation.] It must examine ‘the entire
case, including the evidence adduced, the instructions delivered to the jury, and the

                                                26
entirety of [counsel’s] argument,’ in determining whether misconduct occurred and
whether it was sufficiently egregious to cause prejudice. [Citation.] ‘Each case must
ultimately rest upon a court’s view of the overall record, taking into account such factors,
inter alia, as the nature and seriousness of the remarks and misconduct, the general
atmosphere, including the judge’s control, of the trial, the likelihood of prejudicing the
jury, and the efficacy of objection or admonition under all the circumstances.’ [Citation.]
‘[I]t is only the record as a whole, and not specific phrases out of context, that can reveal
the nature and effect of such tactics.’ [Citation.]” (Garcia, supra, 204 Cal.App.4th at p.
149.)
        As a preliminary matter, Dhaliwal failed to object to the statement concerning
SAFCA’s inability to pay above-market value for the property, and thus, forfeited his
misconduct claim as to that remark. (Garcia, supra, 204 Cal.App.4th at p. 148.) In any
event, the remark did not constitute misconduct. It is well established that “ ‘[t]he term
“just compensation” means “just” not only to the party whose property is taken for public
use but also “just” to the public which is to pay for it.’ ” (People ex rel. Department of
Public Works v. Pera (1961) 190 Cal.App.2d 497, 499; see also Los Angeles County
Metropolitan Transportation Authority v. Continental Development Corp. (1997) 16
Cal.4th 694, 716 (Continental).) In other words, “taxpayers should not be required to pay
more than reasonably necessary for public works projects.” (Continental, supra, 16
Cal.4th at p. 716.) The challenged remark is consistent with this general principle and
did not constitute misconduct.
        Turning to the remark about Dhaliwal’s absence, Dhaliwal claims this remark
constituted misconduct because SAFCA’s counsel knew that Dhaliwal could not attend
the trial because he was undergoing surgery for cancer. As Dhaliwal concedes in his
reply brief, there is nothing in the record to support his assertion that SAFCA’s counsel
knew that Dhaliwal could not attend the trial because was undergoing surgery, and
SAFCA denies that its trial counsel had any such knowledge at the time he made the

                                             27
challenged remark. Assuming without deciding that the remark nevertheless amounted to
a personal insult rising to the level of misconduct, when viewed in the context of the
entire case, we have no trouble concluding that Dhaliwal would not have achieved a more
favorable result had the remark not been made. (Garcia, supra, 204 Cal.App.4th at pp.
148-149.) Dhaliwal’s objection to the remark and motion to strike it were “sustained,”
the remark was fleeting, and it was not particularly serious.
                                      DISPOSITION
       The judgment is affirmed. SAFCA shall recover its costs on appeal. (Cal. Rules
of Court, rule 8.278(a).)


                                             BLEASE                   , Acting P. J.


We concur:


         NICHOLSON                 , J.


         DUARTE                    , J.




                                             28
