Bd. of Mayor and Aldermen v. Thomas

178 S.W.2d 772, 27 Tenn. App. 166, 1943 Tenn. App. LEXIS 138
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 1, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 178 S.W.2d 772 (Bd. of Mayor and Aldermen v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bd. of Mayor and Aldermen v. Thomas, 178 S.W.2d 772, 27 Tenn. App. 166, 1943 Tenn. App. LEXIS 138 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

BAPTIST, J.

The parties will be called plaintiff and defendant as in the Circuit Court.

The plaintiff, Board of Mayor and Aldermen, Town of Milan, filed a petition in the Circuit Court of Gibson County seeking to condemn certain parts of a tract of land owned by the defendant, James Thomas and his wife, Mrs. Frankie Thomas, for the erection of a sewerage disposal plant, the construction of two sewer lines and a roadway a'cross the tract of land to said plant.

On application of the plaintiff a jury of view was summoned and which after viewing the land and taking testi *168 mony returned a verdict for the defendants and fixed the amount of damages at a total of $4350.

The plaintiff excepted to this verdict and the case was tried by a jury in the Circuit Court. This jury returned a verdict fixing the value of the land taken at $720 and the incidental damages to that part of the tract of land not taken at $4300. This latter amount included $300 as damages to the crops growing on the land.

The plaintiff’s motion for a new trial having been overruled, the plaintiff has appealed to this court and assigned errors.

The tract of land in question consists of about 114 acres and formerly belonged to Mrs. J. A. McAllister. About the year 1924 the Town of Milan purchased from Mrs. McAllister for a consideration of $500’, fifty-seven one-hundredths (.57) of an acre out of the north east corner of the 114 acre tract, for the purpose of establishing a sewerage disposal plant. This plant consisted of a septic tank 40x20 feet, the sewage going into one end and out "of the other. There was what is designated as an outfall line across the north portion of the Mc-Allister farm 1500 feet in length. At this time the population of Milan was less than 20001.

Because of the establishment by the Federal Government of what is known as the Wolf Creek Ordnance Plant at or near Milan the population has greatly increased and according to a recent unofficial census is now about 7000 or 80001. For this reason the original sewerage disposal plant became inadequate and the petition in this case was filed for the purpose of constructing a sewerage disposal plant adequate to meet the needs of this increased population.

*169 The petition sought to condemn for this purpose the following:

3.87 acres in fee for the disposal plant.

2.40 acres in fee for the roadway to the plant.

1.3 acres easement during construction of Wolf Creek sewer.

1 acre easement during construction of Wahl St. sewer.

% of an acre permanent easement for Wolf Creek sewer.

y3 of an acre permanent easement for Wahl :St. sewer.

This sewerage disposal plant consists of a pump house 12x12 feet and about 12 feet high; the lower part made of concrete and the upper part of concrete rock; two settling tanks which let out a large part of the sewerage and each of which are 25x25 feet and rise 4 feet above the surface of the ground; a digester built of concrete 18 feet high, to be covered with earth and later with grass; a sludge pit about 100x60 feet with a concrete wall rising 4 feet above the surface of the ground; two outfall lines, one of which parallels the original outfall, known as the Wahl Street outfall, the other known as the Wolf Creek outfall. The Wahl Street outfall is about 1500 feet in length across the north portion of the 114 acre tract, and the Wolf Creek outfall line is about 2100 feet across the east part of the tract. For construction purposes the easement was 20 feet in width, the permanent easement being 5 feet.

The sewer pipes are from 6 to 12 feet under ground, and there are man holes at intervals of 500 feet which project above the ground 3 or 4 feet. In addition the plaintiff has constructed a line of water pipes parallel with the sewer lines to furnish water to the sewerage plant.

*170 Tlie roadway which was taken under these proceedings is 30 feet in width. It runs from the southwest corner of the tract east with defendant’s south boundary line 1278 feet and then runs northeast across the tract to the northeast corner where the sewerage plant is located and comprises 2.40 acres. The southwest corner of the tract is the east end of Factory Street and also the east corporation line of Milan. The residence of the defendants is in the southwest corner of the tract. The 114 acres is almost in the shape of a square, being a little longer north and south than east and west.

No question is made by the plaintiff in error on the award of $720’ as the value of the land taken.

It is apparent that the jury in fixing the amount of incidental damages at $4300 included in that amount $300 as damages to the crops then growing upon the land, so the question is as to the correctness of the award of $4000 as incidental damages to that part of the land not taken.

The first assignment of error contends that the Trial Court was in error in overruling the plaintiff’s first four grounds of its motion for a new trial.

These grounds complain of that part of the verdict of the jury which awards to the defendants $4000 as incidental or consequential damages to that part of the tract of land not taken by petitioner, as being so -excessive as to evince passion or prejudice on the part of the jury; as being-against the preponderance of the evidence and as being contrary to the law and the evidence.

The defendant, James Thomas, testified that the tract of land in question was east of the Town of Milan, being-near the northeast corner of the town and bounded by the corporation line, his residence being the southwest corner *171 of the tract; that there was 35 or 40' acres of the tract facing the highway on one side and the town _on the other, and that this part of the tract was suitable for building lots and could be used as a subdivision; that since the location of the shell loading plant there had been much building in Milan and in his neighborhood; that the sewerage disposal plant as located and erected would be in plain view of any lots in such subdivision; that this sewerage disposal plant, the construction of the two sewer lines across the land and the roadway across the land from the southwest corner to the disposal plant affected the value of the remainder of the land. His opinion was that it damaged the value of that part of the tract suitable for building lots; that the sewerage lines had eight manholes on the cultivated land in the bottom, these manholes being three to five feet high and six feet in diameter; that the disposal plant, the sewer lines and the roadway divided the farm into five tracts, and that by reason of these facts the value of the land was damaged two-thirds; his opinion was that before the condemnation proceedings the tract was worth $150' per acre or about $17,000, and that subsequent to the condemnation proceedings the market value was not more than $5000.

The defendant introduced six witnesses other than James Thomas on the question of incidental damages.

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Bluebook (online)
178 S.W.2d 772, 27 Tenn. App. 166, 1943 Tenn. App. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bd-of-mayor-and-aldermen-v-thomas-tennctapp-1943.