Carolina Power and Light Company v. Clark

91 S.E.2d 569, 243 N.C. 577, 1956 N.C. LEXIS 574
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 29, 1956
Docket91
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 91 S.E.2d 569 (Carolina Power and Light Company v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carolina Power and Light Company v. Clark, 91 S.E.2d 569, 243 N.C. 577, 1956 N.C. LEXIS 574 (N.C. 1956).

Opinion

PARKER, J.

The evidence of the individual defendants introduced without objection, except as to the testimony of Sam W. Huddleston set forth below, which was objected to on the ground that he had not qualified as an hydraulic engineer to express an opinion, tends to show the following facts. They own a farm of about 100 acres in Beaverdam Valley. Beaverdam Creek, a clear mountain stream about 14 to 16 feet wide and 10 to 18 inches deep, runs approximately through the center of the farm. On the north end of the farm is a narrow gorge 100 to 150 feet wide, where a dam could be placed to create a lake and to make a development for residential lots. Before petitioner’s power lines were placed on the easement, they had plans for the construction of a dam. A dam was needed to pond water for irrigation on the farm. Just before the power line was built, they had secured tractors and equipment to build a dam. The petitioner placed five poles on the easement on the farm to carry its lines. Their witness, Sam W. Huddleston, testified that a dam about 120 feet wide at the bottom and about 12 to 14 feet wide at the top could be built in the narrow gorge on the farm. The poles of the petitioner would damage the proposed lake, because the water of the lake would have to be maintained at a level not to interfere with the power lines.

In reply to the above evidence petitioner offered the testimony of Lee G. Warren, who has had experience in the building of hydroelectric developments for 22y2 years. At the request of the petitioner he went out to the farm of the appellants, and made a survey or calculation as to the building of a dam wholly on their farm. He testified as to the *580 things to be considered, in order to calculate and build a dam there. He was then asked this question by petitioner: “Do you have an opinion, from your inspection of this site which you speak of, the approximate cost of the construction of a dam there?” The appellants objected, the objection was sustained, and the petitioner excepted, which is its exception No. 5 and assignment of error No. 5. The witness, if permitted to answer, would have replied: “Yes, 20 feet high it would cost $50,000.00; that is a rolled clay dam, with rock rip-rap sides, surfaces, and for 10 feet high it would cost approximately $20,000.” The jury did not hear this excluded testimony. The petitioner assigns the exclusion of this evidence as error.

In fixing values on property in condemnation proceedings for any and all uses or purposes to which the property is reasonably adapted and might, with reasonable probability, be applied, but has never been applied, its availability for future uses must be such as enters into and affects its market value, and regard must be had to the existing business or wants of the community, or such as may be reasonably expected in the immediate future to affect present market value. The test is what is the fair value of the property in the market. The uses to be considered must be so reasonably probable as to have an effect on the present market value. Purely imaginative or speculative value should not be considered. Gallimore v. Highway Com., 241 N.C. 350, 85 S.E. 2d 392; Light Co. v. Moss, 220 N.C. 200, 17 S.E. 2d 10; Power Co. v. Power Co., 186 N.C. 179, 119 S.E. 213; Teeter v. Telegraph Co., 172 N.C. 783, 90 S.E. 941; Land Co. v. Traction Co., 162 N.C. 503, 78 S.E. 299; Brown v. Power Co., 140 N.C. 333, 52 S.E. 954; Olson v. U. S., 290 U.S. 623, 78 L. Ed. 1236; Boom Co. v. Patterson, 98 U.S. 403, 25 L. Ed. 206; Illinois Power & Light Corp. v. Parks, 322 Ill. 313, 153 N.E. 483; Pruner v. State Highway Com., 173 Va. 307, 4 S.E. 2d 393; State Highway Com. v. Brown, 176 Miss. 23, 168 So. 277; Andrews v. Cox, 127 Conn. 455, 17 A. 2d 507.

Crisp v. Light Co., 201 N.C. 46, 158 S.E. 845, was an action to recover damages for the construction of an electric transmission line over the plaintiff’s land. The Court said: “The defendant contends that several witnesses were allowed to give their opinion as to the purpose for which the lands are adapted or suitable and to give an opinion of its decreased value. We see no objection to the competency of this character of evidence.” See also to same effect Light Co. v. Rogers, 207 N.C. 751, 178 S.E. 575; Teeter v. Telegraph Co., supra.

The individual defendants offered testimony to show that their land was plainly adapted for a dam site, and that the easement acquired by petitioner in impairing or destroying its availability for a dam site decreased the present value of their land. The excluded testimony of *581 petitioner’s witness, Lee G. Warren, as to the high cost of constructing a dam upon their property, was competent as tending to show that, because of the high cost of building a dam upon this land, the availability of this property for a dam site would not enter into the contemplation of a prospective seller or purchaser of the property, and could not reasonably be held to áffect or enhance its present market value. The exclusion of this testimony was prejudicial error to petitioner. Such error is apparent from a reading of the charge where it appears that the judge recapitulated the evidence of the individual defendants as to the availability of their land for a dam site to create a lake for purposes of irrigation and for selling building lots around it, and petitioner’s evidence as to the high cost of constructing a dam upon this property was excluded from the knowledge and consideration of the jury.

The petitioner assigns as error No. 8 this part of the charge: “Where . . . a public utility takes by condemnation a perpetual easement entitling it to occupy and use the entire surface of a part of a tract of land . . .”

The petitioner assigns as error No. 9 this part of the charge: “The rule declares that the full market value of the part of the land covered by perpetual easement will be a proper element of the compensation, and forbids any diminution in the allowable compensation on account of any use which the landowner might make of any part of the land covered by the perpetual easement.”

The petitioner assigns as error No. 10 this part of the charge: “Since the condemnor acquires the complete right to occupy and use all the land covered by the perpetual easement for all time to the exclusion of the landowners, the bare fee remaining in the landowner is, for all practical purposes, of no value, and the value of the perpetual easement acquired by the condemnor is virtually the same as the value of the land embraced by it.”

At the beginning of the trial the parties to this special proceeding entered into a stipulation to this effect: The petitioner is a public utilities corporation existing under, and by virtue of, the laws of North Carolina, and is doing business within said State in the distribution of electricity for commercial, industrial and domestic use. That it has the power of eminent domain for the purposes of its business.

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Bluebook (online)
91 S.E.2d 569, 243 N.C. 577, 1956 N.C. LEXIS 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carolina-power-and-light-company-v-clark-nc-1956.