Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. v. Red Jacket Consolidated Coal & Coke Co.

121 S.E. 278, 95 W. Va. 406, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 16
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 121 S.E. 278 (Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. v. Red Jacket Consolidated Coal & Coke Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. v. Red Jacket Consolidated Coal & Coke Co., 121 S.E. 278, 95 W. Va. 406, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 16 (W. Va. 1924).

Opinion

MilleR, Judge: •

Pursuant to chapter 42 of the Code, the plaintiff, a public service corporation, instituted in the circuit court of Mingo County, West Virginia, condemnation proceedings to take an estate less than a fee, — an easement or right of way,— over and across a tract of land owned by the defendant corporation, to be used' in the erection and maintenance of a telephone and telegraph line. Commissioners were selected *408 and appointed according to law, who reported to the circuit court that they were of opinion that the sum of $200.00 would be a just compensation for the easement or right of way proposed to be taken, “in, on, over, through and across the said real estate for the purpose of erecting thereon poles, wires, fixtures, crossarms and cables to be used as and for a telegraph and telephone line for public use, and which shall include the right to add to the number of said poles, wires, fixtures, crossarms and cables, to inspect, remove, operate and otherwise use the' same for the purposes mentioned, together with the right to cut and remove such timber and growing trees, and overhanging branches which may at any time endanger the safety of the said line; but with the right to the owners, their agents, employees, lessees and tenants to use the said land in such manner as they or either of them may desire, provided that they shall not interfere with, or molest the said applicant in its use of the said line by its officers, agents, employees, lessees and assigns for the purpose and in the manner hereinabove and in said petition specified. * * * As well as for any damages to the residue of said real estate beyond the peculiar benefits which will be derived in respect to such residue from the work to be constructed, after taking into consideration the actual damage that may or will be done to the fee by the construction proposed to be placed thereon.” The description in the notice, petition, orders and in the report of the commissioners is a survey, by courses and distances, of the middle line of the right of way proposed to be taken, 9567 feet in length; but the width thereof is not mentioned therein, nor in the later verdict of the jury. The defendant excepted to the report of the commissioners and demanded a jury trial to ascertain the amount of damages to which it was entitled. Upon the trial, the jury found damages in the amount of $3,000.00, their verdict following the language of the report of the commissioners, for a description of the estate to be taken and the rights and duties of the parties thereunder. From a judgment for the amount of the verdict, the plaintiff has appealed.

The errors assigned relate to the trial court’s rulings on *409 instructions offered by tbe parties and on evidence admitted on behalf of the defendant.

Defendant’s theory is that it is entitled to damages’; (1) for the value of the estate taken; (2) for the increased cost of constructing high tension electric lines across and over plaintiff’s telephone lines, in order to protect itself from damages for injury to persons or property in case an electric wire should break and fall upon the telephone lines; (3) in an amount sufficient to enable it to carry indemnity insurance against such accidents; (4) for the possible danger of fire to the company’s own houses and that part of the' coinsurance that the company has to carry.

There is no contention as to the right of defendant to recover damages for the part of the land actually used by plaintiff in the erection and maintenance of its lines. The evidence of the value of this land is conflicting, and the jury no doubt based a part of the damages found on that evidence. How much, we do not know. At the time of the trial the line had been constructed and was being maintained and used by plaintiff. The evidence shows that ten foot crossarms are now in use, and that a ten foot strip through the land contains about 2.2 acres. At the highest estimate of the value of the fee, this element of damages would not equal anything near the amount of the verdict. The question then is, to what extent, if any, is the residue of the property depreciated by the occupation and use of the right of way by plaintiff?

It appears that the right of way follows the low land and water courses through the coal company’s property. To what extent the land owned and occupied by defendant on both or either side of the right of way has already been developed in the production of coal is not shown; but Mr. Cummings, general superintendent in charge of production for the defendant company, testifies that the company has large veins of coal along both sides of plaintiff’s right of way; and it appears from his evidence that production has up to this time been confined' to one side. He says: “Now, there is coal on both sides of’ this line,” referring to a map of the right of way, “and the Alma seam is not yet touched. We have plans under way now to open the Alma seam, which *410 would, put a plant in at this point, on this side of the creek. While we have no present plans developed for improvement, that unquestionably will be mined, the seams on this side.” He says that in the development of the coal on that side of the right of way, it will be necessary to cross the telephone lines a number of times with high tension electric wires, and that in order to protect the coal company from damages by the falling of electric lines on the lines of the telephone company it will have to expend large sums of money in the construction of extra appliances at the crossing points; that the amount of the additional expenditure will depend on “the number of crossings. Of course we can not anticipate how many times that would be crossed. ’ ’ When asked how many times, in his opinion, in the course of years, it would be necessary to cross the telephone line, he said: “Why, twenty times at $150.00 a crossing is the figures I used on that.” As to who would install the lines contemplated, Cummings said: “That depends on whether we furnish the current or buy the current from the Kentucky and West Virginia Power Company, whether we make it or whether we buy it. If the power company furnishes us with power, part of those lines will be built at our cost and part at theirs. That is a matter of agreement. Of course you understand they will deliver the current to a certain point, at which point it goes through a meter, and they charge us with it from that meter, and the distribution is by us, and we build our own lines.” M. 0. Punk, district manager of the Kentucky & West Virginia Power Company, testified that it would cost three hundred dollars to put in the extra construction at each crossing, that is, netting under the electric lines, or dead end construction; but he says this is not usual; that “we have never taken any (extra precaution) because it was never a question. We are very careful to put up as substantial construction as possible over 'such crossings.” He says the danger is to a certain extent pretty remote, a possibility but not a probability; that, the falling of wires is ordinarily caused by trees being blown down; but that his company maintains regular patrolmen along its lines. M. W. Gilliam, an electrical engineer, and district manager of the West Virginia Enginering Company, *411 consulting engineer for the defendant company, testifies that there is a possibility of any wire breaking at any time,,especially during the time of sleet.

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.E. 278, 95 W. Va. 406, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-potomac-telephone-co-v-red-jacket-consolidated-coal-coke-wva-1924.