Hanson v. Iowa State Commerce Commission

227 N.W.2d 157, 1975 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 977, 1975 WL 343325
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 19, 1975
Docket2-57484
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 227 N.W.2d 157 (Hanson v. Iowa State Commerce Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanson v. Iowa State Commerce Commission, 227 N.W.2d 157, 1975 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 977, 1975 WL 343325 (iowa 1975).

Opinion

UHLENHOPP, Justice.

This appeal involves the meaning of § 489.18, Code 1973. That section provides:

• The state commerce commission shall have power of supervision over the construction of said [electric] transmission line and over its future operation and maintenance. Said transmission line shall be constructed near and parallel to the right of way of the railways of the state or along the division lines of the lands, according to the government survey thereof, wherever the same is practicable and reasonable, and so as not to interfere with the use by the public of the highways or streams of the state, nor unnecessarily interfere with the use of any lands by the occupant thereof. (Italics added.)

We understand “the division lines of the lands, according to the government survey thereof” to mean section lines, quarter-section lines, and quarter-quarter-section lines, which divide land into 640-acre, 160-acre, and 40-acre tracts respectively. Original Instructions Governing Public Land Surveys of Iowa, 33, 123 (Iowa Engineering Society, 1943). See 43 U.S.C.A. §§ 751-753; 3 Stat. 566 (1820); 4 Stat. 503 (1832); Coal Creek Coal Co. v. Chicago, T. H. & S. E. Ry., 114 Ind.App. 627, 53 N.E.2d 179.

Iowa Power & Light Company (Iowa Power) and three other utilities concluded that a need exists for a 345,000-volt electric transmission line from a place of origin near Sioux City, Iowa, to a point near Fort Dodge, and thence to a terminus near Des Moines. The point near Fort Dodge is approximately east of the place of origin near *160 Sioux City and the proposed line would run mostly east-west between those places, but the terminus near Des Moines is southeast of the point near Fort Dodge. The controversy is over the route of the line between the latter two places, that is, which of three principal possibilities shall be utilized: (a) a route following division lines of lands (the legs of a right triangle or several right triangles), or (b) a route following an existing southeasterly railroad right of way (nearly the hypotenuse of the right triangle), or (c) a route in a diagonal direction southeasterly (substantially the hypotenuse). The first possibility would of course be longest, involve the most farms, cost most, and require the greatest number of structures to hold the transmission cables.

Iowa Power made a study of various routes and narrowed the field to nine. Those nine contained variations of the three main possibilities we have listed. Through its engineer, Ells Cackler, Iowa Power then decided upon a proposed route which falls under possibility (c), a diagonal route between the point near Fort Dodge and the terminus near Des Moines. Mr. Cackler later made minor amendments to that route.

Subsequently Carl Schnoor, the engineer of Boone County, proposed a route which would follow land division lines for the most part. Charles G. Tefft, a commerce commission engineer, refined the Schnoor route.

Close examination of Mr. Cackler’s testimony reveals that he chose the Iowa Power route on the basis of which of the routes appeared the most practicable and reasonable — a comparison of routes. He selected the Iowa Power route over routes which fell under (a) (division lines of lands) or (b) (the railroad right of way) for the essential reason that it would be the simplest and cheapest. For example, as to the Schnoor-Tefft route Mr. Cackler testified, “This alternate was rejected primarily because it is ten miles longer than the proposed route. This route would affect more property owners and cost $780,000 more than the proposed route.” He also testified, “The route proposed in these consolidated proceedings and as amended by testimony today is in my opinion the best and most practicable route between Sycamore Substation [Des Moines] and Raun Substation [Sioux City] and is much preferable to any of the alternate routes considered.” Again, “It is the most direct route and one which will least inconvenience property owners and the general public who reside in [the counties in question].” Again, “Q. Is the only reason for rejecting this [Schnoor-Tefft] route the fact that it would result in a longer line? A. Longer line, more interference with additional property owners, more acres of land that would be involved in the building of the line.” Again, “In this particular route which we have selected from Lehigh [Fort Dodge] to Sycamore [Des Moines] we feel that we have selected the route that interferes with the least number of landowners . . As the line length increases, then we are going to cause an interference on more property. In this case, let’s say approximately ten miles more. Ten miles means another 180 acres. There’s 18 acres to the mile in the right of way strip. These are the things we looked at in addition to the cost, the interferences with landowners, and therefore the shortest line route which causes the least interference most generally becomes the most acceptable one.” Again, “I do not consider [the Schnoor-Tefft route] as good a route as the proposed route because of the additional interferences that are created; namely, more property owners affected, greater lengths of line. There are more structures.” Again:

Q. How much longer than the proposed route is the route proposed in Mr. Tefft’s testimony [Schnoor-Tefft route]? A. It is in excess of ten miles longer.
Q. Would this alternate require the procurement of more or fewer easements than the route proposed by Iowa Power? A. More. Twenty-nine more.
Q. Twenty-nine more parcels of land would be affected, is that your testimo *161 ny? A. Twenty-nine more landowners would be affected.
Q. In terms of acreage, how much does this mean? A. Eighteen acres per mile, or in excess of 180 acres.
Q. So it is your testimony that more private property would have to be utilized and more property owners affected under the proposal submitted [in] Mr. Tefft’s testimony as opposed to the route proposed by Iowa Power? A. That is true. I have looked at it from the standpoint that over the length of the line that we are considering here as an alternate route, our proposed route involves 122 landowners. The proposed alternate to that is 151 landowners. That figures out 23 per cent greater inconvenience, greater number of landowners affected.
Q. I believe you mentioned that additional structures would be necessary under the alternate proposed in Mr. Tefft’s testimony. Do you know how many additional structures would be necessary? A. That is correct. As you increase the length of a line and make a squared-off route, the extra ten miles would call for an additional 40 or 44 structures.
Q. In this day and age I’m reluctant to mention the subject matter of money, but I assume in view of the fact that the Tefft proposal is longer than the one submitted by Iowa Power, that it would also be costlier, would it not? A. Yes. At the average cost that we have quoted before of $78,000 per mile, this cost would run in excess of three-quarters of a million dollars .
Q.

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Bluebook (online)
227 N.W.2d 157, 1975 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 977, 1975 WL 343325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanson-v-iowa-state-commerce-commission-iowa-1975.