Illinois Central Railroad Company v. Tennessee Valley Authority, American Commercial Barge Lines, and Cable Belt Conveyors, Inc., United States of America Ex Rel. Tennessee Valley Authority v. A Conveyor Belt Easement and Right of Way Over Two Tracts of Land Containing a Total of 0.26 Acre, More or Less, in Union County, Kentucky, Illinois Central Railroad Company

445 F.2d 308, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 9193
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 30, 1971
Docket20867_1
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 445 F.2d 308 (Illinois Central Railroad Company v. Tennessee Valley Authority, American Commercial Barge Lines, and Cable Belt Conveyors, Inc., United States of America Ex Rel. Tennessee Valley Authority v. A Conveyor Belt Easement and Right of Way Over Two Tracts of Land Containing a Total of 0.26 Acre, More or Less, in Union County, Kentucky, Illinois Central Railroad Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Illinois Central Railroad Company v. Tennessee Valley Authority, American Commercial Barge Lines, and Cable Belt Conveyors, Inc., United States of America Ex Rel. Tennessee Valley Authority v. A Conveyor Belt Easement and Right of Way Over Two Tracts of Land Containing a Total of 0.26 Acre, More or Less, in Union County, Kentucky, Illinois Central Railroad Company, 445 F.2d 308, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 9193 (6th Cir. 1971).

Opinion

445 F.2d 308

ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY, American Commercial Barge Lines,
and Cable Belt Conveyors, Inc., Defendants-Appellees.
UNITED STATES of America ex rel. TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
A CONVEYOR BELT EASEMENT AND RIGHT OF WAY OVER TWO TRACTS OF
LAND Containing a Total OF 0.26 ACRE, MORE OR LESS, IN UNION
COUNTY, KENTUCKY, Illinois Central Railroad Company, et al.,
Defendant-Appellant.

Nos. 20846, 20867.

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

June 30, 1971.

Lively M. Wilson, Louisville, Ky., for appellants; W. Robinson Beard, Stites & McElwain, Louisville, Ky., Thomas E. Sandidge, Sandidge & Sandidge, Owensboro, Ky., on brief.

Thomas A. Pedersen, Sol., Tennessee Valley Authority, Knoxville, Tenn., for TVA; Robert H. Marquis, Gen. Counsel, Justin M. Schwamm, Tennessee Valley Authority, Knoxville, Tenn., on brief.

J. Robert Hard, Jeffersonville, Ind., E. Gerry Barker, Curtis & Rose, Louisville, Ky., for American Commercial Barge Lines and Cable Belt Conveyors, Inc.

Before MILLER and KENT, Circuit Judges, and McALLISTER, Senior Circuit judge.

WILLIAM E. MILLER, Circuit Judge.

These two appeals brought by Illinois Central Railroad Company arise from the condemnation of an easement by TVA in property owned by the appellant railroad in Union County, Kentucky outside the Tennessee river watershed. Appeal No. 20,846 is from dismissal of an action brought by appellant in the district court in anticipation of the condemnation to obtain a declaratory judgment that the proposed exercise of eminent domain by TVA is unauthorized by law and therefore a violation of the fifth amendment. Appeal No. 20,867 is from a judgment entered by the district court in the condemnation action granting the easement and right of way to TVA over the appellant's lands in Kentucky. Because of the identity of the substantive issues in both appeals the cases were consolidated for disposition before us.

TVA filed a Notice and Declaration of Taking and a complaint for condemnation of the easement in appellant's lands on May 22, 1970. Appellant filed its declaratory judgment action on March 19, 1970. In that action TVA and the two corporate defendants made motions to dismiss, which were sustained by orders of June 2 and June 4, 1970. Further findings were filed on June 16, 1970. A final order was entered on June 17, 1970, holding that TVA had constitutional and statutory authority to engage in the project for which the easement was to be condemned and to acquire the easement by purchase or condemnation. Since appellant had adequate opportunity to raise and did in fact raise all of its objections to the proposed taking in its defense of the condemnation action, which was pending at the time these orders were entered by the district court, we turn to a consideration of the validity of the taking by TVA in the condemnation proceedings (No. 20,867).

In 1967 coal reserves belonging to the United States at Camp Breckinridge, Kentucky, were transferred to TVA by authority of the President.1 The actual authority to order such transfers was delegated to the Director of the Bureau of the Budget in 1965.2 In ordering the transfer the Director found, in the statutory language, that 'the above transfers are deemed necessary and proper for the purposes of the Tennessee Valley Authority * * *.'3 This transfer was part of a continuing search for adequate coal reserves to supply the steam generating plants operated by TVA. The Breckinridge reserves, as well as most of the coal reserves acquired by TVA since 1960, are located outside both the watershed of the Tennessee River and its tributaries, and the area in which TVA is a principal supplier of electricity.4

In November, 1969, TVA entered into a 20-year contract with appellee American Commercial Barge Line Company for portage of coal from the Camp Breckinridge reserves to three TVA steam generating plants, principally the Cumberland Plant in Tennessee, the Shawnee Plant in Kentucky, and the Johnsonville Plant in Tennessee. The coal is to be mined by the Peabody Coal Company at two mining camps on the reserve. The contract calls for transportation of the coal by a coal conveyor belt to be constructed from the mines running approximately ten miles overland to a barge facility on the Ohio River near Uniontown, kentucky, and thence by barges to the respective steam plants. The appellee barge company agreed to furnish, install, maintain, and operate the conveyor belts, one from the main mine to the river and another from the second mine to join the first belt. It also agreed to provide the barge loading facility and appurtenant storage area at the Ohio River terminus of the main conveyor belt. TVA agreed to furnish rights of way for the construction of these facilities. Pursuant to this agreement an easement was condemned for the conveyor belt over lands owned by appellant in kentucky. The final judgment entered in the district court in the condemnation action awarded a stipulated amount of $150 for the interests of appellant so taken.

Appellant's ultimate argument in opposition to the present taking is succinctly stated in its reply brief:

Perhaps the proper resolution of this case may be to acknowledge that TVA possesses the powers of a private business corporation when it chooses to conduct outside of its region affairs which Congress did not specifically authorize in the Act. The general corporate powers contained in 16 U.S.C. Sec. 831c, subsections (a)-(g), not being specifically keyed to the stated purposes of the Act, would follow the TVA wherever it wished to conduct business, be it Texas, Pennsylvania or Alaska. * *

When it seeks to exercise the sovereign power of eminent domain, however, then it must accept the limitations of area and purpose which the Act imposes. The concept of a regional agency utilizing the power of eminent domain to deprive private citizens of another region of their property is repugnant to the TVA Act and to the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution.

Appellant concedes that TVA may acquire property by condemnation outside the Tennessee Valley watershed for transmission lines, but argues that its power of eminent domain to acquire property for other purposes outside such area has not been conferred by statute.

We are unable to agree with this narrow conception of the power of eminent domain conferred upon TVA by statute to accomplish its broad purposes. The scope of the power was considered by the Supreme Court in United States ex rel. Tennessee Valley Authority v. Welch, 327 U.S. 546, 553-554, 66 S.Ct. 715, 718, 90 L.Ed. 843 (1946):

The broad responsibilities placed on the Authority relate to navigability, flood control, reforestation, marginal lands, and agricultural and industrial development of the whole Tennessee Valley. The T.V.A.

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445 F.2d 308, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 9193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-central-railroad-company-v-tennessee-valley-authority-american-ca6-1971.