Miller v. Iowa Electric Light & Power Co.

34 N.W.2d 627, 239 Iowa 1257, 1948 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 435
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 16, 1948
DocketNo. 47329.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 34 N.W.2d 627 (Miller v. Iowa Electric Light & Power Co.) 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
Miller v. Iowa Electric Light & Power Co., 34 N.W.2d 627, 239 Iowa 1257, 1948 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 435 (iowa 1948).

Opinion

WenNerstrum, J.

The Iowa Electric Light & Power Company, the principal defendant herein, sought through condemnation proceedings to acquire a right-of-way through a portion of the farm property purchased on contract by Sheldon 0. Miller and Lanor T. Miller, his wife, from the Union Central Life Insurance Company. Harry W. Jennings, sheriff, is also named as one of the defendants by reason of his official connection with the proceedings but no claim for damages is made against him. A sheriff’s condemnation jury awarded damages to the plaintiffs, Miller, his wife and the Insurance Company. The plaintiffs appealed by reason of the condemnation award. Upon trial to a jury damages were allowed the plaintiffs in the sum of $1500. After submission of a motion for new trial, which was overruled, a judgment for the amount of the verdict was entered in favor of the plaintiffs. The defendant company has appealed.

The farm purchased by the appellees, Sheldon 0. Miller and his wife, consists of 220 acres. This farm is adjacent to the city limits of Marshalltown and is located on paved Highway No. 14. Eighty acres of the land lies west of the paved highway and the remaining 140 acres lies east of it and south of a rock *1259 and graveled road. The transmission line, the erection of which necessitated the condemnation proceedings, cnts diagonally through the 140-acre tract. The land condemned is 100 feet wide and is approximately 2200 feet in length. The poles or stations, which the light company has erected on this property, are four in number. Part of the poles erected are dual in nature with a 28-foot crossarm connecting them. The first two poles from the north are located just south of the rock and graveled road with one on each side of a fence running north and south. This set of poles is located approximately 50 feet south of the north fence. The next two poles are located approximately 100 feet out in a cultivated field and are not near a fence. The next set of poles is three in number with a 29-foot crossarm and is located in tillable soil but on what is a present fence line. The appellee, Miller, states that this fence could easily be moved so that the land surrounding the three pole station could be cultivated. He stated that it had never been cultivated but that it could be and that he wanted to do so. The last two poles to the south are set out in the field 15 feet west, of the appellee Miller’s east line fence. There are no guy wires on the two pole structures but there are four on the three pole structure. One of the guy wires extends 65 feet southwest from the poles and not within the 100 foot width. There are three main transmission lines carried on these poles with a voltage of 115,000 volts.

In the course of the erection of the poles of the appellant it is shown that approximately twenty trees of varying sizes were cut down and up-rooted. Miller, the appellee, had used a portion of this land for pasture purposes and it is claimed that by the loss of these trees shade was not as easily afforded the stock and at a point distant from the residence properties. It is Miller’s claim that he will not be able to cultivate a space 25 by 25 feet adjacent to the two pole structure in the field. He also contends that around the three pole structure there would be a space 70 by 30 feet that could not be cultivated. It is also claimed that with these poles in the field the ground could not be advantageously farmed with power machinery and some damage would result to the growing crops' because of the difficulty in cultivating around the poles.

*1260 . It is - shown that the appellee and his wife purchased the 220 acres of land from the Union Central Life Insurance Com■.pany in 1936 for $106 per acre. There are two residence prop- • erties on the 140-acre tract a short distance east of paved Highway No. 14. One of these residence properties, a six-room structure, is occupied by Miller and his wife. It has been thoroughly ■modernized since its purchase. Near this residence is a seven-room modern structure occupied by a son of the Millers.

■ ■; It is disclosed by the evidence that on frequent occasions the land through which the condemned strip was taken is flooded during the spring. This land is termed bottom land and is near the- Iowa river but does not border it. It is shown by Miller’s testimony that despite the flooding of the land he has always been able to later plant and produce a satisfactory crop on it.

■ The, appellee, Miller, placed a valuation of $210 per acre on’-his entire farm prior to the condemnation proceedings and $175 per acre after the condemnation. He claimed he was damaged in the amount of $7700. One of the witnesses for Miller placed a valuation of $250 per acre upon the entire -farm prior to the condemnation and $225 per acre after it. The resulting damage based on these figures would be $5500. Another withess. placed a valuation of $175 to $180 per acre on the farm before the condemnation and a valuation of $150 per ’acre' after the condemnation. Based upon a $30 an acre damage the resulting damage would be $6600. A further witness placed the valuation at approximately $210 per acre prior to the condemnation and a valuation of from $180 to $185 per acre after it. Considering this witness’s maximum valuations there would be a damage of $25 per acre or a total damage to the entire' farm of $5500.- Another witness placed a valuation of $225 per acre on the entire farm before the condemnation and $200 per acre after the condemnation' which would result in a damage to the entire farm of $5500.

One of the valuation witnesses called by the appellant placed a valuation on the entire farm at $115 per acre before the condemnation and stated that there would be no difference in valuation after the condemnation. Another witness placed the •same valuation upon the property as did the first witness. A further witness placed a valuation of $125 per acre before the *1261 condemnation and the samo valuation after the condemnation. Another witness valued the land at $100 per acre before the condemnation and the same valuation after it and the last witness placed a valuation of $125 per acre before the condemnation and the same valuation after this proceeding. It will be observed that none of the appellant’s valuation witnesses stated there was any damage resulting to the property by reason of the running of this high voltage line through the farm and the erection of the several poles at four different points.

During the course of the cross-examination of Sheldon 0. Miller, one of the appellees, a question was asked to which an objection wTas made. The record relative to the question, the objection, and the court’s ruling is, in part, here set out:

“Q. I will ask you to state whether or not, Mr. Miller, you and your wife, Lanor T. Miller, signed an instrument during the early part of 1947 whereby, as far as you were concerned, you gave the Iowa Electric Light and Power Company an easement over this farm for a 36 foot right-of-way at a figure of approximately $300.00? * * *
“Mr. Tye: (In absence of the jury), * * * This is objected to for the reason it is wholly incompetent under the issues in this ease.

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Gustafson v. Iowa Power & Light Company
183 N.W.2d 212 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1971)
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154 N.W.2d 113 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1967)
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96 N.W.2d 468 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.W.2d 627, 239 Iowa 1257, 1948 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-iowa-electric-light-power-co-iowa-1948.