Oxendine v. Public Service Co. of Ind., Inc.

423 N.E.2d 612, 1980 Ind. App. LEXIS 1876
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 26, 1980
Docket1-480A98
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 423 N.E.2d 612 (Oxendine v. Public Service Co. of Ind., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oxendine v. Public Service Co. of Ind., Inc., 423 N.E.2d 612, 1980 Ind. App. LEXIS 1876 (Ind. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

NEAL, Judge.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

This is a consolidated interlocutory appeal by defendants-appellants (Landowners) from adverse judgments in two eminent domain actions, consolidated for trial, brought by Public Service Company of Indiana, Inc. (PSI), wherein the trial court overruled the landowners’ objection to the taking and ordered the appropriation of an easement for a transmission line across two properties in favor of PSI. Appellants John Oxendine and Beulah Oxendine are the owners of one parcel and appellant Fernn L. Higgenbotham is the owner of the other one.

We affirm.

STATEMENT OF THE FACTS

PSI is a public electric utility engaged in the business of generating, transmitting, distributing, and selling electricity. It determined to build a new 345,000-volt transmission line from its generating station in Gibson County to its generating station in Vermillion County. The line is not a service line for’customers, but PSI claims that it is necessary to insure the stability of the Gibson County generating plant and to insure the reliability of the PSI network system of electricity distribution to its customers in Indiana. PSI selected a route for the new transmission line which crossed the appellants-landowners’ two properties. Negotiations for the purchase of the easements failed and PSI instituted the eminent domain actions which are the subject of this appeal. The easements are each 150 feet wide and run 1,967 feet on the Oxendine *615 property and 2,544 feet on the Higgen-botham property.

ISSUES

Landowners have preserved for review the following issues:

I. Whether PSI proved by sufficient evidence that the transmission line is needed for a proper public purpose.
II. Whether selection of and adherence to the route across the Oxendine and Higgenbotham properties constitutes a clear abuse of PSI’s discretion.
III. Whether PSI proved by sufficient evidence that it made good faith, adequate precondemnation offers to purchase a right-of-way across the properties, in that the amounts offered were not shown to be based on the actual characteristics of the particular land and improvements.
IV. Whether PSI’s precondemnation offers complied with the 1977 amendments to the 1905 Eminent Domain Act, Ind. Code 32 — 11—1—2.1 (Supp.1979), in that they were not proved to be based on good faith opinions of fair market values.
V. Whether PSI’s precondemnation offers complied with Ind.Code 32-11-1-2.1, in that PSI did not adhere to the uniform offer form mandated by that statute, but instead added to the statutory form a proposed agreement calculated to release other claims or settle other disputes between the parties.
VI. Whether the trial court erroneously quashed subpoenas for PSI’s construction budgets for the transmission line, in that the budgets would have constituted evidence of PSI’s opinion of when the line will actually be needed.
VII. Whether the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to permit supplemental evidence showing a substantial drop in peak demand by PSPs Indiana customers for the winter of 1979-1980.
VIII. Whether permitting a corporation whose primary purpose is to make a profit to forcefully take private property of Indiana citizens in the manner shown by the record here would be consistent with basic constitutional principles.

Issue I.

Landowners raise the issue of whether PSI proved by sufficient evidence that the Gibson to Dresser transmission line is needed for a proper public purpose, making a two-pronged argument under the emphasized language. They contend: 1) that PSI did not prove an actual present or future need for the line but only a remote and speculative need; and 2) that PSI failed to show a proper public purpose for the line in that the evidence shows that it is to be used not to serve the needs of Indiana residents but to supply electricity to “other power companies not parties to the action, and for the most part outside Indiana.” PSI submits that the evidence is more than sufficient to justify findings that PSI has a present need for this transmission line to insure the reliability of its network system of distribution and the stability of the Gibson generating station, and that such needs constitute a public purpose.

Ind.Code 32-11-3-2 provides:

“The condemnor may take, acquire, condemn and appropriate a fee simple estate, title and interest in such quantity or amount of land as it deems necessary for its proper use and purposes, except that for rights-of-way, the condemnor shall take, acquire, condemn and appropriate an easement.” (Emphasis added.)

The Supreme Court said in Dahl v. Northern Indiana Public Service Company, (1959) 239 Ind. 405, 410-11, 157 N.E.2d 194:

“The rule applicable here is succinctly stated in Guerrettaz v. Public Service Co. of Ind. (1949), 227 Ind. 556, at page 561, 87 N.E.2d 721, as follows:
‘All questions concerning the expediency of taking private property for public use are exclusively for the legislature. Unless the action of the legislature is arbitrary, and the use for which the property is taken is clearly private, the courts will not interfere.’

In Slentz et al. v. City of Fort Wayne et al. (1954), 233 Ind. 226, at page 231, 118 *616 N.E.2d 484, this court reaffirmed the general rule which has long been established and consistently followed in Indiana, quoting from Bragg v. Weaver (1919), 251 U.S. 57, 40 S.Ct. 62, 64 L.Ed. 135, as follows:

‘ “Where the intended use is public, the necessity and expediency of the taking may be determined by such agency and in such mode as the state may designate. They are legislative questions, no matter who may be charged with their decision, and a hearing thereon is not essential to due process in the sense of the 14th Amendment. (Citing authorities.)” ’

And, further, at page 232 of 233 Ind. [118 N.E.2d 484]:

‘The necessity and expediency of taking property for public use is a legislative and not a judicial, question.’ (Citing authorities.)

The statute vests discretion in the ap-pellee, utility, herein, to take or appropriate property for public use, and if in its judgment the property herein sought to be appropriated was necessary to distribute electric energy to the public, appellee had the right to condemn, and its judgment therein cannot be questioned or superseded by the courts except for fraud, capriciousness or illegality. [Citations omitted.]”

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Bluebook (online)
423 N.E.2d 612, 1980 Ind. App. LEXIS 1876, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oxendine-v-public-service-co-of-ind-inc-indctapp-1980.