Pearse v. Loup River Public Power District

290 N.W. 474, 137 Neb. 611, 1940 Neb. LEXIS 40
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1940
DocketNo. 30734
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 290 N.W. 474 (Pearse v. Loup River Public Power District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pearse v. Loup River Public Power District, 290 N.W. 474, 137 Neb. 611, 1940 Neb. LEXIS 40 (Neb. 1940).

Opinions

Paine, J.

This is an appeal by the Loup River Public Power District from judgment on a verdict against it for $1,883 for a right of way and perpetual easement for an electric power transmission line across a farm of 240 acres.

The Public Power District, hereafter called the condemner, began proceedings in the county court for Madison county to acquire a right of way by condemnation under the power of eminent domain. Appraisers were appointed, who returned an award of $750, from which award the condemner appealed to the district court on the ground the award was excessive.

A stipulation was entered into between the parties that damages in the future to growing crops would be paid if and when they arose, and were not to be compensated for in these proceedings.

In the trial in the district court the plaintiff proceeded on the theory that the award was wholly inadequate.

The evidence discloses that the 240-acre farm lies 4% miles east of the city of Madison, and that every acre is tillable. It is fenced and cross-fenced, and the buildings consist of a large modern house, a horse barn for 25 head of horses, a cattle barn, hog sheds, feed lots, silo, granaries, chicken house, farrowing pens, grain elevator, with a capacity of 5,000 to 6,000 bushels, hollow tile corncrib with a capacity of 4,500 to 5,000 bushels of corn, a complete water system throughout the yards and feed lots. The farm is adapted to raising and feeding live stock, and the land, of loess soil, is best for raising corn, alfalfa, and small grain. Because of a scientific plan for rotation of crops, pursued for years, the yield is above the average, as the farm has in the past produced crops of 60 bushels of corn per acre, 80 to 90 bushels of oats, and unusually fine crops of alfalfa. A graveled road connects the farm with Madison, and it is considered one of the best farms in the county. Many wit[613]*613nesses testified that this farm was worth $90 to $100 an acre, and the condemner in his brief admits that $85 an acre is a fair valuation.

The transmission line crosses the farm on a straight north and south line close to the east side of the farm, and consists of three cables suspended from cross-arms supported by two poles. These poles are 50 feet long, set seven feet in the ground, and are creosotad, and the life of the poles is from 30 to 40 years. Each of the six supporting structures across this farm are the same. Two poles are set 14 feet six inches apart, and the east pole of each of the six pairs is set from 12 to 15 feet inside the east boundary line fence of the farm, and the poles are X-braced to give them strength and resistance to high winds. Each of the three electric cables, or conductors, are made with a core of seven strands of steel galvanized wire, around which are wound a number of strands of aluminum wire, which carries the current. The life of a conductor of that sort is indefinite. Similar conductors after having been in service for 20 years show no evidence of deterioration.

D. J. DeBoer, chief electrical engineer of the condemner, testified that he did not know of a single case where this kind and size of a cable was broken, but if a break should occur the line would be de-energized the instant that the cable hit the ground, as automatic circuit breakers immediately take the line out of service the instant it hits the ground, that is, the line would be absolutely dead in a little over one-tenth of a second.

The lowest point which the cables hang to the earth at 60 degrees F. is 28 feet in four of the spans, 29 feet in another, and 35 in another; the distance to the ground would be reduced about six inches for each ten degrees rise of temperature as the cables expand. These clearances equal or exceed those required by the National Safety Code when a power line goes over highways. The weight of the cables is one-half pound per foot, or from 275 to 300 pounds per span.

This power line is designed to carry from 69,000 to [614]*614115,000 volts of electricity. Electricity of this voltage will arc or jump from this uninsulated cable to another well-grounded object a distance of between five and six inches. These lines are patrolled or inspected by men on foot, and it is testified that a major repair, such as replacing a cross-arm or pole, which would require going upon the farm property with a repair truck, would not be required more often than once every 15 years. Each pole is equipped with a ground wire extending from the top of the pole to the ground to carry off lightning, but there is no danger in coming in contact with the poles, or with these ground wires, except during a lightning storm. There is a large steel tower in this line one mile north of this farm which affords added protection from lightning, and it is testified that the presence of these six structures on this farm tends to reduce danger from lightning strokes to live stock and fences. The residence and farm buildings are located from 400 to 500 feet from the transmission line.

Several witnesses for the condemner testified that the market value of the farm would not be decreased more than $150 to $200, and a county supervisor from Platte county testified that he had two such transmission lines across his farm, that he had personally farmed around such structures for a period of nine years, and that the diminution of market value by reason of the building of the transmission line would not in his opinion exceed $15 to $20 for each structure.

Robert Fulton, an electrical engineer, of Lincoln, was the expert called by the plaintiff. He was 51 years of age, a graduate of the college of engineering of the University of Nebraska, has been consulting engineer in the installation of many municipal electric systems in the state, and from 1934 to 1937 was chief electrical engineer for the Platte Valley Public Power & Irrigation District, and since that time has been in the employ of several electrical districts. He testified that he is familiar with the transmission line extending from near Columbus to Norfolk, Nebraska; that it is insulated for 69,000 volts, and all of the balance of [615]*615the construction is suited for 115,000 volts; that any person would be safe within 15 feet of the wires, and that a person thoroughly familiar with such transmission lines could approach much closer without danger; that it is dangerous for an ordinary person to approach nearer than 15 feet to the actual conductor, therefore a farmer should not start a stack of hay within 50 feet of such conductors; that in working on haymaking tools, binders, or combines, where the clearance is 27 feet, he would be in danger if standing on the top of a combine which would put him 17 or 18 feet in the air. Another danger mentioned was that children should not fly kites near these conductors.

A number of farmers were called by the plaintiff, who testified as to the increased difficulty in farming the land. One testified that grain could not be cut along the fence line between the posts and the fence with an eight-foot binder; that in checkrowing corn one would have to cut the wire north and south and resplice it 12 times in the field where the poles stand; that the weeds would grow up around the poles, and that these could not be mowed with a tractor or horse-mower, but would have to be mowed by hand, and that it would be necessary to cut these weeds at least three times during the crop season.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
290 N.W. 474, 137 Neb. 611, 1940 Neb. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearse-v-loup-river-public-power-district-neb-1940.