Schuck v. Rural Telephone Service Co., Inc.

180 P.3d 571, 286 Kan. 19, 2008 Kan. LEXIS 90
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 4, 2008
Docket98,098
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 180 P.3d 571 (Schuck v. Rural Telephone Service Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schuck v. Rural Telephone Service Co., Inc., 180 P.3d 571, 286 Kan. 19, 2008 Kan. LEXIS 90 (kan 2008).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Rosen, J.:

In this appeal from an eminent domain proceeding, Lenus Schuck seeks to enjoin Rural Telephone Service Company, Inc. (Rural Telephone) from obtaining an easement on his land. After mistakenly burying a telecommunication cable outside an easement that it had negotiated with Schuck, Rural Telephone filed a petition for eminent domain seeking an additional easement that would allow it to keep the cable in its present location. Schuck appeals from the district court’s denial of his action seeking to enjoin Rural Telephone from proceeding with its eminent domain action.

FACTS

Schuck has used the property at issue partially as cropland and partially as pasture. In 1991 and 1998, Rural Telephone, Schuck, and Schuck’s parents, his predecessors in title, negotiated easements for Rural Telephone to bury cables across Schuck’s property. In exchange for both easements, Rural Telephone agreed to pay Schuck $1 per rod for a total of $750 and to reimburse Schuck for any crop damage.

*21 In 2002, the Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) notified Rural Telephone, a Kansas telephone public utility, of its plans for construction work on a highway in Norton County, Kansas. Before the construction project could begin, Rural Telephone had to bury a new telecommunications cable along the highway to replace the telecommunications cable located in the construction zone. Rural Telephone determined where it had to place the cable and staked the property pursuant to “staking sheets.” Rural Telephone then sent blanket easements for a quarter section of land to affected landowners, most of whom agreed to the easement.

Schuck received but did not sign the blanket easement. He instead negotiated with a representative from Rural Telephone in the summer 2002 for a more limited 40-foot-wide easement within which Rural Telephone could lay its cable. In exchange for the easement, Schuck and his mother, who has since passed away, received a Hill City phone line and payment for damage to any crops or land upon completion of construction.

Rural Telephone proceeded to install the cable and completed the project on Schuck’s land in early 2003. While building a fence on his property in January 2006, Schuck discovered that the cable was not located within the 40-foot-wide negotiated easement. Schuck later testified that it was readily visible that the cable lay outside the easement; however, he had not been on the property to discover this until January 2006 because he had rented the property to someone else.

Upon discovering the cable’s location, Schuck contacted an attorney, who then notified Rural Telephone that it had placed the cable outside the easement. In response, representatives from Rural Telephone measured the cable’s location and provided Schuck with staking sheets identifying the cable’s location. Rural Telephone discovered that approximately 2,430 feet of cable had been placed outside Schuck’s easement. Schuck and Rural Telephone entered into negotiations, where Schuck ultimately requested damages of $40,000 for Rural Telephone to keep its cable in the present location.

After negotiations failed to resolve the dispute, Schuck filed an action for ejectment and trespass against Rural Telephone. Rural *22 Telephone responded with a petition for eminent domain seeking a permanent easement to keep its cable in its present location. In its petition, Rural Telephone admitted that the cable was outside the easement but maintained that the cable lay in its ideal location and that relocating the cable would interrupt service and degrade the system. Rural Telephone asserted that the taking was therefore necessaiy for it to maintain, inspect, and repair its cable.

Schuck then filed a petition for injunction, which is the subject of this appeal. Schuck asked the district court to enjoin Rural Telephone temporarily and permanently from proceeding with its eminent domain action because: (1) the petition for eminent domain was jurisdictionally deficient because Rural Telephone failed to sufficiently identify its authority for the proposed taking; (2) the taking was not necessaiy; and (3) the taking was fraudulent, in bad faith, and an abuse of discretion. Schuck subsequently filed an amended petition asserting that Rural Telephone’s eminent domain petition should also be denied because Rural Telephone failed to follow the requisite procedures for an eminent domain action.

At the hearing on these petitions, Schuck testified the cable’s location affected his property because it presented an obstacle to laying water lines or making other improvements to the property.

Ron Ellis, Rural Telephone’s Director of Operations, testified about why the company had laid the cable where it did and the consequences of relocating it. He stated that every fine of cable runs parallel to another cable fine because “we don’t want to cross it at a bunch of angles.” According to Ellis, any time one cable crosses another, the cable must be at a right angle to avoid cutting lines, which would result in a disruption of service. He testified that at the time the construction crew buried the cable on Schuck’s property, it had not seen Schuck’s easement and was unaware there was a 40-foot limit. The construction crew continued to lay the cable parallel to the old cable fine, as set forth on the staking sheets and consistent with its normal practice, and in so doing exceeded the easement. Ellis testified that tire placement of the cable in 2003 — parallel and at 90-degree angles to the other cables — -was to ensure the longevity of the cable and not to benefit financially. *23 Ellis testified that Rural Telephone was unaware that a portion of the cable lay outside Schuck’s easement until Schuck contacted the company in 2006.

Ellis further testified that moving the cable into the area of the easement would require Rural Telephone to splice the cable. Each splice to the cable would cause optical loss and add light reflectance, which takes years of life off the equipment and, over time, weakens the equipment. Such splices degrade service, resulting in decreased picture quality on a video system or noise on a phone call. Sphcing would result in the 11 communities served by Rural Telephone losing service for an unknown amount of time. Ellis explained that the public would suffer because of the potential for missing emergency calls and services.

The district court first ruled that Schuck had failed to prove that Rural Telephone acted fraudulently, in bad faith, or in an abuse of discretion when it constructed and buried its 2003 telecommunications cable. The court denied Schuck’s request for injunction. The court concluded that the violation of the negotiated easement was the result of a good-faith mistake.

The court then found that Rural Telephone, as a Kansas telephone public utility that holds a Certificate of Convenience and Authority, has the power of eminent domain under K.S.A. 17-618 and K.S.A. 17-1903.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 P.3d 571, 286 Kan. 19, 2008 Kan. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schuck-v-rural-telephone-service-co-inc-kan-2008.