Southwestern Public Service Co. v. Vanderburg

581 S.W.2d 239, 1979 Tex. App. LEXIS 3532
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 23, 1979
Docket8978
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 581 S.W.2d 239 (Southwestern Public Service Co. v. Vanderburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southwestern Public Service Co. v. Vanderburg, 581 S.W.2d 239, 1979 Tex. App. LEXIS 3532 (Tex. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, Justice.

Southwestern Public Service Company seeks reversal of the judgment rendered in its condemnation action to establish an easement for an electrical transmission line over 4.855 acres extending along one side of a section of land. SPS’s points-of-error contentions, which lead it to the conclusion that the jury’s verdict of $40,000 for the resulting reduction in market value of the remaining 623.965 acres cannot stand, do not present reversible error. Affirmed.

Everett E. Vanderburg and his wife, Louise Collins Vanderburg, own a tract of farmland in Hansford County, Texas, containing approximately 640 acres. The farm is burdened with an 11.18 acre railroad easement extending in a southwesterly to northeasterly direction across the section, and is improved with a brick home and barns situated on fifteen acres in the southeast corner and with an irrigation system. The land is used primarily for the growing of irrigated milo and wheat.

Southwestern Public Service Company brought this condemnation action to secure an easement forty feet wide and one mile long, embracing 4.855 acres, along the west boundary line of the Vanderburg property on which SPS constructed a high voltage electrical transmission line using six two-pole and two three-pole “H-frame” structures. SPS also sought the right of ingress and egress to the condemned strip, but not to the remainder of the farm.

*242 Almost seven years later a jury was empaneled to determine the compensation for the easement taken and the resulting reduction in market value, if any, to the remaining land in the tract. Responding to the special issues submitted, the jury effectively found $1,500 as the value of the easement taken and $40,000 in reduction in market value to the remaining 623.965 acres.

Specifically, the jury found the before-taking value of the 4.855 acre strip to be $1,700 and the after-taking value to be $200. The jury also found that there was a reduction in the market value of the remainder because of the condemnation, and then found the before-taking value of the remainder to be $218,000 and the after-taking value to be $178,000.

Accepting the jury’s verdict, the trial court awarded SPS an easement on and a right-of-way to the 4.855 acre strip, and decreed that the Vanderburgs recover $41,-700 from SPS plus interest and all costs of court. 1

Appealing, SPS makes no complaint of the judgment amount for the 4.855 acre easement. Its nine points of error are directed to the $40,000 recovery for reduction in, and to the admission and denial of various items of testimony bearing on, the market value of the remainder of the property.

Appropriate to position the points is a summary of the testimony material to market values adduced at trial. 2 Jim Davis, the Vanderburgs’ son-in-law who assists in farming the Vanderburg tract, testified, without assessing a dollar amount, that the market value of the entire section of land decreased because of the presence of the power lines. The reasons he gave for a decrease were difficulty in farming around the poles without causing damage to the farm equipment and hand digging rows among the poles for irrigation, all of which must be done four times a year; difficulty in harvesting with a combine among the poles; fear of an electrical charge in using aluminum irrigation pipe under the power lines; inability to effectively spray with herbicides and pesticides under and around the power lines, with the result that weeds, fertilized from nearby land, grew ten times greater than otherwise and a tremendous weed problem occurred, the crop underneath the line was nearly totally wiped out, and greenbugs reinfested the field; an inability to deep plow among the poles which tends to make the dirt blow; and the prevailing southwest winds blowing weeds and dirt from the easement area across the field, which can damage the crop and could affect the entire field. Furthermore, the presence of the power line poles interrupted plans to place underground pipe for irrigation for half a mile down the west side and, because it was not practical to place the pipe out in the field, the plans to irrigate some seventy to one hundred acres, which had not been irrigated, were abandoned although water was available. Davis acknowledged that the presence of the railroad easement substantially interferes with farming the land as a unit.

Ralph Blodgett, a Hansford County resident, gave testimony of market values. Blodgett, who operates an agri-related business with close personal contacts with farmers and land, owns some irrigated farms, and has leased others, in Hansford and Ochiltree Counties. He bought two farms, one irrigated and one dry land, in the vicinity of the Vanderburg property during the time this condemnation action was being pursued. He thought he was familiar with, and he attempts to keep up with, market values of land in this area. He declared he was familiar with market values of land in the vicinity of the Vanderburg section at the time of the condemnation. He has been on, has inspected, and was acquainted with the Vanderburg property which, in his opinion, was farmed to its best use as a unit.

*243 Blodgett had an opinion as to the market value of the Vanderburg section both before and after the taking of the easement. In his opinion, the section would be worth $400 an acre without the railroad and, with the railroad, the before-taking value of the land was $350 an acre. After taking, the 4.855 easement strip was reduced in value by seventy (70%) percent, which he figured as $1,189.48 in damages; and the remaining 623.965 acres were damaged thirty (30%) percent, which he calculated to equal $65,-516.32 in damages.

Questioned as to the basis for his opinions, Blodgett enumerated the matters he had taken into consideration. He listed an intrusion upon one’s privacy for a permanent easement, the unsightly appearance of the power line structures, and the deprivation of construction sites where the power line existed. He said that the double-pole structure is very difficult to farm around, posing a danger, if not destruction, to high priced farm equipment; the land is impossible to deep break and is almost impossible to irrigate through the structures; the structures pose a danger to aerial spraying and present a weed and Johnson grass problem; and the prevailing southwest winds blowing across the easement to the rest of the section pose a problem of the cross-pollination of Johnson grass with other grain sorghums in the area.

However, Blodgett knew of no specific instance where a tract of land sold for less than its market value or was rented for less because of the presence of a power line. Neither did he know of a single instance where a taxing agency had given a tract of land a lesser valuation than it otherwise would because of the presence of a power line of any type.

Bill C. Moore, an Amarillo licensed real estate broker and appraiser who spent some ninety percent of his time doing appraisal work for clients, gave opinion testimony of market values. The basis for his opinions was the comparative market data approach, consisting of analyses of comparable sales of farmland similar to and in the general area of the Vanderburg property, together with his inspection of the Vanderburg property on three or four occasions.

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Bluebook (online)
581 S.W.2d 239, 1979 Tex. App. LEXIS 3532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-public-service-co-v-vanderburg-texapp-1979.