Texas Electric Service Company v. Campbell

328 S.W.2d 208, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2114
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 15, 1959
Docket5331
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 328 S.W.2d 208 (Texas Electric Service Company v. Campbell) 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
Texas Electric Service Company v. Campbell, 328 S.W.2d 208, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2114 (Tex. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

LANGDON, Chief Justice.

This is a statutory condemnation proceeding brought by Texas Electric Service Company, an electric utility company, having the right of eminent domain, to condemn an easement for an electric transmission line over and across 21 (4 sections of land used for ranching and other purposes, located in Winkler County, together with the right of ingress and egress over appellee’s adjoining lands.

The statement in condemnation was filed with the county judge, special commissioners were appointed, and award made in the amount of $4,680. Appellant paid the accrued costs, filed cost bond and deposited with the clerk of the county court double the amount of the commissioners’ award and, thereupon, took possession of the easement and proceeded with the construction of its transmission line.

Appellant, Texas Electric Service Company, duly filed its appeal from the award of the commissioners, and, upon trial before the jury, after the close of the testimony, defendant Seth Campbell filed an admission that plaintiff was entitled to recover as prayed for in its petition, and that the sole remaining issue of fact in the cause was the amount of damages which should be awarded to defendant. Based on the jury’s answers to special issues, judgment was entered awarding appellant its easement and awarding appellee damages in the sum of $10,155.74, which sum is made up of two items — $714.24 for the 50-foot-wide easement strip containing 14.88 acres of land, and $9,441.50 damages to 4,105 acres lying between the Odessa and Andrews highways. The jury found no damage to 9,760 acres north of Andrews Highway and south of the Odessa Highway, constituting the remainder of .defendant’s lands. Motion for new trial was duly filed and, after hearing, overruled, to which order appellant excepted and gave notice of appeal. All prerequisites to appeal have been complied with, and this case is properly before us.

*211 Appellant brings fourteen points of error, which have been divided by appellant into three groups for purposes of argument, and which will be considered and discussed by us in the same manner.

The record discloses that defendant-ap-pellee, Seth Campbell, owned approximately 21sections of land in Winkler County, comprising approximately 13,880 acres of land which is physically divided by two highways — Highway 302 from Kermit to Odessa, and Highway 115 from Kermit to Andrews; that the area between the two highways, being the portion of defendant’s lands actually crossed by the easement condemned, consisted of 4,105 acres of land exclusive of the 14.88 acres of land condemned; that the balance of the remainder of the ranch lying north of Highway 115 and south of Highway 302 consists of 9,760 acres of land. In answer to Special Issues Nos. 3 and 4, inquiring as to the value of the 4,105 acres before and after the taking, the jury found that this land depreciated in value $2.70 per acre immediately after the taking, but found there had been no depreciation in value in answering Special Issues Nos. 5 and 6, inquiring as to the value of the 9,-760 acres of land lying north of the Andrews highway and south of the Odessa highway, before and after the taking.

We have carefully considered appellant’s first six points of error under Group One, and are of the opinion that these assignments must be overruled. Appellant’s position is based primarily upon the assumption that there was no competent evidence and no evidence to support the submission of Special Issues Nos. 3 and 4, the jury verdict thereon, and the resulting judgment; and also that the jury findings thereon were contrary to the overwhelming preponderance of the evidence and the verdict so excessive as to show that the jury was influenced by passion and prejudice against the plaintiff.

The evidence is undisputed that some damage was sustained by the adjoining land lying between the two highways and consisting of 4,105 acres of land exclusive of the 14.88 acres condemned. Only four witnesses testified as to the value of the lands, two for plaintiff (appellant), and two for defendant (appellee). All of the witnesses testified there had been some diminution in value of the adjoining land as a result of the taking of the easement. Appellant’s witnesses, C. A. Cole, Jr., and C. C. Boles, testified as follows: Cole, that the adjoining land between the two highways had depreciated two cents per acre; and Boles, that such land had depreciated three cents per acre. Defendant’s witnesses testified as follows: The witness F. E. Summers, that the remaining land between the two highways had a value of $312 before the taking, and $232.50 immediately after the easement was affixed, the diminution in value being $79.50 per acre; the witness John Moore testified that the same land had a value of $300 per acre before the taking and $285 after the taking, the diminution in value being $15 per acre.

Each of the witnesses on value was qualified as an expert. Defendant’s witness F. E. Summers had lived in Winkler County for 26 years, was employed by the Kermit State Bank, and was the manager of the Basin Finance Company, had previously appraised the land in question and was familiar with it; in making his evaluation he considered that the property abutted on two highways, its proximity to the city of Kermit and the County Park, the expansion of the city of Kermit in the direction of this land, and the fact that it extended to within one-half mile of the city; that he considered the sales in the same general area for commercial and industrial sites; that the high-tension line rendered the land near the line less desirable for building sites, and that the easement depreciated the value of the land because of the superior rights of the easement owner. The defendant’s other witness on value, Mr. John F. Moore, testified that he had lived in Winkler County for twenty years and was engaged in the insurance and real estate *212 business; that he was familiar with real estate values in Winkler County and with the value of the land in question, having made an appraisal of this land. He testified that the land could be used for residential and industrial purposes, and his testimony reflects that he considered substantially the same elements as were considered by the witness F. E. Summers, in arriving at the values found by him for the land in question before and after the easement was affixed.

The defendant, Seth Campbell, did not testify as to value. His testimony was confined, principally, to the nature and character of his lands, its uses and the effects of the easements on his lands. He testified that his property was close to an airport, and that it lay within one mile of the County courthouse; that his home was in a section which adjoined one of the sections crossed by the easement; that the land was used for ranching purposes and was improved with fences, cross-fences, windmills, water tanks, and was in three pastures, and that the high-line goes in one of his pastures and angles across the other two; that there were five gates placed in his fences by appellant; that he operated the entire 21.^ sections as a unit, and that his property, other than the strip condemned, was used by appellant for purposes of ingress !and egress. He also testified that erosion has resulted from the placing of the easement on his land, the blading of vegetation, cutting of roads and building of gates.

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Bluebook (online)
328 S.W.2d 208, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-electric-service-company-v-campbell-texapp-1959.