United States ex rel. Tennessee Valley Authority v. Easements & Rights-of-Way

409 F.2d 660, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 12902
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 9, 1969
DocketNos. 18627-18630
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 409 F.2d 660 (United States ex rel. Tennessee Valley Authority v. Easements & Rights-of-Way) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States ex rel. Tennessee Valley Authority v. Easements & Rights-of-Way, 409 F.2d 660, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 12902 (6th Cir. 1969).

Opinion

WEICK, Chief Judge.

Tennessee Valley Authority has appealed from awards of compensation made to landowners by a three-judge District Court panel in four condemnation actions. The awards were for easements taken by TVA for the construction, operation and maintenance of a 500,000-volt electric power transmission line with towers and attachments1 The easements taken were 200 feet in width and extended across four parcels of land owned by the landowners and situated near Germantown, a suburb of Memphis, Tennessee.

Across the Winchester tract the easement is 3,059 feet long and contains fourteen acres of land. Three steel towers are located thereon. The easement extends 1,238.8 feet across the Wills property and contains 5.7 acres, on which are located two steel towers. The main portion of the easement running across the Jeter tract is 3,937 feet in length, containing 18.1 acres and four steel towers. A small portion of the easement, containing 0.8 acres, is in the bend of a creek. The easement runs 1,022 feet across the May property and contains 4.7 acres, with one tower located thereon.

The District Court appointed a commission of three members to determine the value of the easements taken. The Commission heard testimony and made the following awards:

Winchester Tract:
Damage to land within the easement $17,500
Incidental damage to residue 10,500
Total award 28,000
Wills Tract:
Damage to land within the easement 23,085
Incidental damage to residue 20,000
Total award 43,085
Jeter Tract:
Damage to land within the easement 57,834
Incidental damage to residue 41,000
Total award 98,834
May Tract:
Damage to land within the easement 19,035
Incidental damage to residue 18,000
Total award 37,035

[662]*662The three-Judge District Court panel then heard the cases on exceptions to the report of the Commission and made the following awards, which were not substantially different from the awards of the Commission:

Winchester Tract (Case No. 18,627):
Damage to land within the easement $16,800
Incidental damage to a strip of 4.4 acres on the east side of the tract, and to a strip 200 feet wide running the entire length of the easement, containing 14 acres 11,040
Total award 27,840
Wills Tract (Case No. 18,628):
Damage to 5.7 acres within the easement $23,085
Incidental damage to a 200 foot strip on each side of the easement, containing 11.4 acres 20,520
Total award 43,605
Jeter Tract (Case No. 18,629):
Damage to 18.1 acres within the easement $52,490
Damage to land within 0.8 acres 2,000
Incidental damage to an area of 16 acres on each side of easement 41,600
Total award 96,090
May Tract (Case No. 18,630):
Damage to 4.7 acres within the easement $19,035
Incidental damage to 200 foot strip on each side of easement containing 9.4 acres 16,920
Total award 35,955

In addition, the District Court ordered TVA to pay interest to the landowners upon supplemental deposits from the dates when said deposits were paid into the registry of the Court until the dates when the landowners were informed of such deposits.

It is undisputed that the highest and best use of all four tracts is for residential subdivision development. TVA does not dispute the per acre value determinations made by the three-judge District Court2, nor does it dispute the findings of the District Court as to the amount of depreciation in the value of the land located within the confines of the easements. The thrust of TVA’s contentions is that the awards should be limited to damages found by the District Court to the land within the exact confines of the easements, other than the damages due to the isolation of small plots of land not large enough for building sites, which resulted from the taking of the easements 3. This is the sole controversy between the parties.

TVA contends that, other than the amounts it would allow for the isolated [663]*663parcels of land in the Winchester and May cases, there is no damage whatsoever to land outside the exact boundaries of the easement, and that the District Court erred in allowing any incidental damage therefor to the landowners.

TVA also complains about the use by two of the expert witnesses of the landowners, of a formula in determining the incidental damage to the land outside of the easements, which formula was sanctioned by both the Commission and the District Court.

The Commission commented on the use of the formula as follows:

“The Commission concludes that the preponderance of the evidence shows substantial damage in all of the subject cases to the land outside the confines of the easement. Fixing the exact amount of such damage is understandably a difficult task because this cannot be done with mathematical certainty. The expert witnesses for the owners assessed incidental damages to a 200-foot strip on both sides of the easement in the Wills and Jeter cases and to the west of the easement in the Winchester Development Corporation case. One expert testified that this 200-foot strip was decreased in value by 50%; the other expert witness felt that the diminution in value was 40%. This method of arriving at incidental damages is frequently employed by appraisers in condemnation cases, although it is certainly not the only way to approach the problem. Establishing a 200-foot damage strip in these cases is necessarily arbitrary to some extent. For example, some damage could extend to land further away from the easement. Likewise all of the land within the 200-foot strip might not suffer the same damage. The 40% and 50% diminution figures are simply an average. On the other hand, an average figure was necessarily used by all witnesses when they placed a residual value upon the land within the easement because of the fact that certain portions of this property are more valuable than other portions thereof. For example, the land inside the towers is damaged more than the land outside the towers and the land immediately adjacent to the towers — though not under them— is more affected than the land further away within the easement. Indeed the small area on which the tower footings are set has no residual value to the owner. Both Mr. King and Mr.

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Related

Nos. 18627-18630
409 F.2d 660 (Sixth Circuit, 1969)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
409 F.2d 660, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 12902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-tennessee-valley-authority-v-easements-ca6-1969.