Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. Call

78 S.E.2d 670, 195 Va. 454, 1953 Va. LEXIS 217
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 30, 1953
DocketRecord 4115
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 78 S.E.2d 670 (Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. Call) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. Call, 78 S.E.2d 670, 195 Va. 454, 1953 Va. LEXIS 217 (Va. 1953).

Opinion

Eggleston, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Virginia Electric and Power Company, hereinafter called the condemner, filed its petition with the court below to condemn a 150-foot easement or right of way for the construction and maintenance of its electric power transmission lines over the lands of Manfred Call, III, and Mary Miller Call, his wife, C. C. Vaughan, Jr., and Page Newman Rudd, sometimes hereinafter referred to as the landowners, near Bon Air in Chesterfield county. The easement extends 1,364.3 feet over the Call tract and embraces 4.7 acres. The Call tract as a whole contains approximately 166 acres. The easement extends 3,684.5 feet over the Vaughan-Rudd tract and embraces 12.02 acres. The Vaughan-Rudd tract as a whole contains approximately 358 acres.

On June 30, 1950, the commissioners who had been appointed for the purpose, filed their written report in which they awarded the Calls $1,575 as compensation for their *456 property taken for the easement, and $800 for damages to the residue, or a total of $2,375. They awarded Vaughan and Rudd $3,850 as compensation for their property taken for the easement, and $10,000 for damages to the. residue, or a total of $13,850.

On July 3 the condemner paid into court the full amounts awarded the respective landowners, and shortly thereafter, the exact date not being disclosed in the record, entered upon the property and began the construction of the transmission lines.

On July 12 the condemner filed exceptions to the report of the commissioners, asking that the awards made these landowners be set aside on the grounds that they were “grossly excessive,” that the commissioners had heard and considered “improper evidence,” and had arrived at their awards “in an improper manner and without due consideration” of the court’s instructions. The exceptions were heard on October 6, 1950, and on April 30, 1952, the lower court rendered its opinion overruling the exceptions and holding that the condemner must pay interest on the awards. On July 14, 1952, final orders were entered confirming the awards and adjudicating that the respective landowners were entitled to interest thereon from October 1, 1950, until the amounts were paid to them. From these orders the present appeal was allowed.

The condemner assigns error both to the action of the lower court in not setting aside the awards and in allowing interest thereon.

First, it contends that the Call award should have been set aside because, it says, it appears from the testimony of H. D. Eichelberger, one of the commissioners, that he improperly considered “hearsay evidence” of the values of other property in the neighborhood. This commissioner had testified that the award was based on a valuation of $335 an acre for the 4.7 acres embraced within the boundaries of the easement. Upon being pressed as to the justification for this valuation, he replied: “I know quite a few of the real *457 estate people and do right much business with them and they have shown me figures they are getting in that area I wouldn’t have believed if I hadn’t seen them.” These figures, he said, were “about four times higher” than the acreage valuation which the commissioners had placed upon the property.

Information obtained by the commissioner in this manner should not have been considered by him, but, in the light of his whole testimony, the fact that he had such information does not require that the award be set aside. There is nothing to suggest that he conveyed to his colleagues the information which he had acquired, or that they were influenced thereby. In fact, he said that each of the commissioners, without conferring with the others, made his own calculations as to the value of the Call property, and that the slight differences therein were quickly adjusted. The acreage valuation arrived at was much less than that about which Eichelberger said he had been told.

While the per acre valuation fixed by the commissioners is slightly in excess of that testified to by the witnesses, the commissioners went upon and viewed the land pursuant to Code, § 25-14, and they were properly instructed that they were “not bound by the opinion of experts,” and might give their “own conclusions” as to value. Kornegay v. City of Richmond, 185 Va. 1013, 1026, 1027, 41 S. E. (2d) 45, 51.

The condemner also attacks the testimony of Commissioner Eichelberger because, it says, it shows that in arriving at the amount of the Call award this commissioner took into consideration evidence of lot sales which had been adduced with reference to the valuation of the VaughanRudd lands.

It will be observed that the condemner elected to condemn an easement across the Call, Vaughan and Rudd and other properties in one proceeding, and the same commissioners heard the evidence-as to the values of the several pieces of land. Since a part of the Vaughan-Rudd property *458 had been subdivided these landowners introduced evidence of lot sales in the neighborhood which they claimed was pertinent to the valuation of their tract. The condemner argues that such evidence was inadmissible with respect to the Call property which had not been so divided.

But there is nothing in the testimony of Eichelberger, as we read it, which indicates that in arriving at the valuation of the Call property he took into consideration the evidence with respect to the valuation of the Vaughan-Rudd tract. It is true that when Commissioner Eichelberger was pressed by counsel for the condemner as to his justification for the valuation of the Call property at $335 an acre, he was asked if he knew of any sales on Jahnke road at $1,000 an acre, and his reply was that it had been developed at the hearing on the valuation of the Vaughan-Rudd tract that property in a subdivision of that tract, bordering on that road, had sold at “$1,200 an acre.” Yet there is nothing in Eichelberger’s testimony to indicate that he applied" this valuation to the Call property.

As has been said, the commissioners fixed the value of the 12.02 acres of land within the boundaries of the easement over the Vaughan-Rudd tract at $3,850, or $320 an acre, and awarded the sum of $10,000 for damages to the residue of the tract. The condemner does not contest the amount of the award for the property taken, but contends that the award for damages to the residue should be set aside as excessive because, it says, it appears from the testimony of Commissioner Eichelberger that the commissioners placed a higher value per acre on that part of the tract which they considered would be damaged by the proximity of the transmission lines than they placed on the land actually taken. The basis of this contention is the testimony by Eichelberger that in addition to the 12.02 acres taken, the commissioners thought that twice as many acres, that is, 24 acres, lying immediately adjacent to the easement would be a “total loss” to the landowners. Dividing the amount awarded for damages to the residue, $10,000, by *459 24 acres, the condemner says, shows that the commissioners placed a value of $416 an acre on the damaged property, whereas they had placed a value of $320 an acre on the area actually taken.

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.E.2d 670, 195 Va. 454, 1953 Va. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-electric-power-co-v-call-va-1953.