West Tennessee Power & Light Co. v. Hughes

15 Tenn. App. 37, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 71
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 5, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 15 Tenn. App. 37 (West Tennessee Power & Light Co. v. Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West Tennessee Power & Light Co. v. Hughes, 15 Tenn. App. 37, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 71 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

For convenience the parties will be referred to as in the court below, West Tennessee Power & Light Company, plaintiff, and J. D. Hughes, defendant.

This is a condemnation suit filed by petitioner to acquire a power transmission line right of way over and across the lands of the defendant. The only question made on this appeal is to the amount awarded by the jury and trial judge as damages for the property taken and the incidental damages to the remainder of the tract of land not taken.

The right of way easement established by the judgment of the court is in conformity to the right of way set out in the application *39 for same made in the petition, and the report of the jury of view that set apart by metes and bounds the strip of land condemned. The jury of view awarded damages for property actually taken for the easement the sum of $600, and incidental damages to the remainder of the tract of land, $1,000, making a total of $1600. On appeal to the Circuit Court from the award of the jury of view, the jury fixed the amount of compensation for the right of way easement at $500, and incidental damages to the remainder of the tract at $900, thereby reducing the jury of view award from $1600 to $1400, and the court taxed the cost to J. D. Hughes. A motion for a new trial was made by petitioner, setting forth several grounds, and this motion was overruled and disallowed by the trial judge and judgment rendered in favor of the defendant landowner and against the petitioner for the amount of the jury verdict, $1400. From the action of the trial judge in overruling its motion for a new trial and rendering judgment against it for the amount-of the jury verdict, the petitioner prayed and was granted an appeal in the nature of a writ of error to this court, and the appeal has been duly perfected and errors assigned.

The first assignment contends that there is no material evidence to sustain the verdict of the jury awarding $1400 damages. By the second assignment it is said that the verdict of the jury is contrary to the law and the evidence. By the third assignment it is insisted that the verdict of the jury is excessive as to damages found and awarded, both, as to the value of the land taken in the right of way, $500, and as to incidental damages of $900 to the balance of the tract, and that said verdict evinces passion, prejudice and caprice upon the part of the jury, and is so excessive as to shock the conscience of the court. The fourth assignment is very similar to the third, and under the fourth assignment it is contended that the award of $500 and $900 respectively, is contrary to the preponderance of the evidence.

The fifth assignment charges error of the court in refusing to permit plaintiff upon its cross examination of the defendant, to prove by the defendant that for the calendar years 1929 and 1930 his real estate in the Seventh District of Madison County was for each of said years assessed for taxation as two separate tracts, one tract of 471 acres assessed for taxes at $7,000, and the other tract of 46 acres assessed at $450, and that it was error for the court to exclude said evidence. The sixth assignment is directed to a portion of charge of the court, which will later be referred to, and the seventh assignment is also directed to another portion of the charge of the court to the jury, and which will also be later referred to. The eighth and ninth assignments, are based upon the action of the court in refusing to give two respective special requests, submitted by *40 petitioner, in charge to the jury. The tenth assignment is likewise directed to the action of the court in refusing to give in charge another special request submitted by petitioner. The eleventh assignment is a broad challenge to the action of the court in rendering judgment for the amount of the jury verdict, and in denying petitioner’s motion for a new trial.

We will not take up and dispose of each of the several assignments of error in the order in which they are presented. The first four assignments go to the question of the value of the property taken and the incidental damages, if any, to the remainder of the land across which the right of way taken runs. By the fifth assignment of error it is contended that it was competent for petitioner to prove on the cross-examination of J. D. Hughes the amount at which the entire tract of land involved, and out of which the right of way is taken, was assessed for taxes for the years 1929 and 1930, and that it was error of the court to sustain the objection of defendant to this evidence.

In the case of Wray v. Railroad, 113 Tenn., 544, in the eighth headnote, it is said:

“A paper purporting to be an assessment blank or schedule for the purpose of taxation in the tax assessor’s office, proved to have been handed in by the husband of the complainant, containing the valuation of a number of lots, including the lot, a part of which was condemned and taken for public use, but not showing the separate value of the particular part of said lot so condemned and taken, and purporting to be signed by the complainant, but without proof of her signature is not admissible or competent to prove the Value of the land so condemned and taken. ’ ’

In the present case Mr. Hughes testified that he did not turn the property in for taxation and did not sign the schedule, but that the valuation was placed thereon by a tax assessor. For the benefit of the record, the attorney for petitioner was permitted to examine Mr. Hughes in the absence of the jury on this subject. It was not sought to be shown that the particular land taken for this right of way was separately assessed for taxation.

In Wray v. Railroad, supra, speaking on this subject, the court said:

“The valuation, if made of the lot by the petitioner Mrs. Wray, was for a wholly different purpose from the present one. This court knows judicially and as a part of the financial history of the state, that land is never assessed for purposes of taxation at its real cash market value, though that may be the law, but only in comparison with other- lands around it, and if petitioner valued it, we would presume she placed such comparative value, instead of the real market value upon it.
*41 “It is said in Lewis on Eminent Domain, Section 448, that Lie assessment of property for taxation being made for other purposes, and not at the instance of either party, and not usually at the market value of the property, is not admissible as evidence of value in condemnation proceedings.
“We think that admission of the schedule was improper.”

Prom this authority it appears that it was not only not error for the learned trial judge to exclude this evidence, but it would have been error to have admitted it. The fifth assignment is overruled.

That portion of the charge of the court made the basis of the sixth assignment is as follows: ‘ ‘ The two issues to be determined in this law suit are these: In the first place the defendant is entitled to a verdict by this jury for the value of the strip of land set out in the petition in this ease, and you will return a verdict upon that question for the defendant Hughes, setting out in dollars and cents the amount you find in his favor as the value of said land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Tenn. App. 37, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-tennessee-power-light-co-v-hughes-tennctapp-1932.