whistlepig
Elite Member
Things like that are always negotiable.
And what is your experience at negotiating?
Things like that are always negotiable.
And what is your experience at negotiating?
Neither. Currently we enjoy all 31 acres with zero pipeline and zero easement(s). The nearest easement is probably 1 mile away.Do you already have a pipeline in place? Or is there one across the road?
I agree on both it is a precursor and it will affect many landowners. Lots of neighbors have Roads named after them. This farm land has been with their family for generations. I would like to foster a relationship and fight as a group if they'd be willing. I have one family that is all ready interested. They own 100's of acres and have a road named after them...From what I read in the article the survey they would like to do is all a pre curser to filing for emanate domain if the courts will let them into Occidental Chemical's corridor. Thats scary stuff. I would not give permission for the survey until more detail was available.
This has got to be affecting many land owners. Start looking for others that may be forming a group to represent the landowners.
Good luck,
MarkV
I agree on all accounts. And thank you!!Unfortunately, it appears that Texas grants eminent domain powers to "Common Carriers". A company gains that status by applying to the Railroad's board and getting the T-4 certificate.
It also appears that Texas courts grant rights to enter and survey property along with a Common Carrier's eminent domain rights. If a big chemical company can't block them, then you probably can't as well.
Here are some thought on how you might proceed:
- They need permission from both my wife and I. My wife said no. The tenant said no too.- Any permission to survey should be in writing, and be sure you are not granting them anything else. And I'd hold of on allowing them access as long as possible.
- If they proceed they will be ruining approx 10 acres - the whole left side. But I'd still want them to buy me an identical 31 acre lot in the same zip code since I will ultimately lose out on the use and enjoyment of the entire piece of land; as I had intended.- Eminent domain allows the taking of land, but not without compensation. I'd start building your case for the loss of value in your land if an easement gets forced onto you. Your best outcome may be to extract the most compensation.
- Excellent idea!- List all the things you won't be able to do on the land, and start assigning value in the form of annual income and/or land value. Note that you will be paying taxes on this unusable land.
- I think so. This area is booming. They are building toll roads, highways, schools, subdivisions, shopping centers. The area is so different vs how it was 10 yrs ago. The appreciation in land value is insane.- People often buy land because it appreciates in value. You can value to lost use of the land in today's dollars, but is there a way to value the loss in the future when you sell the land.
- The salesman said they can't discuss numbers until after the Survey was completed.- Can you get compensation that is both a one-time fee as well as an on-going fee, perhaps justified by your ongoing payment of the taxes.
- I like that idea the most!- Draft up a subdivision and development plan for your property. Cut up the house lots so every driveway crosses the ROW. Now argue that the ROW squashes your subdivision plans and that compensation needs to reflect that. The chemical company will likely claim the compensation due to them is based on the lost value of their other development plans. You should do the same thing to jack up the value.
- Yes. I'd assume Occidental all ready looked into that angle.- You might also look into their Common Carrier status. Is it justified? Undoing that might be an angle to work, but I expect the Chemical company already looked into it.
They sent a Fed Ex today with a Survey and a ridiculous low ball Written Offer :thumbdown:.
How do I get the pdf up on to this website for people to review?