This is thе second hearing of an appeal by the United States in condemnation proceedings had in connection with the John H. Kerr Dam and Resеrvoir, a flood control project on the Roanoke River in Virginia and North Carolina. The Virginia Electric and Power Company was the owner of a flowage easement over 1540 acres of land belonging to Mrs. Olive Vaughan Williams, and the value of this easement was destroyed by the taking of flowage rights by the United States in the condemnation proceeding. We affirmed the judgment below which awarded compensation on the basis that the right to flood permanently the entire 1540 acres had been taken. We based this affirmance on the ground that the value of the power company’s flowage rights was destroyed by the taking, even though there would be only an intermittent flooding of the land as a result thereof. In this connection, following our decision in United States v. Twin City Power Company, 4 Cir.,
The holding of the Supreme Court in the Twin City case was that the availability of land on a navigable stream as a site for water power development could not be considered as an element of value in assessing damages on a taking by the governmеnt. Nothing in the opinion holds that compensation must not be made for other elements of value; and the case was expressly distinguished from United States v. Kansas City Life Ins. Co.,
“The taking was not of the rights of designated persons in the property but of the property itself. ‘ * * an unqualified taking in fee by eminent domain takes all interests and as it takes the res is not called upоn to specify the interests that happen to exist.’ Duckett & Co. v. United States,266 U.S. 149 ,45 S.Ct. 38 ,69 L.Ed. 216 . The value of the property once being determined in a proper prоceeding, the sum so determined stands in the place of the property and can be distributed upon the adjudication of the value of the rеspective interests. United States v. Dunnington,146 U.S. 338 ,13 S.Ct. 79 ,36 L.Ed. 996 ; Monongahela Navigation Co. v. United States,148 U.S. 312 ,13 S.Ct. 622 ,37 L.Ed. 463 .”
It is argued that the government should not be required to pay anything to the power company, for the reason that the flowage rights that the power company has acquired are of value only for the purposes of water power development. The answer is that the conveyance of flowage rights by the owner of the land to the power company vested in the latter thе interest in the land that is being taken by the government here in the condemnation proceeding and entitles it to compensation for the taking оf such interest. See United States v. Welch,
The power company argues that since availability for water power development was not considered by the court below in making its valuation, its judgment should be affirmed. This, however, overlooks the fact that the court made its valuation on the basis of the entire tract being taken for the .purpose of permanent flooding, whereas the easement taken by the government was to flood only such portions of the land permanently or intermittently as would be necessitated by the John H. Kerr dam and reservoir; and this would not destroy the entire value of the land.for agriculture or grazing purposes. See United States v. 2648.31 Acres of Land etc., 4 Cir.,
For the reasons stated, the judgment appealed from will bе vacated and the case will be remanded to the court below with direction to award to the power company as compensation for the taking of the easement- condemned the difference between the value of the land with and without the servitude of the easеment, excluding from the valuation in both instances any element of value arising from the availability of the land for water power purposes due to its being situate on a navigable stream.
Judgment vacated and' case remanded with directions.
