Voltmer Family Farms, Inc. (Voltmer), appeals the judgment of the district court for Richardson County affirming the action of the board of equalization of that county in determining the actual value of Voltmer’s real estate. We affirm.
In order to alleviate flooding and drainage problems caused by the Nemaha River, drainage district No. 1 (and its successor, drainage district No. 7) of Richardson County by proceedings in eminent domain in 1949 acquired a right-of-way affecting *397 Voltmer’s farmland, namely, an easement for a river channel and drаinage works, including earth removal, construction of levees, and a “floodway.” The president of Voltmer testified that in connеction with the condemnation proceedings, appraisers told him that the land subject to the easement would be removеd from the county’s tax rolls. The petition filed by the drainage district contained no allegation that the land within the easement would be removed from the tax rolls.
As the channel of the Nemaha crossed Voltmer’s land, and adjacent to the river, there was a flоodplain bordered by a levee — all according to the right-of-way or easement acquired by the drainage district. From 1970 to the present action in the district court, Voltmer’s farm of 160 acres, including the land subject to the easement, has been on the county tax rolls. As a result of Voltmer’s protest and a hearing before the Board of Equalization of Richardson County, the actual value of the land subject to the easement was reduced by 50 percent. Voltmer claims that the land within the easement should have “zero valuation” and that the land within the easement should not have been taxed to Voltmer. The district court found that Voltmer failed tо prove the board of equalization’s action was unlawful, and affirmed the board’s action in determining the actual value of Vоltmer’s real estate for taxation.
The record reflects misunderstanding regarding the nature of an easement and the manner of reaching actual value for taxable real estate which is subject to an easement.
An easement gives no title to the real estate on which the servitude is imposed. See,
Alvin v. Johnson,
An easement is not an estate in land, and the es
*398
tate in fee simple from which an easement is granted is not reduced tо a lesser estate as a result of the easement. See,
Town of Menasha v. City of
Menasha,
An easement is an interest in real estate, an incorporeal hereditament, which permits use of another’s land for a specified purpose. See,
Independent Sch. Dist. v. DeWilde,
The drainage district did not acquire fee title to the Voltmer real estate located within the boundaries of the easement, but obtained only a right to use land in accordance with the stated purpose for which the basement was acquired. Acquisition of the easement did not transfer, reduce, or otherwise alter Vóltmer’s fee in the land within the confines of the easement.
“All tangible property and real proрerty in this state, not expressly exempt therefrom, shall be subject to taxation, and shall be valued at its actual value. Such aсtual value shall be taken and considered as the taxable valué on which the levy shall be made.” Neb. Rev. Stat. § 77-201 (Reissue 1981). See
Hastings Building Co. v. Board of Equalization,
“In an аppeal from a county board of equalization on the ground that the property has been valued in excess of its aсtual value, the sole issue to be determined is the actual value of the property. . . . There is a presumption that the valuation made by a board of equalization is correct. However, this presumption disappears when competent evidеnce to the contrary is introduced. The reasonableness of the
*399
valuation then becomes a question of fact to bе determined from the evidence. . . . The burden of proof remains upon the party contesting the valuation to establish that the valuation was incorrect.”
Otradovsky v. Board of Equalization,
It is true that one area of the Voltmer real estate may have a value less than another, when different areas within the entire tract are viewed as isolated and independent parts. However, Voltmer’s title to the entire trаct, that is, title to the land inside and outside the easement, united the 160 acres so that the easement’s location at a particular site within the taxable unit was a burden borne by and affecting the whole tract. The easement’s resultant burden was a factor tо be considered in determining the fair market value (actual value) of the tract’s unified acres — a factor for the formula fоund in Neb. Rev. Stat. § 77-112 (Reissue 1981) to ascertain “actual value” of taxable property. Cf.
Josten-Wilbert Vault Co. v. Board of Equalization,
Voltmer has alleged thаt in the condemnation proceedings to acquire the easement, the appraisers told Voltmer that the land within the easement would be removed from the county’s tax rolls. Ap
*400
praisers in eminent domain proceedings are not representativеs of the condemning authority, e.g., the drainage district, but, rather, are “disinterested” freeholders called upon to ascertain thе compensation due the landowner as a result of the taking. See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 31-321 (1943). The rights acquired and consequential liabilities for governmental acquisition of the easement are determined by the declarations in the petition of taking filed at the cоmmencement of the proceedings in eminent domain. See
Danish Vennerforning & Old Peoples Home v. State,
For the reasons given the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
