Friday, August 10, 2012
Judge Hears First Landmark Case After Texas Supreme Court Decision Protects Landowners from Takings
Press
Release August 10, 2012
Contacts: Debra Medina, We Texans, 512.663.8401, Terri
Hall, TURF, 210.275.0640, Linda Curtis, Independent Texans, 512.657.2089,
Jessica Ellison, Texans for Accountable Government, 512.653.9179, Tom “Smitty”
Smith, Public Citizen, 512.797.8468, Rita Beving, Paris Organizer, 214.557.2271
Courtroom Showdown with Landowner
Challenges TransCanada’s Right to Eminent Domain in Condemnation Proceedings to
Build Keystone Tar Sands Pipeline
Judge Hears First Landmark Case After
Texas Supreme Court Decision Protects Landowners from Takings
PARIS,
TX – Today statewide groups of all political persuasions came to the
Lamar County courthouse to support Texas landowner Julia Trigg Crawford against
TransCanada which has announced plans to start building the southern segment of
the Keystone pipeline to carry tar sands crude from Cushing, Oklahoma to Texas
Gulf Coast refineries.
[[This
courtroom showdown marks the first landmark battle following a recent Supreme
Court case ruling in favor of landowners.
Crawford’s hearing is the first case since the Supreme Court ruling to
protect private property from an illegal taking. Julia Trigg Crawford, along with her attorney Wendi Hammond, faced
Judge Bill Harris and a team of TransCanada lawyers in a packed courtroom of
observers with an overflow crowd for more than __ hours. Crawford’s attorney contended that
TransCanada is a foreign-owned pipeline carrying tar sands for private profit,
challenging its qualifications as a common carrier with eminent domain
rights.]]
Texas courts have long held that property owners
could not challenge property takings by pipelines, but a recent, unanimous
Texas Supreme Court decision, which highlighted the fight between Texas Rice
Land Partners versus Denbury Green Pipeline changed that equation. In the Denbury Green court case, the justices
unanimously ruled that the pipeline company had to prove it was meeting the
state’s statutes and serving a common good before it should be given the right
to “take” private property.
[[“Today
the eyes of Texas were shining upon the Judge in this case. All of us were here to see if he would stand
up to protect landowners from illegal takings or side with a foreign pipeline
company. The Crawford case begged the question of whether Judge Bill Harris
would allow a hearing on the facts or whether he would deny a landowner justice
in favor of this Canadian company” asked Debra Medina, former gubernatorial
candidate and executive director of We Texans, a nonpartisan public policy
advocacy group. The court has been
saddled with volumes of paper and will take it along with the arguments heard
today into consideration before rendering its decision.]]
“The
question remains "Why are Texans made to fend for themselves against the
likes of corporations like TransCanada?” Medina asked. “The leaders of this state often talk about protecting property rights
– but when the abuse starts, they stand up for the politically influential.
This is in keeping with the crony capitalist lethargy that grips Austin. They
pretend to see and hear no evil. The
fervor by which people from all political stripes came here today to rally for
the Crawford’s cause should make it clear: Texans are tired of abuse at the
hands of big business and big donors.”
“The Texas Railroad Commission approved
TransCanada’s permit to operate a pipeline as a common carrier, yet the agency
has stated that it doesn’t review the applications for pipelines and doesn’t
have the authority to determine common carrier status or give eminent domain
permission to TransCanada,” commented Jessica Ellison, director of Texans for
Accountable Government. “TransCanada has
yet to prove to the court that they meet the legal requirements of transporting
the product for the public good or for public use.”
Page 2 of 2
With the threat of imminent trenching for TransCanada’s
southern pipeline segment to begin, landowners such as David Daniel of
Winnsboro have now told TransCanada that it can no longer come on his
property. Daniel has recently been
served with notice by TransCanada that they are seeking a court order with the
threat of damages should he continue to refuse entry onto his property. Daniel’s Winnsboro neighbor, Susan Scott, has
also recently refused the entry of surveyors on her land.
"Here we've had a private company masquerading
as a 'common carrier' pipeline in order to obtain the power of eminent domain
in Texas. The Crawford family, along with those landowners supporting her today
and more than 90 other landowners, have had their land condemned by
TransCanada. These landowners deserve to
be protected from eminent domain abuse before irreparable harm is done to their
property," contended Terri Hall, Founder and Director of Texans
Uniting for Reform and Freedom. "It's an outrage that in a state that
claims to be pro-property rights, that there's absolutely no state authority
checking to see whether or not these private companies meet the legal
requirements of a public use pipeline. Landowners should not be put in the
position of law enforcers at great personal expense."
Recently, the Texas House Land and Resource
Management Committee met at the Capitol to hear invited testimony from Crawford
and other interested parties regarding the dilemma of industries
self-proclaiming they are common carriers with no review from any state agency
as to whether a company is truly a common carrier or not.
[[“The answers we need are not going to be here
today, but in an appeals court. Today’s
outcome will also be laid at the foot of the Texas legislature to do something
about this kind of abuse, “ noted Tom ‘Smitty’ Smith, executive director of
Public Citizen. “We have already begun
the process of pointing out the grave inequities of companies being able to
walk into the Railroad Commission saying ‘trust us’, we’re a common carrier,
and then be granted eminent domain authority without the needed checks and
balances and review by an authorized government agency. That needs to change
with the next legislative session.”]]
“Today is not the end, but signals the beginning
of the next steps we must take,” remarked Linda Curtis, director of Indy
Texans. “Ms. Crawford’s case is emblematic of the
continuing struggle of Texas landowners being tread upon by a private company, taking land for private use,
and foreign profit. In the revolutionary words of those who’ve come before
us, ‘we’ve not yet begun to fight’…and tomorrow we will soldier on.”
Today’s trial before Judge Harris marks the
continuation of proceedings which began in Paris on February 13th. TransCanada’s attorneys have complained that
the delay of the start of its southern segment has cost the company $3 to $4
million per day.
The southern segment of TransCanada’s Keystone
pipeline encompasses a 485-mile trek from Cushing to refineries on the Gulf
coast. In Texas, more than 1,450 parcels
of land have been acquired by TransCanada in its pursuit of construction on the
pipeline which has been slated to commence any day pending any further legal
delays. Ms. Crawford’s 600-acre farm
near Sumner north of Paris signifies the last tract in contention between
Cushing and the refineries on the Gulf Coast.
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thanks for sharing.
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