Hill Country Wind Farms
Various firms investigating the economic viability of placing “wind farms” in the Hill Country (Gillespie County) prompted the formation of the Save Our Scenic Hill Country Environment alliance (for more, visit www.soshillcountry.org ). The flowing article (re-printed from the August 26th Austin American-Statesman is sure to add fuel to the debate on wind farms near Fredericksburg, Texas
Court sides with wind farm in suit by landowners
Neighbors called 400-foot turbines’ ‘aesthetic impact’ a nuisance.
By Robert Elder AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF Tuesday, August 26, 2008
A state appellate court has handed a victory to the wind energy business in Texas in a closely watched “nuisance” lawsuit brought by West Texas landowners.
The 11th Court of Appeals in Eastland last week upheld a district court judgment against landowners who had sued FPL Energy LLC over the company’s massive Horse Hollow wind farm in Taylor County. The jury had found that the wind turbines were not a nuisance to neighbors and rejected their claim for damages.
Horse Hollow is one of the world’s largest wind-generating facilities, with about 425 turbines spread over more than 50,000 acres of land southwest of Abilene.
Before trial, the judge rejected the landowners’ claims for damages based on the “aesthetic impact” of the 400-foot turbines. The jury was the first to hear a nuisance claims suit against wind farms in Texas.
The appeals court affirmation said “Texas case law recognizes few restrictions on the lawful use of property.”
The ruling “is going to kill all the arguments about filing a lawsuit because you don’t like the way (a turbine) looks,” said Dallas lawyer Trey Cox, the lead counsel for FPL Energy, a subsidiary of Juno Beach, Fla., utility FPL Group Inc.
Disputes over the noise of turbines or their environmental impact shouldn’t be affected by the ruling. Cox predicted: “That’s something you can objectively fight about in court. But the issue of what’s pretty and what’s ugly, we can’t argue about that.”
Steve Thompson, the Houston lawyer who represented the Abilene-area landowners, did not return a message Monday.
The plaintiffs didn’t contend that FPL’s operations were illegal, but they said a legal business can be considered a nuisance if it’s abnormal and out of place with its surroundings.
The 11th Court ruling, written by Justice Rick Strange, noted that several Texas courts have accepted the argument, but in cases where the nuisance had occurred from things such as flooding or odors.
The appellate ruling was the second win for wind projects this month. Earlier, U.S. District Judge Lee Yeakel of Austin said he would dismiss a suit that sought to stop further construction of two wind power projects along the Gulf Coast in Kenedy County. The projects are expected to place more than 600 turbines on 60,000 acres near Laguna Madre, south of Corpus Christi.
Yeakel has not yet issued his final order in the case.
The Coastal Habitat Alliance, an environmental group that includes the King Ranch, filed the suit, saying the turbines could kill untold numbers of migratory birds and damage the bay. The suit sought to overturn the decision by the Texas General Land Office to allow the projects to be built without environmental review or input from the public.