Create a Website Account - Manage notification subscriptions, save form progress and more.
In accordance with Texas Property Code § 21.0112, the following statement is considered to be made available on the City of Victoria’s website:
This Bill of Rights applies to any attempt by the government or a private entity to take your property. The contents of this Bill of Rights are prescribed by the Texas Legislature in Texas Government Code Section 402.031 and Chapter 21 of the Texas Property Code.
Eminent domain is the ability of certain entities to take private property for public use. Private property can include land and certain improvements that are on that property. Private property may only be taken by a governmental entity or private entity authorized by law to do so. Your property may be taken only for public use. Eminent domain cannot be used to take your property for economic development purposes, except for limited exceptions provided by law.
Your property cannot be taken without adequate compensation. Adequate compensation includes the market value of the property being taken. It may also include certain damages, if any, to your remaining property caused by the acquisition itself or by the way the condemning entity will use the property.
The taking of private property by eminent domain must follow certain procedures. First, the entity that wants to condemn your property must notify you about its interest in acquiring your property. Second, before a condemned entity begins negotiating with you to acquire your property, it must send this Landowner’s Bill of Rights Statement to the last known address of the person in whose name the property is listed on the most recent tax roll. Third, the condemning entity must make a good faith offer to purchase the property. The condemned entity’s offer must be based on an investigation and an assessment of adequate compensation for the property. At the time the offer is made, the government condemning entity must disclose any appraisal reports it used to determine the value of its offer to acquire the property. You have the right to either accept or reject the offer made by the condemned entity.
If you and the condemning entity do not agree on the value of the property being taken, the entity may begin condemnation proceedings. Condemnation is the legal process for the taking of private property. It begins with a condemned entity filing a claim for your property in court. If you live in the county where part of the property being condemned is located, the claim must be filed in that county. Otherwise, the claim must be filed in any county where at least part of the property being condemned is located. The claim must describe the property being condemned, the intended public use, the name of the landowner, a statement that the landowner and the condemning entity were unable to agree on the value of the property, and that the condemning entity provided the landowner with the Landowner’s Bill of Rights statement.
After the condemning entity files a claim in court, the judge will appoint three landowners to serve as special commissioners. These special commissioners must live in the county where the condemnation proceeding is filed, and they must take an oath to assess the amount of adequate compensation fairly, impartially, and according to the law. The special commissioners are not authorized to decide whether the condemnation is necessary or if the public use is proper. After being appointed, the special commissioners must schedule a hearing at the earliest practical time and place and provide you with written notice of that hearing. You are required to disclose to the government condemning entity, at least ten days before the special commissioner’s hearing, any appraisal reports used to determine your opinion about adequate compensation for the property. You may hire an appraiser or real estate professional to help you determine the value of your private property. You may also hire an attorney regarding these proceedings. At the hearing, the special commissioners will consider evidence on the value of the property, the damage to the remaining property, any value added to the remaining property as a result of the project, and the uses to be made of the property being taken.
After hearing evidence from all interested parties, the special commissioners will determine the amount of money to be awarded as adequate compensation. You may be responsible for the cost if the Award is less than or equal to the amount the condemned entity offered before the condemnation proceeding began. Otherwise, the condemning entity will be responsible for the costs. The special commissioners will give a written decision to the court that appointed them. That decision is called the "Award." The Award must be filed with the court and the court must send written notice of the Award to all parties. After the Award is filed, the condemning entity may take possession of the property being condemned, even if either party appeals the Award of the special commissioners. To take possession of the property, the condemning entity must either pay you the amount of the Award or deposit the amount of the Award into the registry of the court. You have the right to withdraw the deposited funds from the registry of the court.
If either you or the condemning entity is dissatisfied with the amount of the Award, either party can object to the Award by filing a written statement of objection with the court. If neither party timely objects to the Award, the court will adopt the Award as the final judgment of the court. If a party timely objects to the special commissioners’ Award, the court will hear the case in the same manner as other civil cases. If you object to the award and ask the court to hear the matter, you have the right to trial by judge or jury. The allocation of costs is handled in the same manner as with the special commissioners’ Award. After that trial, either party may appeal any judgment entered by the court.
If you are displaced from a residence or place of business, you may be entitled to reimbursement for reasonable expenses incurred while moving personal property from the residence or relocating the business to a new site. You are not entitled to these relocation costs if they are recoverable under another law. If you are entitled to these costs, they cannot exceed the market value of the property being moved and can only be reimbursed for moving distances within 50 miles.
If private property was condemned by a governmental entity, and the purpose for which the property was acquired is canceled before the 10th anniversary of the date of the acquisition, you may have the right to seek to repurchase the property for the fair market value of the property at the time the public use was canceled. This provision does not apply to property acquired by a county, municipality, or the Texas Department of Transportation.
The information in this statement is intended to be a summary of the applicable portions of Texas state law as required by HB 1495, enacted by the 80th Texas Legislature, Regular Session. This statement is not legal advice and is not a substitute for legal counsel.
Further information regarding the procedures, timelines, and requirements outlined in this document can be found in Chapter 21 of the Texas Property Code.