In Allard v. Big Rivers Elec. Corp., No. 2019-CA-000486 (May 15, 2020), the Kentucky Court of Appeals made short work of each of the property owner’s arguments objecting to a taking of land for a electric-transmission corridor, and we won’t go through each contention here.
But that one that we will mention briefly is the necessity argument. You know, the one you often hear from your property owner clients: “they shouldn’t put the [road, fire station, whatever the condemnor claims is the public use] on my property, it makes much more sense to put the [public use/purpose thing] somewhere else.” Makes intuitive sense doesn’t it? After all, how can a taking be “necessary” to accomplish the stated public use or purpose if it is not the best place for the thing, or even a rational place to locate it?
But despite this, you also know that in all



