Texas Constitution:Article III, Section 52-j: Difference between revisions

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{{DISPLAYTITLE:Article III, Section 52j of the Texas Constitution (''<small>"Sale of Real Property Acquired Through Eminent Domain"</small>'')}}{{Texas Constitution|text=Added November 6, 2007:
{{DISPLAYTITLE:Article III, Section 52-j of the Texas Constitution (''<small>"Sale of Real Property Acquired Through Eminent Domain"</small>'')}}{{Texas Constitution|text=Added November 6, 2007:


'''A governmental entity may sell real property acquired through eminent domain to the person who owned the real property interest immediately before the governmental entity acquired the property interest, or to the person's heirs, successors, or assigns, at the price the entity paid at the time of acquisition if: (1) the public use for which the property was acquired through eminent domain is canceled; (2) no actual progress is made toward the public use during a prescribed period of time; or (3) the property is unnecessary for the public use.'''
'''A governmental entity may sell real property acquired through eminent domain to the person who owned the real property interest immediately before the governmental entity acquired the property interest, or to the person's heirs, successors, or assigns, at the price the entity paid at the time of acquisition if: (1) the public use for which the property was acquired through eminent domain is canceled; (2) no actual progress is made toward the public use during a prescribed period of time; or (3) the property is unnecessary for the public use.'''


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|seo_title=Article III, Section 52-j of the Texas Constitution ("Sale of Real Property Acquired Through Eminent Domain")
|seo_keywords=Article 3 Section 52-j, eminent domain, prior owner
|seo_description=The government may, under certain circumstances, sell property acquired by eminent domain to the prior owner.
|seo_image=Texas_Constitution_of_1876_Article_3.jpg
|seo_image_alt=Article III: Legislative Department


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}}

Latest revision as of 10:40, August 19, 2023

Added November 6, 2007:

A governmental entity may sell real property acquired through eminent domain to the person who owned the real property interest immediately before the governmental entity acquired the property interest, or to the person's heirs, successors, or assigns, at the price the entity paid at the time of acquisition if: (1) the public use for which the property was acquired through eminent domain is canceled; (2) no actual progress is made toward the public use during a prescribed period of time; or (3) the property is unnecessary for the public use.

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Attorney Steve Smith

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