Nevada Code § 37.010

Public uses for which eminent domain may be exercised
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1. Subject to the provisions of this
chapter and the limitations in subsections 2 and 3, the right of eminent domain
may be exercised in behalf of the following public uses:
(a) Federal activities. All public purposes
authorized by the Government of the United States.
(b) State activities. Public buildings and
grounds for the use of the State, the Nevada System of Higher Education and all
other public purposes authorized by the Legislature.
(c) County, city, town and school district
activities. Public buildings and grounds for the use of any county,
incorporated city or town, or school district, reservoirs, water rights,
canals, aqueducts, flumes, ditches or pipes for conducting water for the use of
the inhabitants of any county, incorporated city or town, for draining any
county, incorporated city or town, for raising the banks of streams, removing
obstructions therefrom, and widening, deepening or straightening their
channels, for roads, streets and alleys, and all other public purposes for the
benefit of any county, incorporated city or town, or the inhabitants thereof.
(d) Bridges, toll roads, railroads, street
railways and similar uses. Wharves, docks, piers, chutes, booms, ferries,
bridges, toll roads, byroads, plank and turnpike roads, roads for
transportation by traction engines or locomotives, roads for logging or lumbering
purposes, and railroads and street railways for public transportation.
(e) Ditches, canals, aqueducts for smelting,
domestic uses, irrigation and reclamation. Reservoirs, dams, water gates,
canals, ditches, flumes, tunnels, aqueducts and pipes for supplying persons,
mines, mills, smelters or other works for the reduction of ores, with water for
domestic and other uses, for irrigating purposes, for draining and reclaiming
lands, or for floating logs and lumber on streams not navigable.
(f) Byroads. Byroads leading from highways to
residences and farms.
(g) Public utilities. Lines for telephone,
electric light and electric power and sites for plants for electric light and
power.
(h) Sewerage. Sewerage of any city, town,
settlement of not less than 10 families or any public building belonging to the
State or college or university.
(i) Water for generation and transmission of
electricity. Canals, reservoirs, dams, ditches, flumes, aqueducts and pipes for
supplying and storing water for the operation of machinery to generate and
transmit electricity for power, light or heat.
(j) Cemeteries, public parks. Cemeteries or
public parks.
(k) Pipelines for petroleum products, natural
gas. Pipelines for the transportation of crude petroleum, petroleum products or
natural gas, whether interstate or intrastate.
(l) Aviation. Airports, facilities for air
navigation and aerial rights-of-way.
(m) Monorails. Monorails and any other overhead
or underground system used for public transportation.
(n) Video service providers. Video service
providers that are authorized pursuant to chapter
711 of NRS to operate a video service network. The exercise of the power of
eminent domain may include the right to use the wires, conduits, cables or
poles of any public utility if:
(1) It creates no substantial detriment to
the service provided by the utility;
(2) It causes no irreparable injury to the
utility; and
(3) The Public Utilities Commission of
Nevada, after giving notice and affording a hearing to all persons affected by
the proposed use of the wires, conduits, cables or poles, has found that it is
in the public interest.
(o) Redevelopment. The acquisition of property
pursuant to chapter 279 of NRS.
2. Notwithstanding any other provision of
law and except as otherwise provided in this subsection, the public uses for
which private property may be taken by the exercise of eminent domain do not
include the direct or indirect transfer of any interest in the property to
another private person or entity. Property taken by the exercise of eminent
domain may be transferred to another private person or entity in the following
circumstances:
(a) The entity that took the property transfers
the property to a private person or entity and the private person or entity
uses the property primarily to benefit a public service, including, without
limitation, a utility, railroad, public transportation project, pipeline, road,
bridge, airport or facility that is owned by a governmental entity.
(b) The entity that took the property leases the
property to a private person or entity that occupies an incidental part of an
airport or a facility that is owned by a governmental entity and, before
leasing the property:
(1) Uses its best efforts to notify the
person from whom the property was taken that the property will be leased to a
private person or entity that will occupy an incidental part of an airport or
facility that is owned by a governmental entity; and
(2) Provides the person from whom the
property was taken with an opportunity to bid or propose on any such lease.
(c) The entity that took the property:
(1) Took the property in order to acquire
property that was abandoned by the owner, abate an immediate threat to the
safety of the public or remediate hazardous waste; and
(2) Grants a right of first refusal to the
person from whom the property was taken that allows that person to reacquire
the property on the same terms and conditions that are offered to the other
private person or entity.
(d) The entity that took the property exchanges
it for other property acquired or being acquired by eminent domain or under the
threat of eminent domain for roadway or highway purposes, to relocate public or
private structures or to avoid payment of excessive compensation or damages.
(e) The person from whom the property is taken
consents to the taking.
3. The entity that is taking property by
the exercise of eminent domain has the burden of proving that the taking is for
a public use.
4. For the purposes of this section, an
airport authority or any public airport is not a private person or entity.

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