Nev. Rev. Stat. § 37.160

Entry of final order of condemnation on deposit of award; recording; when title vests

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NRS 37.160  Entry of final order of condemnation on deposit of award; recording; when title vests.  When the award has been deposited as required by NRS 37.150 and the bond given, if required by NRS 37.140, the court shall enter a final order of condemnation describing the property condemned and the purpose of such condemnation. A copy of the order shall be recorded in the office of the recorder of the county, and thereupon the title to the property described therein shall vest in the plaintiff for the purpose therein specified, except that when the State is the plaintiff, the property shall vest in the State for any public use.

      [1911 CPA § 679; RL § 5621; NCL § 9168]—(NRS A 1965, 995; 1967, 815)

     

Notes of Decisions
Cited in 3 cases, 1975–2012 · leading case: Duddy's v. State Department of Transportation
Duddy's v. State Department of Transportation (1997) nev “Eliades argues that, in order for a condemnation to take place, condemnation proceedings must be brought in district court by way of a verified complaint, the district court must enter a final order of condemnation, and interested parties must be allowed to defend their claims.”
Gold Ridge Partners v. Sierra Pacific Power Co. (2012) nev “NRS 37.160. Upon the recording of the final order of condemnation in the office of the county recorder, title to the property vests in the plaintiff.”
LaPratt v. City of North Las Vegas (1975) nev “Nor has a final order of condemnation been entered, NRS 37.160, although the property has been occupied by City as a street, pending entry of a final judgment.”
Annotations are extracted automatically from the opinions in the Syfert caselaw corpus and ranked by authority, recency, and treatment. Dots show Syfertize treatment of the citing case itself.