83 S.E. 635 | S.C. | 1914
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The case shows the following:
“The plaintiffs, claiming title thereto as a part of their right of way, brought this action against defendant in the Court of Common Pleas for Spartanburg County for the recovery of the possession of a strip of land in the city of Spartanburg, owned by A. H. Kirby prior to and at the time of the construction of plaintiffs’ railroad, and lying within one hundred feet of the center of plaintiffs’ track, and on which defendant has constructed and is operating a line of street railway; for damages for the alleged trespass thereon by defendant; to require defendant to remove its track therefrom, and to perpetually enjoin defendant from further trespassing thereon or in any way interfering with plaintiffs’ quiet use and enjoyment thereof.
“The case was tried before his Honor, Judge T. S. Sease, and a jury. The verdict was for the defendant, and from a judgment duly entered thereon plaintiffs appeal.
“The plaintiffs based their claim of title to the land in dispute on section 11 of the act incorporating the Greenville and Columbia Railroad Company, passed December 15, 1845 (11th statutes, 324), and on sections 4 and 5 of the act incorporating the Air Dine Railway Company in South Carolina, passed December 20, 1856 (12th statutes, 439). These acts, which are public 'acts, were introduced in evidence.”
Sections 4 and 5 of the act of 1856 (12th statutes, 439), read as follows:
“Section 4. That said company shall have full power and authority to survey, lay out and construct a railroad from the line of the State of Georgia, in the direction of the city of Atlanta, to Anderson county courthouse, and thence to some point of connection with the Charlotte and South Carolina Railroad, in the direction, of Charlotte, North*304 Carolina, or in their discretion, from the Greenville and Columbia Railroad, at or near the town of Newberry, to some point of connection with the said Charlotte and South Carolina Railroad at or near the town of Chesterville, and the same to equip, use and enjoy, with all the rights, privileges and immunities granted to the' Greenville and Columbia Railroad Company, under the act incorporating the same, and the several acts amendatory thereof, so far as they may be applicable to the purposes of the charter hereby granted.
“Section 5. That all questions concerning the right of way between the said company and the owner of any lands over which the said railroad may be located, where the parties cannot agree concerning the same, shall be adjudged and determined in the same manner as provided for determining the right of way by the act incorporating the Green-ville and Columbia Railroad Company, passed on the fifteenth day of December, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and forty-five. .In all cases of appeal full costs shall be awarded and collection thereof enforced .as in cases of trespass on the case.”
Section 2 of the act of 1845 is omitted, as it is set forth . in the first exception.
Exception 1. “That his Honor erred in refusing to charge plaintiffs’ first request to charge, ‘that under the undisputed facts in this case and the statute law of this State, the Atlanta and Charlotte Air Line Railway Company became the successor of the Air Line Railway Company in South Carolina, whose charter gave to said company all the rights, privileges and immunities granted to the Greenville and Columbia Railway Company under the act incorporating the same, and the several acts amendatory thereof, so far as they may be applicable to the purposes of the charter hereb3r granted. That^ among the rights and privileges granted to the Greenville and Columbia Railway Company in its charter is the following: “That in the absence of any written
It is not surprising, therefore, that there should be a time limit within which these great powers must be exercised. We find in the sixteenth section that the exclusive rights are limited to thirty-six years, and the following proviso: “Provided, that the subscription of stock in said company be filled up to the amount of three thousand shares within thirteen months from the passing of this act and the said railroad be commenced within two years and be completed within ten years after the shares shall be subscribed.”
The other exceptions raise questions as to the effect of the Constitution of 1868 and subsequent statutes on the act of 1845. These questions are now academic.
The judgment is affirmed.