75 Md. 94 | Md. | 1891
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a hill to restrain the appellant, a railroad company, from proceeding to condemn certain real estate held hy the appellees as trustees. The company’s powers of condemnation are derived from section 167, Article 23 of the Code, which provides in the first place, that the company may agree with the owner for the purchase of any property which may he needed for the construction of its road, and if the owner he an infant, non compos, or a married woman, or a non-resident, application may he made by the company to a justice of the peace, who shall thereupon issue his warrant to the sheriff of the county, requiring him to summon a jury of twenty, qualified to act as jurors under the laws of the State, to meet on the premises on a day named in said warrant, and from the panel thus selected, the company and the owner, may each strike off'four persons, and the remaining twelveshall actas “the jury of the inquest of damages.” It further provides that the jury shall reduce their inquisition to writing, and sign and seal the same, and that it shall then he returned hy the sheriff to the clerk of the Circuit Court, and shall he confirmed hy the Court at its next session, unless cause to the contrary he shown.
This statute, it is contended, is in violation of the constitutional rights of the land-owner, as guaranteed
But there is a wide difference between the summary process sanctioned by the common law for the collection of -the public revenue, and the taking of one’s property under the power of eminent domain for a public use. And-we think it may he safely said that there never has been a time in the constitutional history of England, much less in this country, when one could be lawfully deprived of his property for public use without notice and an opportunity to he heard. There was, it -is true, an ex parte proceeding under the ancient writ of “ad quod damnum, ” issued by the Court of Chancery in pursuance of an Act of Parliament passed in 1299, by which the sheriff was directed to summon a jury to inquire whether a grant to a religious use would he to the damage of the king and others. And this writ was in the course of time used in the condemnation of private property for public uses. And, although the writ issued upon an ex parte application, yet, if the inquisition was found,
But we do not rest, nor is it necessary to rest, our decision in favor of the validity of the Act in question on this ground, because by every fair rule of construction the Act itself, we think, necessarily implies that notice is to he given to the owner. In the first place, it provides that the Company may agree with the owner for
And this brings us to the last objection urged against the validity of sec. 167, and that is, the power of the Legislature to provide that the compensation to be paid to the owner shall be assessed by a special jury summoned upon warrant. The language of the Constitution, is, that “the General Assembly shall enact no law authorizing private property to be taken for public use without just compensation, as agreed upon between the parties or awarded by a jury, being first paid;” and it is said that this means a common law jury, and a regular trial in Court. But for the opinion of the Judge below, it would not have occurred to us there was any difficulty as to this question. Ordinarily, it is true, the term
Order reversed, and bill dismissed.