107 Ill. 507 | Ill. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This was an action of trespass quaere clausum fregit, brought by Kimbro T. Barnett, against the Board of Trade Telegraph Company. The declaration is in the usual form, the gravamen of the action being that defendant entered with force and violence upon the premises of plaintiff, and dug holes and erected- thereon telegraph poles upon which to place its wires. The pleas of not guilty and liberum tenementnm, originally filed to the declaration, were both withdrawn, and the matters insisted upon as a defence to the action were embraced in five special pleas. The substance of the first three pleas is, the locus in quo was a public highway; that defendant was and is a corporation existing under the laws of Illinois; that the acts complained of were necessarily and properly done in the building of the telegraph line of defendant along such highway, and that the building of such telegraph line was done under and according to the written and recorded consent of the county board of the county in which the premises are situated. The additional matters contained in the other special pleas add nothing to the strength of the defence, and it will not be necessary, as the case comes before this court, to state their contents. To the special pleas setting up the facts above stated, with some others of no considerable importance, with the usual fullness and formality, the circuit court sustained a general demurrer. The defendant electing to stand by its pleas of justification, the court rendered judgment as upon nil elicit, and proceeded to hear evidence, with a view .to assess plaintiff's damages. It was proven plaintiff was the owner of the land described in the declaration; that defendant, by its employés, entered upon the premises, and commenced digging holes and putting up telegraph poles; that plaintiff asked them what authority they had for so doing, and was told they had permission from the county board. Afterwards they went on and put up_twenty-six poles along tlie_side of theJiedge, without the consent of plaintiff. The poles erected are outside of the hedge growing at the side of the highway, but close to it. In some instances the employés cut away the hedge, because it was in their way, and they also cut down two hedge trees that were intended for gate posts where they stood. It was further proven the land where the poles were erected belonged to plaintiff, subject to the right of way, and that the highway was used by the public. It was also proven the erection of the poles by defendant would render it inconvenient for plaintiff to trim his hedge with machines constructed ilor that purpose. Thereupon the circuit court assessed plaintiff’s damages at $78, and from the judgment rendered defendant obtained an appeal to the Appellate Court for the Fourth District, where the judgment of the trial court was affirmed. A majority of the judges of the Appellate Court having certified that in their opinion this “case involves a question of law of such importance, on account of collateral interests, that it should be passed upon by the Supreme Court, ” defendant brings the case to this court on its further appeal, as it is permitted to do under the' Practice act.
The objection an action of trespass guare clausum fregit will not lie in such a case as the one being considered, is settled adversely to the position taken by defendant, in the decision of this court in Indianapolis, Bloomington and Western R. R. Co. v. Hartley, 67 Ill. 439. That, in some respects, was an analogous case, the form of action being the same, and plaintiff was permitted to recover.
Authority is given by the statute 'to all telegraph companies to erect poles on which to place their wires, on all highways or public roads, by first obtaining the consent, in writing, of the county board of the county in which such highway is situated. Of course that permission is given subject to the constitutional inhibition, “private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation. ” Provision is also made by law for ascertaining the compensation to be paid to the owner when it shall be necessary to take or damage any property for the construction, alteration or repair • of any line of telegraph. Rev. Stat. 1874, chap. 134.
The principal question arising on the record may be stated to be, is the right to erect and maintain lines of telegraph . thereon a part of the public easement in a common highway, or is such a structure a new and additional burden upon the fee, for which the owner of the fee may maintain an action ? It was held by the trial court, and its decision was affirmed by the Appellate Court, the erection and maintenance of a line of telegraph on the, highway, although done with the consent of the county board, was a new and additional burden upon the fee, and a recovery by the owner Was permitted. The correctness of that decision is challenged on this appeal.
The question raised is important, and being one of first impression in this court it has been fully considered. Although the case has been elaborately argued, the views entertained by the court may be briefly stated, without any extended discussion. There can be no disagreement as to the facts of the case as they appear from the pleadings by admission on demurrer. Only questions of law remain to be considered on the admitted facts. As has been seen, defendant is a corporation existing under the laws of this State, with power to construct and use a line of telegraph in this State. Permission in writing was given by the proper county board to erect poles on the highway in question, on which to maintain its line of telegraph, care to be taken to do no unnecessary injury. Plaintiff was and is the owner of' the fee, and objected to that use of the highway, but his wishes were disregarded. No effort was made to agree with him as to the damages he would sustain, nor to assess the same under the statute. It is conceded the locus in quo is an ordinary highway, situated without the limits of any municipal corporation. The highway was constructed over lands owned by plaintiff. Of that no question is made. It follows, therefore, plaintiff is the owner of the fee to the center of the highway, subject only to an easement over and upon it in favor of the public. The position taken by defendant is, that. the State can rightfully, as' it has done, authorize the county board to permit defendant to construct its line of telegraph upon the highway without the consent of the abutting land owner; that it imposes no new or additional burden thereon, and that when the public acquire an easement over land, for a compensation fully paid, the public obtain all the rights the land owner had, and the State may authorize any use of it not inconsistent with its use as a highway. On the other hand it is insisted the proprietary rights of plaintiff have been interfered with in a manner detrimental to his interests as the owner of the fee, and that the action of defendant in taking possession of his land forcibly and against his will comes within the constitutional inhibition, “private property shall not be taken or damaged without just compensation.” The latter position is the one best sustained by authority, and rests on sounder principles. It is for the reason the construction and maintenance of a telegraph line upon the highway is a new and additional burden upon the fee to which it was not contemplated it should be subjected, and for which the owner is entitled to additional compensation. The principle is, neither the State nor a municipal corpora-, tion has any rightful authority, under the constitution, to grant away the private, property of the citizen, and if corporations quasi public, in the exercise of the right of eminent domain with which they are clothed by the sovereign power of the State, seek to appropriate it, so that they may have a benefit therefrom,- every principle of justice demands they should make just compensation, whether the property taken or damaged is of little or great value. But aside from all considerations of right and justice, the constitution has so declared, and its mandate in that respect may not be disregarded. A ease having many features in common with the one now before ‘ the court is Indianapolis, Bloomington and Western R. R. Co. v. Hartley, 67 Ill. 439. It was there said : “A distinction has been taken where the municipality granting the right to lay a track owns the fee in the street, and where the fee remains in the abutting land owner, and it seems to us it rests on sound principle, and is supported by the highest authority. Where the fee remains in the original proprietor it is immaterial how the public acquired an easement over the lands,—whether by condemnation or by dedication. It is only for the use of ordinary travel, such as we are accustomed to see on. streets or highways. In ease the proprietor dedicated the land, it was for no other purpose ; and if it was condemned, his damages were assessed with no other view. A different use of the land can not be justified on the ground that a railway is an improved highway. Railway companies are only public corporations in a limited sense. The right of way, the road bed, and the carriages propelled-thereon, are owned by private individuals, aftd not by the publie. Fares are charged for travel thereon for the exclusive benefit of the parties owning the road. They are constructed and equipped in the interest of private speculation, but at the same time they are intended to subserve the public good. The travel on them bears no analogy to our notions of travel on an ordinary street or highway, where every one travels at his pleasure, in his own conveyance, without paying tolls or fares. The uses are totally different, and even inconsistent. The one is exclusive in favor of private interests, and the other is open and free to all. The doctrine most in consonance with our sense of justice is, when the fee of the street remains in the abutting land owner the corporation may grant the right to the railway company to lay its track along or across any street, but the company avails of its privilege at its peril. If, in laying its track, it causes a private injury to him who owns the fee in the adjoining,premises, it must make good the damages sustained. ” The doctrine of this ease has since been embodied' in the text by Mr. Billon, in the recent edition of his valúa,-, ble work on Municipal Law, in a distinct section, .and the author says it has for its support the sanction of some of the most eminent jurists in this country. At all events it is now the settled law of this State, and it is now too late to insist a different rule should be adopted. The principle of Hartley's case is conclusive of the one being considered. What is there said respecting the right of a railway to the use of a common highway, applies with equal force to a telegraph corporation. In the same sense the construction of a line of telegraph on the highway is an additional servitude, to which the fee of the land had not before been subjected. The servitude differs more in degree than in character, and whether the' damages are great or small, the corporation asking for or appropriating to itself the benefit of such new servitude must make just compensation to the., owner of the fee. In many, and perhaps in most instances,'the damages may be merely nominal, but in others an actual detriment may be occasioned. That, of course, is a question to be determined from the evidence in each particular ease, with which this court has no concern.
• The decision of the trial court in sustaining the demurrer to the special pleas of justification is warranted by the law, and as its finding as to the damages sustained by plaintiff has been affirmed by the Appellate Court, it is, of course, conclusive on this court, and the judgment of the latter court will he affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.