96 S.E. 725 | S.C. | 1918
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *117 September 4, 1918. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Plaintiffs brought these actions to recover possession of two strips of land, now occupied by defendants as railroad rights of way, or, in the alternative, to recover compensation for the use thereof by defendants. Both strips are on the same tract, which is now owned by plaintiffs as tenants in common. One of these strips was taken by the Columbia and August Railroad Company about the year 1867, and the other by the Carolina Midland Railroad Company about the year 1899. Both were taken while the tract was in the possession of a life tenant, or, rather, in possession of persons holding under the life tenant. The railroads named were and are different railroads, built at different times across different parts of the tract; but both roads are now in possession of and are being operated by Southern Railway Company, one as owner and the other as lessee.
The Cayce Land Company is the grantee of all the right, title and interest of some of the remaindermen in and to the land, and the assignee of their right to compensation for said rights of way, having acquired their said interests before the falling in of the life estate, which occurred in 1915. The other plaintiffs are the heirs of one of the remaindermen. *119 The details of the devolution of the title and interests in the premises to the present parties in interest (plaintiffs and defendants) are not material to the issues. The taking in each case was by authority conferred upon the railroad company by the legislature, under the State's power of eminent domain. In neither case was there any condemnation proceeding, or notice to the remaindermen of the taking, nor did the remaindermen consent thereto. These facts are established by the findings of the Circuit Court. But, in the first case, the Southern Railway Company obtained a deed conveying the right of way from the person in possession holding under the life tenant many years after the railroad had been in operation; and, in the second case, such a deed was obtained by the Carolina Midland Railroad Company at or about the time the road was built. In each case, plaintiffs allege that they are owners, as tenants in common, of the fee, and that they the entry and taking had been without notice to them, or their predecessors in title, and without their consent, and that they are, therefore, entitled to immediate possession of the strip, together with the value of the use thereof since the death of the life tenant; but, if the defendant wishes to retain the said strip of land for railroad purposes, they are willing to convey the same upon being paid adequate compensation therefor on the basis of the present value thereof, together with interest thereon from the death of the life tenant.
Defendants denied plaintiffs' right to compensation in each case. In the first case defendants relied upon the presumption created by section 20 of the charter of the Columbia and Augusta Railroad Company (
Section 20 of the charter of the Columbia and Augusta Railroad Company (
The word "owner," as used in the statutes authorizing condemnation of lands for railroad purposes, does not necessarily mean the owner of the legal title to the land, but the party in possession and having control of the land at the time of the taking for railroad purposes is the "owner" in the sense in which that word is used in the *121
statutes, at least for the purpose of giving consent to the entry. It follows that, where the entry is made or the land is taken for such purposes with the consent, express or implied, of such an "owner," the railroad company is not a trespasser, and cannot be proceeded against as a trespasser.Tutt v. Railway,
Where a corporation having power to condemn lands for a public purpose takes possession of the lands of another for such purpose, without consent of the owner, express or implied, it becomes a trespasser; and, while it may be made liable in damages for the trespass, it does not necessarily follow that it may be ejected as an ordinary trespasser, for, if it would have the right to take the land under condemnation proceedings, if the parties in interest have stood by and allowed the corporation to incur expense in the construction of the railroad without objection, it may retain possession, provided due compensation for the taking is made to the owner — the amount thereof to be ascertained in the method provided by the statute, if the right to compensation is not denied, or by the verdict of a jury in an action in the Court of Common Pleas, when the right to compensation has been denied, but adjudicated in favor of the owner. Ingleside Mfg. Co. v. Charleston Light W. Co.,
When the owner of the legal title is in possession of the land at the time of the taking, he is bound by the terms of the statute under which the land is taken and must apply in the manner and within the time therein prescribed for an assessment of compensation, or he will be barred; and the same may be said as to the owner of an estate in less than the fee, if he is in possession at the time of the taking. But where the person in possession is not *122
the owner of the legal title in fee, but has a less estate or interest, as, for instance, a life estate, notwithstanding his consent to the entry and taking by the corporation will be sufficient to keep the corporation from being a trespasser it will not bind or estop the remaindermen from obtaining compensation for their interests after the termination of his estate. Hence it has been uniformly held that the deed of the life tenant conveying the easement or his failure to demand compensation does not bar the remaindermen, for the life tenant cannot convey, or lose by his acquiescence or laches, any greater interest than he has in the land. And, therefore, it has also been held that the statute of limitations does not begin to run against the remaindermen until the termination of the life estate. Railway v. Scott,
If a public service corporation would acquire a perfect and indefeasible title to its easements or other property against the claims of all persons interested therein, it should proceed in the manner prescribed by law, by making all persons having a present or prospective interest therein parties to a condemnation or other proceeding by which they will be bound. Remaindermen and other owners of deferred or contingent interests in property are entitled to notice and a hearing before they can be deprived of their interest or their right to compensation therefor.
It follows that the Circuit Court was right in holding that plaintiffs are not barred by the statute of limitations, nor by the provisions of section 20 of the charter of the Columbia and Augusta Railroad Company. No doubt the presumption created by that section would have been sufficient to bar the "owner," in the sense in which that word is used as above defined, if he or any claiming under him had applied for compensation after the time prescribed in the section had elapsed. And, as the then *123
"owner," being the person holding under the life tenant, had the right to consent to the entry, and the remaindermen had no cause of action for compensation, until after the death of the life tenant, it follows, according to the principles above stated and announced in the previous decisions of this Court, that the plaintiffs are not barred. Nor are they hampered by the decision in Bridges v. Railway,
In several cases, this Court has held that, in cases like this, the plaintiffs may recover compensation, but they have no right to recover the land itself, or at least so much of it as has been or may have been lawfully taken under the power of condemnation for a public purpose. The right of the owner is subordinate to the right of the public. Ingleside Mfg. Co. v. Charleston L. W. Co.,
The Court erred also in holding that the compensation to which plaintiffs are entitled must be based upon the present value of the land. As we have already seen, the defendants' predecessors in title were not trespassers, but entered and built their railroads with the consent, actual or presumed, of the then "owner" of the land, and, as they were vested with power to condemn the rights of way which were taken, they were entitled to take them at a compensation based upon the value of the land at that time. If compensation had been awarded to the plaintiffs' predecessors in title at the time of the taking, it would have been based upon the value of their interest in the land at that time; but it was not done then, and, as the payment of their compensation has been deferred until the present time, it should still be based upon the value of their interests in the land at that time, with interest thereon from that time until it is paid. That was expressly decided to be the correct basis of assessing compensation in a similar case. See Railwayv. Reynolds,
The judgment of the Circuit Court is modified to conform to the views herein announced, and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent therewith.
Modified.