delivered the opinion of the court.
Tranbarger, owner of 60 acres of farming land in Calla-way County, Missouri, brought this action against the Railroad Company in a Missouri state court to recover damages and a penalty under §1110 of the Missouri Revised Statutes of 1899, as amended by act of March 14, 1907, Sess. Act's, p. 169, of which the portion now pertinent is as follows: •
A judgment for damages and a penalty of one hundred dollars was.sustained by the Supreme Court of the State (250 Missouri, 46), and the case comes here upon questions respecting the validity of the.statute, as construed and applied, in view of familiar provisions of the Federal Constitution.
The facts found by the Missouri.Supreme Court to be within the pleadings and proofs and to be sustained by the verdict of the jury are these: Plaintiff’s lands lie in what are known as the Missouri River bottoms. It is the habit of that river to overflow the bottoms from the west to the east in times of high water. Defendant’s railroad extends across the bottoms from southwest to northeast, and along the easterly boundary of plaintiff’s land. The roadbed is constructed of a solid earth embankment, varying in height from four to seven feet, and is not provided with traverse culverts, openings, or drains of any kind for the escape of surface water, but constitutes a solid barrier
The statutory requirement of “openings across and through the right of way and roadbed” originated in the 1907 amendment of § 1110. Before that, and dating from the year 1874, the statute merely required railroads to construct ditches along each side of the roadbed. [Laws 1874, p. 121; Rev. Stat. 1879, §810; Laws 1883, p. 50; Rev. Stat. 1889, § 2614; Laws 1891, p. 82; Rev. Stat. 1899, § 1110;
Collier
v.
Chicago & Alton Ry.
(1892),
(1) The argument that in respect of its penalty feature the statute is invalid as an
ex post facto
law is sufficiently answered by pointing out that plaintiff in error is subjected to a penalty not because of the manner in which it originally constructed its railroad embankment, nor for anything else done or*omitted before the passage' of the act of 1907, but because after that time it maintained the embankment in a manner prohibited by that act. The argument to the contrary is based upon a reading of the section that applies the limiting clause “within three months after the completion of the same” to railroads already in existence as well as to those to be constructed thereafter. The result is, according to the argument, that as the road of plaintiff in error was constructed upon a solid embankment at least as early as the year 1895, the act was violated as soon as enacted. This construction is so unreasonable that we should 'not adopt it unless required to do so by a decision of the state court of last resort. The language of the sectibn as it now stands: “It shall be the duty of every corporation . . . owning or operating any railroad or branch thereof in this State, and of any corporation . . . constructing any railroad in this State, within three months after the completion of the same through any county in this State, to cause to be constructed and maintained suitable openings,” etc.,. seems to us to be more reasonably construed as prescribing the express limit of three months only with respect to railroads afterwards constructed,-and as allowing to railroads already in existence a reasonable time after the passage of the enactment within which to construct the openings. In adopting this meaning, we have regard not merely to the phrases employed, but to the previous. course of legislation, which, is set forth in the briefs but need not be here repeated. Whether we are
(2) Upon the question of impairment of contract, it appears that the railroad in question was constructed and afterwards leased to plaintiff in error in perpetuity by virtue of a charter and franchise granted to the Louisiana & Missouri River Railroad Company in the year 1870 (Laws, p. 93, §§ 22, 23, 43), by § 33 of which the company was exempted from the provisions of § 7 of Article I of the general corporation act of 1855 (Rev. Stat. 1855, p. 371), and thereby, it is claimed, relieved from the legislative power of alteration, suspension, and repeal. And while by the constitution of 1865 (in force at the time the railroad in question was authorized and constructed), railroad corporations could be formed only under general laws subject to amendment or repeal, it is contended that this did not apply to subsequent amendments of charters. previously granted
(State, ex ret. Circuit Attorney
v.
Railroad,
48 Missouri, 468;
St. Joseph & Iowa Ry.
v.
Shambaugh,
106 Missouri, 557, 569), and it is pointed out that the charter of 1870 is an amendment of one enacted in 1868 (Laws, p. 97), and this in turn an amendmént of
Next, it is insisted that for all purposes except those covered by the act of 1907, Missouri has at all times adhered to the common-law rule that surface water is a common enemy, against which, every landowner may protect himself as best he can, and that this applies to and protects railroads as well as other landowners.
Abbott
v.
Kansas City &c. Ry.
(1884), 83 Missouri, 271, 280
et seq.; Jones
v.
St. Louis &c. Ry.,
84 Missouri, 151, 155;
Schneider
v.
Missouri Pacific Ry.,
Of the cases cited in support of this contention the only one that has a semblance of pertinency is
Muhlker
v.
Harlem Railroad Co.,
(3) But a more satisfactory answer to the argument under the contract clause, and one which at the same time refutes the contention of plaintiff in error under the due process clause, is that the statute in question was passed under the police power of the State for the general benefit of the community at large and for the purpose of preventing unnecessary and wide-spread injury to property.
It is established by repeated decisions, of this court that neither of these provisions of the Fedeial Constitution
We deem it very clear that the act under consideration is a legitimate exercise of the police power, and not in any proper sense a taking of the property of plaintiff in error. The case is not at all analogous to those which have held that the taking of a right of way across one’s land for a drainage ditch, where no water-course exists, 'is a taking of property within the meaning of the Constitution. The present regulation is for the prevention of damage attributable to the railroad embankment itself, and amounts merely to an application of the maxim
sic utere tuo ut alienum non Icedas.
Of course, compliance with it involves the expenditure of money; but so does compliance with regulations requiring a railroad company to keep its roadbed and right of way free from combustible matters; to provide its locomotive engines with spark arresters; to fence its tracks; to provide cattle guards and gates at crossings, or bridges or viaducts, or the like. Such regulations as these are closely analogous in principle, and have been many times sustained as constitutional.
Minneapolis Railway Co.
v.
Beckwith,
And it is well settled that the enforcement of uncompensated obedience to a legitimate regulation established under the police power is not a taking of property without compensation, or without due process of law, in the sense of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Chicago, Burlington &c. R. R.
v.
Chicago,
(4) The contention that the statute in question denies to plaintiff in error the equal protection of the laws is not seriously pressed, and is quite unsubstantial. Railroad embankments, stretching unbroken across tracts of land that are liable to injury from surface waters, differ- so materially from other artificial constructions and improvements to which the doctrine of the “common enemy” applies, that there is very plainly a substantial ground for classification with respect to the object of the legislation. The statute applies alike to corporations, companies, and persons owning or operating railroads that are so constructed as to obstruct the flow of drainage and surface waters, and we deem it unexceptionable in this regard.
Judgment affirmed.
