This controversy arises from an effort of the City of Norton to open a street at grade across the station grounds and yards of the Rock Island Railway.
Appellant here, defendant below, is a city of the secоnd class with about 3000 people. First Street runs north and south, and the tracks of appellees run east and west. The year the railway built into the town — 1887—First Street was vacated for one block where it crossed appellees’ tracks, doubtless to provide space for station grounds, sidetracks, water cranes, and the like. The title to the vacated street reverted to the railway which owned the blocks on either side. R.S.Kаn.1923, § 14 — 423.
Cities of the second class are authorized to open and extend streets, but before doing so “the city counsel * * * shall proceed to condemn the necessary lands as provided by law.” Section 14 — 423, supra. The section governing condemnation proceedings provides for the appointment of three commissioners by the state district court whose duty it is, after notice and upon view, to “appraise the value of the lands taken and assess the other damages done to the owners of such property, respectively, by such appropriations.” Sections 26 — 201, 26 — 202. Except as hereafter limited, these statutes authоrize appellant to open or extend streets across a railway right of way. City of Wichita v. Wichita Union Terminal R. Co.,
In 1935 the city proposed to open First Street across the tracks, and procured the аppointment of commissioners to assess the damage- Before the commissioners could meet, this action was brought to enjoin the proceedings. After a trial a decree was entered perpеtually enjoining appellant from “appraising, valuing or condemning the property of the plaintiffs for any purpose and from extending or opening, or undertaking to extend or open First Avenue in the City of Norton thrоugh, over and across the property of the plaintiffs.” This appeal is from that decree.
While a city has plenary power over streets and alleys, such power may not be exercised arbitrarily, capriciously, or in bad faith. City of Emporia v. Atchison, T. & S. F. Railway Co.,
The decree finds its main support in the finding that part of the property sought to be condemned is now devoted to a public use, and that to subject it to the proposed use would substantially destroy or materially interfere with the present public use. The trial court found:
“That if the property of plaintiff should be condemned and First Street projected acrоss the tracks, grounds and premises of the plaintiffs, the said property would be greatly and irreparably damaged and injured, and the use thereof seriously and permanently impaired and would result- in the obstruction of, interference with, and delay to freight and passenger trains in interstate commerce.”
The power to take private property for public use inheres in the sovereign, is essential to the public welfare, and сan neither be contracted away nor surrendered. It applies to property already devoted to one public use. Georgia v. Chattanooga,
The city here is acting under a grant of general power; the trial court has found, after hearing conflicting оpinion evidence as to the necessity of opening the street, that such second use will materially interfere with the railway use. The question remains whether, giving due weight to the conclusions of the trial court, we should say that such finding is clearly wrong. Laying to one side the conflicting opinion evidence, many facts are undisputed. Four passenger trains . a day— eight in better times — stop at this station. The depot platform extends across the street sought to be condemned — seven feet of concrete and the rest cinders and ballast. Pullman passengers alight from and board west bound trains from this platform. It is dangerous for passengers to alight where there is no platform. A water crane is so located that the locomotive on east bound trains would extend into the street. Passenger trains each way would block this street while making their station stops. Five regular frеight trains are operated daily. The yards for their necessary work cross this proposed street intersection, and switching cars and street intersections are a dangerous combination. A Kansas statute, R.S.Kan.1923, § 66 — 273, аnd customarily city ordinances, Walker v. Missouri Pac. Railway Co.,
Property owned by a public service company, but which is not presently devotеd to a public use and where there is no reasonable probability that it will be so devoted in the near future, may be condemned under a statute conferring the right of eminent domain in general terms. The Supreme Court оf Kansas so held in Railway Co. v. Kansas City & M. O. Railway Co.,
While appellees have title to a full block on First Street vacated, only the surface of that part now occupied by its platform and tracks is devoted to public use. That part of First Street south of the tracks is not now devoted to public use, and apрellees have no present intention to put it to such use, for they propose to permit a packing company to erect a permanent structure thereon. That part north of the tracks has bеen paved by the railway and is used by its patrons as a street.
Furthermore, the construction by the city of an overpass or underpass would not interfere with the use to which appellees are devoting the surface.
The decree below will be modified so that the appellant is enjoined only from *667 pursuing its present effort to condemn the surface of the ground now occupied by appellees’ tracks and plаtform. The decree should make it clear that appellees’ present public use includes subjacent and lateral support for their structures, together with reasonable means of ingress and egress thereto; that appellant is not enjoined from condemning that part not now occupied, nor from opening the street by a thoroughfare over or under appellees’ tracks and platform. Each pаrty will pay its own costs in this court.
Modified.
Notes
Many states have statutes authorizing such condemnation where the second use is found to be more essential to the public welfare than the first. And, as in all other cases, specific power may be found by necessary implication.
