131 Ind. 446 | Ind. | 1892
This was an action by the appellees against the appellant, in the Madison Circuit Court, to enjoin it from entering upon, digging trenches and laying gas pipes in certain real estate belonging to the appellees, described in the complaint. The complaint alleges that the appellant is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Indiana, and is engaged in leasing lands, drilling gas wells and piping natural gas to the city of Indianapolis, and supplying the same to private consumers; that it is threatening to, and is about to, and has entered upon the land of the appellees particularly described, has torn down their fences and is now digging great trenches in the same, and is laying down a six-inch gas pipe line upon and across said land, and is about to, and is threatening to connect said pipe line with some of its gas wells, and connecting the same with another line of pipes running to the city of Indianapolis; that it entered upon said land and did, and is about to, do the things above set forth without any leave or license from the appellees, and against their protest and over their objections, never having paid or tendered to them the damages that would accrue to them by reason of said acts; that the acts
To this complaint the appellant filed an answer consisting of one paragraph. The answer admits the ownership of the land in the appellees, the incorporation of the appellant under the laws of the State, and that it is engaged in leasing land, digging gas wells and piping natural gas to the city of Indianapolis to supply private consumers. It avers that it is supplying, for heating and illuminating purposes, forty thousand people in that city with natural gas, who are dependent upon it for such supply, and that it has contracts with such consumers obligating itself to furnish them with natural gas for fuel; that it has main lines leading from the city of Indianapolis northwardly through the counties of Marion and Hamilton into Madison county to near the south line of appellees’ land; that it has leased lands, lying north of appellees’ land and has drilled ten gas wells and laid its gas pipe lines connecting with said gas wells north of appellees’ land down to and running along the highway through a part of appellees’ land with their full knowledge and acquiescence, leaving a space of only sixty rods through appellees’ land necessary to connect appellant’s pipe line from the city of Indianapolis with its line connecting with said wells; that being unable to agree with the appellees for a right of way through their land it filed in the circuit court of Madison county its notice and act of appropriation and condemnation of a right of way to lay its pipe line through said land, and thereupon said court appointed three disinterested freeholders of Madison county as appraisers to view the premises and assess the damages that would accrue to the appellees by reason of said act of appropriation and condemnation of a right to lay its pipe through said land; that the appraisers were duly sworn and assessed the damages that would accrue to the appellees by reason of the appropriation at the sum of six hundred dollars, and filed their report thereof in said court; that thereupon the appellant
The circuit court sustained a demurrer to this answer, and, the appellant refusing to answer further, the appellees had a perpetual injunction. This ruling of the court is assigned as error.
The appellees contend that the above ruling of the Madison Circuit Court is justified on five several grounds, namely:
First. Because the act of February 20th, 1889 (Acts of 1889, p. 22), under which the condemnation proceedings, set.
Second. Because the payment of the amount assessed as damages into the cleric’s office without first tendering the-same to the appellees, gave no right of entry.
Third. Because to give a right of entry under the statutes of the State, the tender of payment to the clerk of the court must be unconditional, and a tender upon condition that it shall not be received by the land-owner, or \yith instruction not to pay it over to such owner, gives no right of entry.
Fourth. Because, if the law is to be so construed as to confer the right of entry upon payment of the assessed damages to the clerk of the court, without tender to the land-owner, it is in conflict with section 21, article 1, of the- ■ State Constitution.
Fifth. Because the statute in question is in conflict with section 8, article'1, of the Constitution of the United States.
Section 23, article 1, of the State Constitution, provides that “ The General Assembly shall not grant to any citizen, or class of citizens, privileges or immunities which, upon the same terms, shall not equally belong to all citizens.”
It is claimed that the act of February 20th, 1889, supra, is in conflict with this constitutional provision because it grants to companies, corporations or voluntary associations under the laws of this State, for the purpose of drilling and mining for petroleum or natural gas and furnishing the same to patrons within this State, the right to condemn and appropriate land for the purpose of laying their pipes, and does not grant to such companies, corporations or associations engaged in furnishing petx'oleum and natural gas to customers without the State the same right.
The right to take private property for public use, without the consent of the owner, is called the right of eminent domain, and belongs alone to the sovereign. It embraces all
The right of eminent domain is limited only by the Constitution, and the only limitation in this State is, that no man’s property shall be taken by law without just compensation ; nor, except in case of the State, without such compensation first assessed and tendered. Section 21, article 1, Constitution of the State.
It is to be exercised only when the public necessity or convenience requires it, but when such necessity or convenience is declared by the representative of the sovereign, the Legislature, courts can not question the wisdom of such declaration. Water-Works Co., etc., v. Burkhart, 41 Ind. 364.
The time, manner and occasion of the exercise of the right of eminent domain are wholly in the control and discretion of the Legislatures of the several States of the Union except as it is restrained by the Constitutions of such States. Secomb v. Milwaukee, etc., R. W. Co., 49 How. Pr. 75; Swan v. Williams, 2 Mich. 427; Weir v. St. Paul, etc., R. R. Co., 18 Minn. 155; Roanoke City v. Berkowitz, 80 Va. 616; Lewis Eminent Domain, section 238.
So, too, the exercise of the power of eminent domain being an attribute of sovereignty, the sovereign may grant it to whomsoever it may think proper, and deny it to all others.
In his valuable work on Eminent Domain, Mr. Lewis, in speaking of this subject, says : “ Such has been the common practice since the revolution, and the right to do so has never been a matter of serious question; and it may be regarded as settled law that it is solely for the Legislature to judge what persons, corporations or other agencies may properly be
In this State the Legislature, in the exercise of its discretion, has judged it proper to clothe companies, corporations and associations engaged in the business of furnishing petroleum and natural gas to the citizens of this State, for consumption, with the power of eminent domain, while it has not, as yet, thought proper to clothe companies, corporations and associations not so engaged with that power. It is not our province to inquire into the motives which prompted the Legislature to grant this power to persons engaged in furnishing petroleum and natural gas to the people of this State, and to make no such provision for those furnishing them to the people of other States. It is sufficient for us to know that under the authorities above cited they ppssessed the power to do so, and that in the exercise of the discretion it possesses it has done so.
Nor do we think the law is subject to the objection that it is local or special. A law which applies generally to a particular class of cases is not a local or special law. Hymes v. Aydelott, 26 Ind. 431; Palmer v. Stumph, 29 Ind. 329.
The Constitution does not require that the operation of a law shall be uniform, other than that its operation shall be the same in all parts of the State under the same circumstances. Groesch v. State, 42 Ind. 547.
In our opinion the act approved February 20th, 1889, now under consideration, is not subjection to the constitutional Objection urged against it in this case.
As to the second position assumed by the appellees, it is sufficient to say that the almost unbroken line of .decision is that there is no valid objection to a statute like ours, which permits the condemning party to pay the assessed damages into court, for the use of the land-owner, and that such payment is equivalent to a tender, and confers a license to take possession even when an appeal is prosecuted. Lewis Eminent Domain, section 579; Baltimore, etc., R. R. Co. v.
The third position assumed by the appellees presents a question much more difficult than the second. Ordinarily a tender to be good must be unconditional. While there may be some conflict in the authorities, arising out of the different provisions of the several State constitutions, the better reason is, that under a Constitution like ours the Legislature can not authorize an entry upon the land of another, by the party condemning, where the owner is satisfied with the damages assessed, until the damages are paid or such disposition made of the money as amounts to payment. Accordingly, it has been held that a law which authorizes the party condemning to take possession pending an appeal by him, by depositing the damages assessed to be withheld from the owner of the land until such appeal Was determined, was unconstitutional in so far as it authorized the withholding of the money. Meily v. Zurmehly, 23 Ohio St. 627; State, ex rel., v. Lubke, 15 Mo. App. 152; St. Louis, etc., R. W. Co. v. Evans & Howard, etc., Co., 85 Mo. 307; Matter of New York, etc., R. R. Co., 98 N. Y. 12.
The money in this case, when paid into court, if the appellees were satisfied with the assessment, represented the land appropriated, and at once became the property of the appellees. Such being the case, the direction of the appellant not to pay it to the appellees, was a direction the clerk of the court could not heed, and amounted to nothing. Meily v. Zurmehly, supra; Meyer v. State, 125 Ind. 335; Ross v. Adams, 28 N. J. L. 160.
The question as to whether the appellant could make a tender to the appellees which they were willing to accept,
What ,we have already said disposes of the fourth position assumed by the appellees.
Under the fifth position assued by the appellees it is contended that the law in question interferes with interstate commerce, in that it prohibits the piping of petroleum and natural gas out of the State.
It may be that those who desire to pipe petroleum and gas out of the State are hindered in their operations by the absence of a statute conferring on them the power of eminent domain, but we are unable to perceive any interest they have in the question as to whether those piping petroleum and gas for domestic use do or do noiwpossess such power. The former are in no worse condition than they were before the passage of the law under consideration. In other words, it affects them in no manner whatever. How then can it be said to interfere with interstate commerce?
In our opinion the appellant acquired the right to enter upon the land of the appellees by its proceedings in condemnation and the payment of the assessed damages into court, and that the court erred in sustaining a demurrer to its answer setting up such proceedings, and for this reason the judgment rendered herein should be reversed.
Judgment reversed, with directions to the circuit court to overrule the demurrer of the appellees to the appellant’s answer.