4 Utah 117 | Utah | 1885
Tbe respondent built its road over and across a parcel of land belonging to tbe United States. Tbe appellant afterwards entered tbe land and obtained tbe •government title by patent for it. Thereafter, tbe respondent instituted proceedings for condemning so much of tbe land as it was using. Tbe commissioners reported tbe value of tbe ground to be one hundred dollars without railway bed, railway or railway improvements, and eight hundred and forty-five dollars including tbe railway and railway improvements thereon. Tbe court gave judgment for one hundred dollars damages, and appellant moved for new
It is not a wise policy to grant a rehearing in any case except there be strong reasons therefor. In the case before us no new questions or special reasons are offered why a rehearing should be granted. The grounds of the motion are simply the grounds urged for a reversal of the judgment of the court below, as we view it.
But were we to reopen the case, when nothing appears to, show that due consideration and weight were not given to the questions on the former hearing, we find the controlling question in the case to be whether, in estimating the damages or compensation to be allowed appellant, the court should have taken into consideration the railway and railway improvements placed upon the land by respondent while it yet remained unclaimed and unoccupied public land, and before appellant had any interest therein, or had obtained government title thereto. Appellant does not claim to have ever bought from the company or from the government the railway or improvements, except that they were fixed to the realty when he purchased the land of the government, and went with the land.
It is a general rule that when a person buys land, he buys whatever is fixed to the land as part of the realty. There are, however, some modifications or exceptions to the rule, and the case before us presents one such.
The railroad company, the respondent, is in possession of the railway and railway improvements which the appellant asks pay for. The respondent has never released the possession of or abandoned them, nor been ejected therefrom, but it has by the government and appellant been suffered to retain undisturbed possession of them. The appellant did not place the rails, ties or other improvements on the land, nor did he ever pay for them or have
The fact that respondent when it built the railway and railway improvements was a trespasser upon government land, is not material to the issue. The government could have ejected the company, but it did not do so. The company became a trespasser, not with a view of permanently holding the land without paying for it, but to hold it temporarily and until it could be condemned in manner provided by law. Because the company was' then a trespasser, it does not follow that it should lose its railroad. It would then have no use for the ground, unless it bought back both the land and the railroad. The motion for a rehearing is denied.