11 Colo. 247 | Colo. | 1888
The constitution (art. 15, § 4) declares, inter jeilia, that “any association or corporation organized for the purpose shall have a right to construct and operate a
It is hardly necessary to say that we regard the several additions referred to in this case as having been platted and recorded substantially in 'compliance with the statutory requirements, and hence treat them as statutory dedications. The statute does not, however, make this
The superior court did not err in refusing to enjoin the operating of the Circle road. It is sufficient, upon this objection, to say — First, that some of the plaintiffs below obtained their title after the company, acting under the municipal license above mentioned, had constructed its road, and the same was in operation; second, that the rest of the plaintiffs, all of whom were owners prior to the occupation of the street under such license, quietly stood by, permitting the expenditure of a large sum of money in construction, and waited.more than six years
Did the court below eiT in enjoining the Denver & Santa Pe Company from laying a third rail, and operating standard gauge trains upon the road-bed originally constructed by the Circle Company, until it had proceeded under the eminent domain statute to condemn a right of way through the two streets mentioned in the pleadings? This is not an action directly against defendants for the unlawful usurpation or exercise of a corporate franchise, nor for the illegal appropriation or use of a public or guasi-public license. Neither the public, nor the city of Denver, nor any one acting or professing to act in behalf of the public or city, is here complaining. The suit is instituted by private property owners along the two streets in question, in their private capacity, and to prevent by injunction the continuation of one alleged private injury, and the perpetration of another private injury alleged to be threatened.' Turning to the ordinance granting the Circle Company permission to use the streets named, we find that the company was ‘“authorized to locate, construct, maintain and operate a single or double track railway and telegraph line, with the necessary turn-outs and switches;” also, that authority was given “to operate said railroad by steam-power; ”
A clause in the ordinance provides that the Circle Company “ shall not grant to any other railroad company the right to use any part of said right of way.” Whatever may have been the purpose of this provision, it is clear that there was no intention to prevent the passing into other hands of the company’s property, including the license granted; for another clause declares “that said company, its successors and assigns, are authorized,”
We shall assume, without, however, determining the matter, that the laying of the third rail, and doing the business of a standard gauge trunk line, is an additional burden or servitude imposed upon the street; also, that those acts may result in injury to the abutting lot owner, for which, under the constitution, he is entitled to compensation. Should a court of equity, at his suit, in view of the facts of this case, grant an injunction forbidding the acts in question? As we have already seen, the fee to Willow lane and Clark street is by law vested in the city in trust for the use of the public. It is not, and never was, in the present plaintiffs, who are purchasers of lots subsequent to the dedication of the streets. There is no evidence to show that the grants to them included the reversionary interest or reserved rights, if any such interest or rights there be, of the dedicator in this fee. If the street should be abandoned by the municipality, or for any other reason the trust should fail, and the fee pass out of the city, it would not revert to plaintiffs. Gebhardt v. Reeves, 15 Ill. 301. It follows, therefore, that the increased burden mentioned would not constitute an actual taking of plaintiffs’ property, though their peculiar interest in the street as abutting owners might entitle them to compensation for injuries inflicted. Besides, it is suggested that, where such a qualified fee in the city as we are now considering exists, “ the reversionary right of the owner of the fee in the surface of the street is too remote and contingent to be of any appreciable value, or to be regarded as property, which, under
It is contended that this doctrine ought not to be held applicable here, because of the peculiar phraseology of our constitution. True, this instrument declares that private property shall not be “damaged” without compensation. It does not, however, require that the damages, where property is not “taken,” shall be computed and paid before the injuries complained of are inflicted. It provides that “ property shall not be needlessly disturbed, or the proprietary rights of the owner therein divested,” till remuneration be made. The proprietary rights of plaintiffs in the land are not divested, because such rights do not exist. There may be a disturbance of the easements connected with the use or enjoyment of their abutting lots; but needful disturbances of property may take place without prior compensation. McClain v. People, 9 Colo. 190. The city council, by adopting the right-of-way ordinance, determined conclusively, so far as the general public is concerned, including all'interests of the plaintiffs common to the general public, that the anticipated disturbances were needful. But the disturbances mentioned in the constitution are, in our judgment, disturbances of property sought to be taken, or, at least, property of the same owner out of which that desired is to be carved. We do not think that the clause in question was intended to require the prior assessment and payment of probable damages for disturbances, to take place in the future, of an easement connected with the property of a party, no part of which is taken,. near or adjacent to the land condemned.
Our statute (section 242, Oivil Code) seems to contemplate that the commissioners or jury shall determine the necessity for the taking of private property, though they are not required to return a specific' finding upon this question. The ordinance granted the Oircle Company the privilege of constructing and operating a standard gauge railway; and we must, in the present suit, presume that it was adopted by the city council after full and careful investigation of the subject. Since the fee is not in plaintiffs, and the council possessed authority to grant the privilege in question, their action must be considered decisive as to the necessity for the taking, in so far as the license to use a street for this purpose can be considered a “taking” of private property. Besides, this provision of the statute does not refer to the damaging of property. If, therefore, there be no taking of the fee, the consequential injuries resulting to an abutting lot owner, through interference with certain easements, do not entitle him, by virtue of the statute, to interpose the objection that the use of the street is not necessary.
The decree of the superior court will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed.