64 Mo. 453 | Mo. | 1877
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the hearing of this cause, the court below made an order whereby it was adjudged and decreed that defendant pay to plaintiff, on or before the 11th day of January, 1875, the amount
This action of the lower court has caused this appeal by defendant. It is assumed by counsel that plaintiff must be presumed to have waived or postponed his right to insist upon immediate payment for his land. On what a slender foundation this assumption rests will be readily seen by reference to the defendant’s charter and the agreed facts of this case.
That charter (Acts 1857, § 10, and Acts 1851, 483, §§ 7, 9, 10,) gave “ full power to survey, mark, locate and construct a railroad,” and “provides, in order that the progress of the work may not be impeded, that after said viewers have filed their report and plat in the office as aforesaid, the company, after having made a tender of the amount of damages to the person or persons, or made a deposit of the same with the clerk of the county court in which the case may be pending, shall be authorized to proceed in the construction of the work as fully as though no disagreement had arisen.”
The parties failing to agree, commissioners were, in July, 1872, at the instance of the defendant, appointed, who assessed the plaintiff’s damages at $1.00, which sum, defendant, having already located its road, deposited with the clerk, and proceeded to construct its road. The plaintiff filed exceptions to the report\of the viewers, and at the January term, 1873, the court set aside the report and appointed other commissioners, who, at the April term, 1873, assessed plaintiff’s damages at $48, and their report was confirmed and judgment rendered aceoidingly. Meanwhile, however, the defendant’s road had been completed and in operation twenty miles west from plaintiff’s land, prior to the setting aside of the report of the first commissioners,
If the law favors uniformity, if, indeed, it is no respecter of persons, there can be no difference in point of abstract principle, nor yet in its application, whether applied to the adjustment of rights between a natural person and a corporation, or where a like adjustment is sought between individuals alone. These remarks are induced by the position of defendant’s counsel, before referred to, and by the authorities cited in support of that position.
In the case of Provolt vs. C., R. I. & P. R. R. Co. (57 Mo. 256), a case which goes far beyond any other to be found in the books, it was held that ejectment could not be maintained against a railroad company, although failing to pay the owner for his land, and this upon the ground of his, having waived his right to insist on immediate payment. But though the remedy by ejectment was denied, because of the supposed waiver, it was still held that the plaintiff was entitled to equitable relief, ex. gr. by having a receiver for the road appointed. That case is claimed as the counterpart of this, and so it would seem to be, and it is insisted that a waiver which should preclude a recovery in ejectment, should likewise preclude an-injunction. And there would appear to be no little force in the observation, because either method of redress, if enforced, would effectually interfere with the interests of “ the public,” by preventing the operation of
In Walker vs. C., R. I. & P. R. R. Co., (same volume), it was held that mere silence and inaction for the time being, on the part of the land owner, while a railroad was being built over ’his property, would not be construed into acquiescence nor estop him from his action of ejectment. And in Walther vs. Warner (25 Mo. 277), cited with approval in the Provolt case, it is said in conclusion, that “ all the cases in all the books seem to assume that an individual cannot be absolutely deprived of his property without the actual payment of the assessed price, even though a proper provision is made in the act authorizing the taking of it; and perhaps it would be better to hold that, even in cases where proper provision is made for the payment of the price, so that the property is allowed to pass, it passes subject to the condition that the price is subsequently paid, so that if for any cause it be not paid, the party may re-possess himself of it on account of the condition broken.”
It is altogether unnecessary to say whether the facts in the Provolt case were of a character to establish the inference of a waiver. It is sufficient to observe that, applying the rule before announced, the same rule which should govern between ordinary vendor and vendee, we have after careful consideration of the facts before us, been unable to discover anything .on the part of plaintiff, even remotely indicative of an intention to surrender, or so much as postpone the right which the constitution so sedulously protects. For he met the railroad company at the very threshold of controversy, exhausted every means of statutory resistance, and I, for one, will never say that this amounts to either laches or acquiescence, or that his appeal to a court of equity for the enforcement of a plain, constitutional right shall be in vain.
The case of McAuley vs. Western Vt. R. R. Co., (33 Vt. 311) an action of ejectment cited in the Provolt case as “ strikingly in point” originated in a written contract between McAuley and the railroad company, to take stock at its par value for his -damages. And the company entered with the consent of the
All these circumstances were taken into consideration, and the plaintiff was held not entitled to maintain his action. And the obvious justness of that decision, proceeding as it does on the grounds of license, imthe first instance, under a written agreement, of silent acquiescence for six years after the discovery of fraud, and the acquisition of rights by innocent third parties upon the faith of that agreement, cannot be questioned. But the facts of that case bear not the faintest resemblance to this ; and it is a total perversion of language to assert the remotest analogy between them. And the same may be said of Goodin vs. Cincinnati and White Water Canal Company (18 Ohio St., 169), for
Greenhalgh vs. The M. & B. R. R. Co., (3 Mylne & Cr. 784) was a proceeding for specific performance of a written contract between the plaintiff who was an “ assenting party ” to a bill offered in parliament to establish the South Union R. R. Co., which, by act of parliament, was consolidated with a bill for the formation of the M. & B. R. R. Co. A temporary injunction in aid of the proceeding for specific performance was granted, which, on final hearing, was dissolved on the grounds above stated, in connection with the fact that the plaintiff had written to the company expressing his entire willingness to let it have such portion of his land, embraced in the written contract, as might be desired. •
Toney vs. C. & A. R. R. Co. and R. & D. B. R. R. Co. (3 C. E. Green., 293) was merely a proceeding by the contractors who built a branch road for one company to compel defendants to pay for the work, and to restrain the R. & D. B. R. R. Co. from using the branch road till paid for. Injunction was refused because plaintiff’s remedies at laio were ample, and it was observed : “If the road was in their possession they could maintain trespass ; and if not in their possession and not let to the company, possession could not be obtained by ejectment.”
Erie R. R. Co. vs. Del., Lack. & Western and Morris & Essex R. R. Co’s, (6 C. E. Green., 283) was a contest between rival, railroad cornpanies as to which .was entitled to a right of way, the title to which was in dispute. Besides the complaining company had not only witnessed without objection the construction of the rival road, hut had lent its “active assistance” by selling for a large sum of money a portion of his own land to aid in the construction of the road complained of, and it was held
There is nothing, therefore, in the incidents of these cases at all parallel to the case at bar, or which give the slightest support to the position taken by defendant’s counsel; and the like observation applies to Commission of Highways vs. Dunham, (43 Ill. 86); Ross vs. E. & S. R. R. Co., (1 Green. Ch. 422); Browning vs. C. &W. R. R. Co., (3 Green. Ch. 47); and in Harness vs. Chesapeake & Ohio Canal Co., (1 Md. Ch. 248). also cited for defendant, where an injunction was granted, it was held that the act of the legislature only conferred a “ temporary privilege ” on the company to proceed with its work ; a privilege which ceased when the damages assessed were not paid. And it was also .said: “If the owner has the right to insist upon the payment of the money before his property is wrested from him, (and such right cannot be disputed) what is to prevent him from invoking the aid of the court for his protection, if the judgment for the money remains unpaid. The argument that the judgment is no more than a general lien, does not militate against this right of the owner of the land. His title does not rest upon his right, as a judgment creditor, but upon the act-of assembly, and upon that settled and fundamental doctrine according to which the owner of property, taken for public use, is entitled to compensation, and as Chancellor Kent says, “ to have it paid before or at least. concurrently with the seizure and appropriation of it.”
The further position is taken for defendant, that although the road is completed and in operation, the owner not paid, the company bankrupt, and all the injury done to plaintiff that can possibly be done, and after “ the public has acquired a right ” that this is a reason why equity should not interpose by granting restrictive relief.
This position is taken with a very poor grace by a corporation, which, under the arbitrary forms of law, has wrested property frum its owner. But the complexion of this case is not at all altered by any or all of the aforementioned circumstances. That mythical personage, “ The Public,” so often summoned as a conven
Now it is obvious that were the plaintiff’s lien as vendor to be enforced, it could only result in a sale of that portion of the railwa.y track passing through plaintiff’s land; a something which would be of no use to a third party, and if bought in by plaintiff, himself, he would be in the same situation as at present, without compensation for the injury done that portion of his land covered by the railroad track, and without pay for the damage necessarily resulting to that portion not thus included. And it is equally obvious that it would be quite as unavailing to have a receiver appointed to administer the affairs of a bankrupt corporation. But even were this not so, a court of equity, owing to the flexibility of its powers, is not confined to a single method of affording redress, but will, as just seen, adopt that method of administering relief, as will, without circuity of action, compel the party in default to do equity.
The method best promotive of such end is that resorted to by the court below, and abundantly sustained by the following authorities :
The foregoing reasons seem conclusive that the judgment should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.