This was a suit to recover the possession of three lots, in Cambridge city. Answer in two paragraphs: 1. General denial. 2. That the defendants are railroad corporations, organized under the general law of this State, and as such have built their respective roads; that it was necessary to build a passenger depot at the intersection of their roads; that they built such a depot on said lots, and now use the same therefor, said-lots being no' more than is necessary for that purpose, and for the track of one of the defendants, the Cincinnati and Indianapolis Junction R. R. Co., which is laid on said lots; that no damages have been assessed or paid for said appropriation, and that this is the possession alleged in the complaint. A demurrer to the second paragraph of the answer was overruled, and upon this arises the only question in the case.
The constitution of the State provides 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.” Art. 1, § 21. The possession of the lots in question was taken in defiance of this safeguard of the fundamental law. This, and nothing more, is pleaded as a bar to the suit. Can such unlawful seizure of property confer any right to hold possession of it? We have held that the act of seizure will, in enforcement of the constitution, be prevented by injunction. Sidener v. The Norristown, &c., Turnpike Co., 28 Ind. 623. But the taking by
But, it is argued that the owner of property may waive his right to prior compensation. Undoubtedly, but no such waiver is shown by the answer, and, in the absence of an averment, we cannot presume it. This provision of the constitution is too plain to be misunderstood, and too just and wise to excuse any disposition on our part to permit it to be evaded or frittered away. As against a private corporation, it protects the citizen in the possession and ownership of his property until compensation for it shall be assessed and tendered, and the taking without the precedent conditions which authorize it is wholly without warrant of law, and confers no right whatever, and a possession so obtained is plainly unlawful, for which he has whatever remedy the law gives for an unlawful deprivation of his possession. In the ease of lands, that remedy is a suit to recover the possession, a common law remedy for that wrong. The case is not one where a new right is created, and a particular remedy provided to secure it. The right to have damages assessed was not intended as an exclusive remedy for the taking of property without previous compensation. It is very inadequate to the purpose in many cases. It is well adapted to cases where the owner chooses to waive prior compensation, and is content to believe that the damages,assessed will be paid when ascertained, or is content with such final process as the law gives for the collection of a judgment for money. It is his right to make this waiver. But the constitution cannot be satisfied with such action of the courts as will allow his property, against his will, to be first taken, and. himself turned over to such vexatious litigation to obtain compensation, as he may meet afterwards. There must be snperadded, in order to make the remedy at all efficient, an injunction to stay the taking until the damages shall be paid. But this is not provided for by statute. It is an
Green v. Boody, 21 Ind. 10; The Indiana Central Railway Co. v. Oakes, 20 id. 9; The New Albany and Salem R. R. Co. v. Connelly, 7 id. 32; The Lafayette Plank Road Co. v. The New Albany and Salem R. R. Co., 13 id. 90, and Sidener v. The Norristown, &c., R. R. Co., 23 id. 623, are cited by the appellee. The last named case is strongly against the appellee, and it is there said., that “ cases decided where compensation was not required to precede the taking, cannot be authority upon this question.” We have now endeavored to show why they cannot be applicable either to that case or this. The other cases named, so far as they are variant from the opinion now given, must be overruled, because they do, inadvertently, apply doctrines thus shown to be inapplicable.
The judgment is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded, with directions to sustain the- demurrer.