132 Mo. 34 | Mo. | 1895
These proceedings were instituted by the plaintiff, a street railroad corporation of St. Louis, under provision of ordinance number 12652, of that city, for the purpose of determining the “just compensation, to be paid by plaintiff to the People’s
By section 6, article 10, of the city charter of said city it is provided that, “any street railway company .shall have the right to run its cars over the tracks of •any other railroad company, in whole or in part, upon the payment of just compensátion for the use thereof, •under such rules and regulations as may be prescribed by ordinance, and it shall be the duty of the municipal •assembly to immediately pass such ordinances as may be necessary to carry this provision into effect.”
An ordinance, number 12652, was enacted under the provisions of the city charter quoted, which conferred on the plaintiff the right to use that part of ■defendant’s track, as before stated, upon paying defendant compensation for such uses under the provision of said ordinance. The ordinance, in case the two ■companies can not agree upon the compensation to be paid for such uses, provides for the appointment of ■three commissioners by the mayor, to hear evidence, ■examine the track, and determine the compensation to be-paid, and.the time and manner of payment; the •award is to be in writing returned to the mayor, whose ■duty it is to return the same with all the papers connected with the proceedings to the city register. Either party may file written exceptions to the report of the commissioners, and appeal to the circuit court, where the exceptions are to be heard, and such orders made as justice and. right may require, or a new •appraisement may be ordered upon good cause being •shown.
The circuit court after hearing the cause rendered ■the following decree:
11 Second. That the said plaintiff company shall pay to the said defendant on . the foregoing basis, for the use of said tracks, and the connections to be made therewith, by switches and otherwise, the total sum of twenty-six hundred and forty-three and 49-100 ($2,643.49) dollars per annum, in semiannual installments, in advance; the first of the said semiannual installments, namely: Thirteen hundred, twenty-one and 74-100 ($1,321.74) dollars, shall be due and payable when the said plaintiff company begins to make any connection between its tracks and those of the said defendant company, and said payment shall be made semiannually thereafter as long as such connection is continued, provided, however, that the said plaintiff company as a condition of the right to use said tracks, under this present proceeding shall make said connections within the time within which it is required to construct its said railway under the ordinance of the city of St. Louis authorizing it to construct the same, and that it shall make and maintain the switch and crossover connections of its tracks with the
“Third. Said plaintiff company shall annually pay one half of the cost and expense of keeping said tracks free and clear of snow and ice, within five days after demand, upon an account of said expense being furnished it, the said plaintiff company, by the said defendant company, on April 1, of each year.
“Fourth. Said plaintiff shall pay to said defendant, whenever it shall become necessary to renew the said tracks and the granite paving connected therewith one half the cost of such renewals, within twenty days after the renewals shall have been made, and it must pay all of such costs furnished by said defendant company to said plaintiff company, proportioned, however, according to that portion of the life of said tracks and granite paving during which the said plaintiff company may have occupied and used said tracks and paving, that is to say, the plaintiff company shall pay to the defendant company one half of so much of 'the whole cost of said renewals as may be equal to the fractional part of such entire cost produced by dividing such entire cost by the number of years and fractional parts of a year intervening between the time when plaintiff begins to use said tracks and the time when said renewals were made, plus one half of the number
“The said plaintiff company shall also execute and deliver to said defendant company a bond' in the sum of $10,000 before attempting its said connections with said tracks, with two or more sufficient sureties to be approved by the court, conditioned that it will pay its said part of the said renewals as provided for in this subdivision of this decree and judgment; with a right, however, on the part of the plaintiff to substitute for said bond or any bond subsequently given another good and sufficient bond, with sureties to be approved by said court; the said substituted bond whenever so approved, to operate as a release and discharge of the pre-existing bond, the said plaintiff company to give ■five days’ notice to said defendant company of its intention to give said substituted bond, which notice shall fix the time and place when said bond will be presented to the court for approval; the right also being reserved to said defendant company to apply to the court from time to time, upon five days’ notice to said plaintiff company, for an order requiring a new or additional bond in case any surety shall have died or become insolvent.
“Fifth. It is further ordered and adjudged that the said defendant have, and recover of, and from, the said plaintiff its costs and charges herein expended for which let execution issue.”
The following is a statement of the facts by the learned trial judge.
“The People’s Railway Company operates its cars by means of cable power and its roadway is so constructed. The Grand Avenue Railway will be operated by electric power with overhead wires and trolley system. Out of this difference in the method of operation arises one of the questions to be determined. For the operation of a cable road it is necessary to construct and maintain under the surface of the roadbed a conduit. For this purpose excavation is made along the entire length of track of sufficient width and depth, and in this is set a hollow wooden form, the outside of which is made to conform to the desired shape and size of the conduit required, and then the entire excavation outside of this form is filled in solid with cement concrete which when settled makes a permanent conduit, in which are placed the pulleys on which the cable runs.
“Owing to the fact that the cable thus operates under the surface of the ground and that the cars are to be operated by it, it is necessary to provide a continuous means of connection between the cars and cable, and this is done by having the top of the conduit made with a narrow longitudinal opening over which are placed two flat iron wires which constitute the ‘slot/ through which the ‘grip’ is extended into the conduit in such manner as to readily take hold and let go the cable and thus to operate the cars. The necessity of this ‘slot’ prevents the use of the ordinary ties and stringers used in the construction of the street railroad operated by electricity or horse power, and to supply their place iron yokes are used in the construction of the cable roadway. These are set in the excavation
I. Plaintiff’s first contention is, that the decree rendered by the circuit court is erroneous, in that it is based on an incorrect view of defendant’s property rights in the tracks proposed to be used. Especially is it claimed that the court erred in respect to two matters embraced in its decree; first, in including the conduit underneath the tracks in the determination of the value on which interest is to be paid as annual rental, and its requirement concerning payment of renewals of the tracks and paving.
As bearing upon these questions it may be conceded that the defendant has no exclusive franchise or property right in its occupancy of any street on which its tracks have been laid. The city has no power or authority to confer upon any corporation the exclusive right to use one of its streets for its own business. Railroad v. Railroad, 111 Mo. 666, and Railroad v. Railroad, 97 Mo. 457. It would seem, then, to logically follow, that the only right defendant has in the street is the right to occupy and use the same for the purpose granted, subject, however, to the right of the city to permit any other company to run its cars over defendant’s road, as the public convenience might require.
In speaking of the rights of parties situated similar to the parties to this suit in Railroad v. Railroad, 105 Mo. 562, the court said: “Plaintiff owns its road and franchises, it is-true; but the city has the reserved
But because defendant possesses no exclusive right to the use of the street it does not follow that its rights are not paramount to those of plaintiff, defendant having first occupied the street under a contract with the city.
It is true that plaintiff is granted the same right to run its cars on Grand avenue from the -same considerations that originally induced the grant of defendant’s franchise; and that it is required to make use of ■defendant’s tracks between Lafayette avenue and Tower Grove Park, but it can make no possible difference whether such right be public or private, as the .■only way that it can be exercised is by the payment of just compensation as provided by the city charter.
There was nothing allowed defendant in this case for diminished profits on account of competition in carrying passengers, or for the value of its franchise. It is, therefore, unnecessary to pass on those questions.
It is conceded by counsel for plaintiff that if the-operation of its cars over the tracks caused any damage-to the conduit, such damage would be a proper element-of compensation, and that in so far as the yokes perform the office of ties in supporting the tracks, the-value of ties should be included in the amount upon which interest is computed.
The fault of the argument is, the want of premise-upon which to base it. No ties were used in the superstructure of the road, and, in estimating the just compensation to be paid, we must take the conditions, as we find them. The phrase “just compensation,” as used in the charter of the city and its ordinance has-the same meaning which that phrase has when used in the federal and state constitutions with respect to the-exercise- of the right of- eminent domain, and when thus used “means a fair and full equivalent for the loss-sustained by the taking for public use.” Lewis on Eminent Domain, sec. 462, and authorities cited. In Bigelow v. Railroad, 27 Wisconsin, 478, it is said that it-“consists in making the owner good, by an equivalent in money, for the loss he sustains in the value of his property by being deprived of a portion of it.”
III. It is further contended that the court committed error in requiring bond' from plaintiff for payment to defendant of one half the costs of future renewals, whereas the adjustment of such expenses can not be equitably determined between the parties until the occasion arises, in which event the ordinance provides an ample remedy in a new proceeding.
The trial court adjusted all elements of compensation and damages, and provided for the payment thereof. And by the provision of said ordinance, either party may apply to the mayor of the city for a readjustment of the terms of the compensation, once in each two years. The court adjusted the compensation to which defendant is entitled in a way that seems eminently fair and just between the parties, or as nearly so as possible under the circumstances.
In a written opinion the court said: “It is doubtless true that some inconvenience may result from the requirement of a bond to cover the payment by the plaintiff of its share of renewals of rails and pavement which will be required in the course of time. But it seems to the court that this is the fairest and most equitable manner of adjusting the matter, which is involved in much difficulty as heretofore pointed out.”
Power to require the bond was conferred on the court by section 1268, of the ordinance, which authorizes the court “upon the trial to make such order therein as right and justice may require.” Moreover, in the absence of any such ordinance, the court had the inherent power under the circumstances of the case to require such a bond, if the equity and justice of the case required it.
Erom these considerations it follows that the judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.