132 Ky. 692 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
Appellant Greasy Creek Mineral Company owns a tract of land .in Knox county adjacent to the Cumberland Valley Branda of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad. It operates a coal mine on this land. In order to reach its mine with ears, it has built a spur track nearly a mile long. The land is mountainous-. Adjoining appellant’s land is another tract of about 600 acres owned by appellee. The latter opened a coal mine on its land. In order to reach its mine, it was necessary to build a spur railroad track about a mile long from the Louisville & Nashville line. This spur has to be on a different grade from appellants’ track, though running about parallel with it.
Appellee’s position is that the building of a railroad by a mineowner for the exclusive use of his own mine is a purely private enterprise; that the operator does not owe or discharge any public duty; and that, if he be allowed to exercise the right of eminent domain, it would be to let one person, under that power which lays alone in the sovereign, take one man’s property to another man’s private use. We do not find it necessary to enter into a discussion of the power of the state to empower a private person to take property of another by condemnation for private use. The statute in question1 in this case is a part of the chapter on railroads. It provides for the building of a railroad; not more than three miles long, for a particular purpose; that is, to a mine or quarry. The statute expressly brings such roads, so far as the conditions may apply, within the general laws regulating all railroads. We understand this to mean that these short roads, like trunk lines and other railroads, are subject to the laws affecting common carriers, and that they may be required to serve the public as common carriers. Indeed, such construction seems to have been implied in the opinion in Bowling Green Stone Co. v. Oman, 115 Ry. 369, 73 S. W. 1038. It may be that the owner of the track may not have cars and engines with which to serve the public; but if an
Appellants’ contention that appellee did not need the strips of land sought to be condemned is based upon the fact that it was possible for appellee to have' constructed, as it did, its tracks entirely upon its own land. While it is true that it is an engineering possibility to build the road on appellant’s own land,
One of the strips sought to be condemned lies just beyond appellee’s coal chute or tipples. A few yards after passing the tipple, the hill sets in abruptly, so there is not room to set the necessary empty ears, or to make a track to run the locomotives around the tipple, without; tunneling' into the mountain. The cost and labor to do that make it impracticable; but by turning out on appellant’s land at that point enough ground can be had to accommodate these necessary tracks'. We think this was also a necessity for the road. It is as necessary to have all requisite siding and terminal facilities as it is the main line of the road. "The purpose for the building of the road was to carry away the coal from these mines. That purpose would be interfered with if not defeated by denying the road room enough to switch and store enough oars to load the coal in as it was mined, and preparatory to shipping it away. In Saginaw R., etc., Co. v. Bordner, 108 Mich. 236, 66 N. W. 62, it was held the necessity existed justifying the condemnation where the railway company needed the additional ground to enable it to more conveniently get out gravel from certain gravel pits which it was operating. We do not mean to be understood as saying that mere
We perceive no error in the case, and the judgment is affirmed.