30 Ind. App. 557 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1903
This cause was transferred from the Supreme Court under the provisions of the act of March 12, 1901 (Acts 1901, p. 565).
Appellant filed in the office of the clerk of the Delaware Circuit Court its instrument of appropriation, averring that it is a corporation organized under the laws of Indiana for the purpose of drilling and mining for petroleum and natural gas, and otherwise acquiring gas and petroleum wells and the product thereof, and to furnish the same to its patrons for use within this State, and by manufacture to convert the same into gas for fuel and illuminating purposes, and other articles of commerce, and digging trenches and laying pipes for the purpose of conducting gas to its patrons within this State; that it gives notice of its desire and intention “to enter upon, use, hold, and appropriate the fee simple interest, subject to the rights of the public therein as a public highway, as and for a right of way for its pipe-line, of the following described landsA strip one rod wide off the west side of a certain quarter section “being so much of said tract not exceeding one rod in width as lies within the public highway now located thereon and abutting on the center line of said highway; that said real estate is necessary for the use of said company for its
Notice having been given, and the instrument of appropriation submitted to the circuit court at a regular term, for the appointment of appraisers, appellees excepted to the instrument of appropriation, and denied the power of the court to take any further action, for the reasons, among others, that the instrument of appropriation does not show that the appropriation is desired for the purposes for which the right of eminent domain may be invoked under the statute, and that it is sought to condemn the fee simple of the real estate, and not a mere easement.
Eor the purposes of this opinion it is unnecessary to set out all the objections made to the application. Some of these objections tender issues of law, while others tender issues of fact. The manner of raising objections apparent upon the face of the instrument of appropriation is not uniform in all jurisdictions. The same result may be reached by different methods. Lewis, Eminent Domain (2d ed.), §389. The proceeding is in its nature a special statutory one, and while it is not, in the strict sense, an ordinary civil action, yet the provisions of the civil code as to matters of practice may be called to the aid of such statute. Lake Shore, etc., R. Co. v. Cincinnati, etc., R. Co., 116 Ind. 578.
The statute (§5103 Burns 1901) upon which the proceeding is based provides: “That whenever any company, corporation or voluntary association incorporated under the laws of the State of Indiana, or which may hereafter be incorporated thereunder, for the purpose of drilling and mining for petroleum or natural gas, or otherwise acquiring gas or petroleum wells and the products thereof, and to furnish the same to its patrons for use within this State, and by manufacture to convert the same into gas for fuel and illuminating purposes, and other articles of commerce, shall desire to dig trenches apd lay pipes for the purpose of conducting gas to its patrons within this State, or conducting gas from its wells, or wells leased by it, or from its manufactory to any point within this State, such company, * * * * shall possess” certain powers, among them the power of eminent domain.
By §5104, supra, such company, if unable to purchase real estate required for the construction of its trenches and laying of mains and connecting pipes, is given the right to acquire an easement for such purpose in and upon such land. Section 5105, supra, provides that such a proceeding shall be instituted by depositing, “with the clerk of the circuit or other court of record in the county where the line lies, a description of the rights and interests intended to be appropriated, and an easement in such land, rights and interest shall belong” to such company “for the purpose specified” upon payment or tender of payment as provided. Provision is also made that if the company and the landowner can not agree touching the damages,. the company shall deliver to the owner, within the county, “a copy of such instrument of appropriation,” or if the owner does not reside in the county the company shall publish in a newspaper “an advertisement reciting the substance of such
Section 5105, supra, follows closely the language used in §5160, supra, concerning proceedings to appropriate land for railroads, and proceedings in both cases are governed by the same rules. Consumers Gas Trust Co. v. Huntsinger, 12 Ind. App. 285.
The statute concerning proceedings to appropriate land for railroads, — §§5159, 5160, 5164 Burns 1901, the same being §§14, 15, 17 of an act approved May 11, 1852; and §396 of the code (§399 Burns 1901), the same being §99 of an act approved June 18, 1852; and §896 of the code of procedure, touching the writ of assessment of damages (§908 Burns 1901), the same being §697 of an act approved June 18, 1852, — are to be construed in pari materia. Swinney v. Ft. Wayne, etc., R. Co., 59 Ind. 205; McMahon v. Cincinnati, etc., R. Co., 5 Ind. 413.
It is first argued by appellant’s counsel that the court had no jurisdiction at the stage of the proceedings involved to entertain any exceptions; that the court had no jurisdiction to act judicially, but only ministerially, and to determine in a ministerial way, upon the face of the instrument of appropriation, whether appellant was a de facto corporation, and whether the proceedings were regular upon their face.
The question raised is one of practice, and seems never to have been expressly settled in this State. The propriety of the exercise of the right of eminent domain is a question exclusively legislative, but the proceedings in the exercise of the right may be before such body or tribunal as the legislature may designate. Whether such a proceeding is, strictly speaking, a civil action, or a special
The power of eminent domain, — the right to appropriate the private property of a citizen to a public use without his consent, — guarded as carefully as it can be, has been characterized by the Supreme Court as a “very high and dangerous one,” and that no restriction for the better protection of the property owner should be disregarded unless the very words of the statute require it. Lake Shore, etc., R. Co. v. Cincinnati, etc., R. Co., 116 Ind. 578. It is doubtless true that these questions could be raised at a later stage of the proceedings. But the right of the corporation to maintain the proceedings at all is a question logically preliminary to the appointment of the appraisers. The power exists only by virtue of some statute. And the statute not only designates the corporation to which the power has been delegated, but it also limits the purpose for which the power can be exercised. If the corporaiton is not such as the statute designates, or if it seeks to condemn for purposes not designated in the statute, or has
In Lake Shore, etc., R. Co. v. Cincinnati, etc., R. Co., supra, it was held that an instrument of appropriation which omitted a fact in its nature jurisdictional was an insufficient foundation for subsequent proceedings, and the judgment was reversed for failure of the petition or instrument of appropriation to show an effort of the corporation seeking title to acquire it by agreement. We can see no reason for an appellate tribunal saying to a trial court that it has no power to pass upon the sufficiency of - the instrument of appropriation until after the appointment and the report of the appraisers, although the same question was presented before this additional expense was incurred. A court should not be required to enter upon the question of compensation where the instrument shows upon its face that it is insufficient to invoke the statutory power. We fail to see how the condemning party can be harmed by determining these questions at the beginning of the proceedings, nor should it be heard to complain that it was prevented from summarily paying or tendering the damages assessed and entering into possession of the real estate when its very right to condemn was the chief question presented. Rot only do the implied holdings in Ney v. Swinney, supra, and Lake Shore, etc., R. Co. v. Cincinnati, etc. R. Co., supra, as well as the better reasoning, support the practice above indicated, but authorities in other jurisdictions are to the effect that the right to condemn is to be determined before the appointment of ajipraisers to estimate the amount of compensation to be made. In re Split Rock Cable Road Co., 128 N. Y. 408; Baltimore, etc., R. Co. v. Pittsburg, etc., R. Co., 17 W. Va. 812; Wheeling, etc., Bridge Co. v. Wheeling Bridge Co., 138 U. S. 287, 11 Sup. Ct. 301, 34 L. Ed. 967. See In re St. Paul, etc., R. Co., 34 Minn. 227; In re Split Rock Cable Road Co., 12 N. Y. Supp. 116; Cin
There are cases holding that where a statute provides that the application may be to a judge, officer, or board acting in a ministerial capacity, and “such a case is made as is required by the statute,” the officer or tribunal has no discretion whether or not appraisers will be appointed, but that the duty to make the appointment is imperative. But in such cases the principle is recognized, that necessarily the officer must look to see whether such a case is presented as authorizes and requires him to act. Illinois, etc., R. Co. v. Rucker, 14 Ill. 353; Western Union Tel. Co. v. Dickson, 30 Wis. 389; Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Wilson, 17 Ill. 123; Lewis, Eminent Domain (2d ed.), §387.
The statute here in question provides that upon filing the act of appropriation with the clerk of the circuit or other court of record, and the delivery of the copy or making publication, “the circuit court or other court of record, or any judge thereof in vacation,” shall appoint appraisers. In the case at bar the application came on for hearing by the circuit court at a regular term. The statute permits the application to the court in a- particular manner and upon certain conditions, and in such case it is said, “the court necessarily has power to determine whether the conditions exist or have been complied with, and whether the application has been made in proper form. * * * The adjudications upon such questions will be as binding as adjudications in any other cases, and the same questions cannot be again litigated between the same parties. Where the application is to a court, the better practice clearly is that all objections which go to the right of'the petitioner to maintain the pa’ocee<lings should be determined before the assessment of damages is entered upon.” Lewis, Eminent Domain (2d ed.), §388.
We think the court not only had the right to inquire into the sufficiency of the instrument of appropriation prop
It is first argued against the sufficiency of the petition, that it does not show that appellant seeks to appropriate the real estate for any purpose authorized by statute, nor does it show that condemnation is sought for a public use. The statute authorizes the corporation to condemn only “for the purpose of conducting gas to its patrons within this .State, or conducting gas from its wells or wells leased by it, or from its manufactory to any point within this State.” The only averment in the instrument of appropriation which attempts to state the purpose of condemnation is, .“that said real estate is necessary for the use of said company for its pipe-line and connections therewith in the construction of the same from the city of Muncie north to the gas-weills and territory owned by said company in the northern part of said county of Delaware.”
The right of eminent domain is limited, not conferred, by the Constitution. The legislature must grant the authority and prescribe the manner in which and the purpose for which it may be exercised. But this grant of authority must be within the constitutional limitation that the property sought to be taken is for some public use. And while the courts can not question the wisdom of the act of the legislature declaring the exigency or necessity, for the exercise of the right, yet the courts may prevent a legislative attempt to permit the taking of private property for other than a public use. If a legislative act assumes to authorize the seizure of the property of one citizen for the benefit of another, it can not be upheld. “The right of eminent domain,” said the court in Blackman v. Halves, 72 Ind. 515, “can only be invoked for the compulsory taking or the enforced appropriation of private property when some pub-
It must be conceded that in this State private property can be taken only for a public use. “It is conceded on all hands,” says Judge Cooley, “that the legislature has no power, in any case, to take the-property of one individual and pass it over to another without reference to some use to which it is to be applied for the public benefit.” Cooley, Const. Lim. (’6th ed.), 651; Lewis, Eminent Domain (2d ed.), §157; Missouri Pac. R. Co. v. Nebraska, 164 U. S. 403, 17 Sup. Ct. 130, 41 L. Ed. 489. It is not controverted that the property must be taken for a public use, but the question is, what is a public use within the meaning of the law, and whether under our Constitution private property may be taken for the public good or general welfare as contradistinguished from a technical public use. The fact that the present Constitution (Art. 1, §21) does not contain the term “public use,” and that the Constitution of 1816 (Art. 1, §7) did contain these words, is of no significance in view of the decisions by the Supreme Court. Neither Constitution expressly forbids the taking of private property for a private use, and under neither could private property be taken except for a public use. The effect
In determining whether a proposed use is public, we must look not only to the character of the business to be done, but also to the proposed manner of doing it. If, the use is merely optional with the owners, or the public benefit merely incidental, it is not a public use authorizing the exercise of the power of eminent domain. There must be in the general public a right to a definite use of the property, a right which the law compels the owner to 'give to the general public, and which is guarded and controlled by the law. It is not enough that the general prosperity of the community is promoted. "Public interest and public use are not synonymous. The establishment of furnaces, mills and manufactories, the building óf churches and hotels, and other similar enterprises, are more or less matters of public concern, and promote, in a general sense, the public welfare. But they lie without the domain of public uses for which private ownership may be displaced by compulsory proceedings.” Matter of Niagara, etc., R. Co., 108 N. Y. 375. “The true criterion,” said the court in Twelfth St. Market Co. v. Philadelphia, etc., R. Co., 142 Pa. St. 580, “by which to judge of the character of the use is whether the public may enjoy it by right, or only by permission. The test is, not what the corporation owning the land may choose to do, but what under the law it must do, and whether a public trust is impressed on the land.” See, also, Sholl v. German Coal Co., 118 Ill. 427, 59 Am. Rep. 379; Matter of Eureka Basin, etc., Co., 96 N. Y. 42; Railroad Co. v. Iron Works, 31 W. Va. 710, 8 S. E. 453, 2 L. R. A. 680; West River Bridge Co. v. Dix, 6 How. 507, 12 L. Ed. 535; In re Split Rock Cable Road Co., 128 N. Y. 408, 28 N. E. 506; Railway Co. v. Petty, 57 Ark. 359, 21 S. W. 884, 20 L. R. A. 434; In re Rhode Island, etc., R. Co., 22 R. I. 457, 48 Atl. 591, 52 L. R. A.
Appellant’s position, as stated in its brief, is that “under the statute it is not essential that the company should furnish to the public, or any part of it, natural.gas; it is sufficient if it furnishes it for its patrons for use within the State;” and it is argued that the development of natural gas and the carrying it to consumers, whether to one or many, or solely to a manufacturing mill and industry, is a public use for which the power of eminent domain might be exercised, for the reason that gas is public property, and any use or development of it would be a public use, and for the further ■reason that so furnishing gas would come within the principle of the mill and mine cases.
The fact that appellant is in its nature a public corporation (State, ex rel., v. Portland Nat. Gas. Co., 153 Ind. 483, 53 L. R. A. 413, 74 Am. St. 314), is not of itself sufficient to authorize it to exercise the power of eminent domain in order to malee a profit for its own benefit. Buckingham v. Smith, 10 Ohio 288. It is true it is held (State v. Ohio Oil Co., 150 Ind. 21, 47 L. R. A. 627; Townsend v. State, 147 Ind. 624, 37 L. R. A. 294, 62 Am. St. 477) that the “title to natural gas does not vest in any private owner until it is reduced to actual possession.” But it will not do to say that because the State owned it, so far as it was subject to ownership, after it is reduced to possession its owner is entitled to any greater or different consideration than is the owner of any other species of property. Supplying such a commodity, after it has become private jn'operty, to a single consumer would be no more a public use than so
The mill cases involve mills run by water-power, and were generally gristmills or sawmills regulated by statute and compellable to grind or saw for the public. It is true some of these acts have been sustained without regard to whether the mill was a public or a private mill. Reference is made to early cases in Massachusetts and New Jersey, and it seems the view was then entertained that in the absence of any restriction the legislature might take private property for any purpose calculated to promote the general good. But it was also held that the right to erect a dam and overflow land “is not a right to take and use the land of the proprietor above, against his will, but it is an authority to use his own land , and water privilege to his own advantage and for the benefit of the community. It is a provision by law for regulating the rights of proprietors on one and the same stream, from its rise to its outlet, in the manner best calculated, on the whole, to promote and secure their common rights in it.” Bates v. Weymouth Iron Co.; 8 Cush. 548; Murdock v. Stickney; 8 Cush. 113.
And in Turner v. Nye, 154 Mass. 579, 28 N. E. 1048, 14 L. R. A. 487, a bill to prevent defendant from maintaining a dam across a stream to create a pond for the culture of fish, the court said: “The statute was not an exercise on the part of the legislature of the right of eminent domain, but was enacted under the provision which gives it power to 'make, ordain, and establish, all manner of wholesome and reasonable orders, laws, statutes, and ordinances * * . * so as the same be not repugnant or contrary to this constitution, as they shall judge to be for the good and welfare of this commonwealth, and for the government and ordering thereof, and of the subjects of the same.’ Const. Mass. pt. 2, ch. 1., Art. 4. It is upon this, provision that the mill acts have been placed finally in this state, after what appear at times to have been somewhat
Counsel call especial attention to the case of Head v. Amoskeag Mfg. Co., 113 U. S. 9, 5 Sup. Ct. 441, 28 L. Ed. 889, in support of the proposition that the-taking of land for water-power for running any kind of mill or machinery is a public use authorizing the exercise of the right of eminent domain. But we do not so understand the holding in that case. After a discussion of the various colonial, territorial, and state mill acts, the court by Mr. Justice Gray, says: “The question whether the erection and maintenance of mills for manufacturing purposes under a general mill act, of which any owner of land upon a stream not navigable may avail himself at will, can be upheld as a taking, by delegation of the right of eminent domain, of private property for public use, in the constitutional sense, is so important and far-reaching, that it does not become this court to express an opinion upon it, when not required for the determination of the rights of the parties before it. We prefer to rest the decision of this case upon the ground that such a statute, considered as regulating the manner in which the rights, of proprietors of lands adjacent to a stream may be asserted and enjoyed, with a due regard to the interests of all, and to the public good, is within the constitutional power of the legislature.” Moreover, in another case (Cole v. LaGrange, 113 U. S. 1, 5 Sup. Ct. 416, 28 L. Ed. 896), decided on the same day, and the opinion written by the same justice, the court said: “The general grant of legislative power in the constitution of a state does not enable the legislature, in the exercise either of the right of eminent domain, or of the right of taxation, to take private property, without the owner’s consent, for any but a public object. Nor can the legislature authorize counties, cities or towns to contract, for private objects, debts which must be paid by taxes. It can not,
While there are in the cases conflicting views upon the construction of these early mill acts, yet it must be conceded that the reasons upon which statutes giving the right to condemn land for private mills were upheld, do not now exist. In a new country, into which emigrants were rapidly coming, without facilities for transportation, gristmills and sawmills were as necessary to the existence of a civilized comiminity as roads and bridges. The expense and great distance made the transportation of steam machinery impracticable, and in many cases impossible. The question at that time was not so much whether watermills were given the right to flow land for some public use, as it was that the public welfare required that they have such right. It is not difficult to see that there were times and places when and where public necessity was sufficiently urgent to authorize a legislature in granting''the right to flow land for a purpose which could not perhaps be termed a public use. A careful examination of these early acts, and the decisions under them, leads to the conclusion that tírese acts were sustained, not so much on the ground that they authorized the exercise of the right of eminent domain by private mills, as upon the ground that they provided regulations for the use of property which was necessary to the public welfare, and that, where the flowage of lands was regarded as a talcing of property under the power of eminent domain, the power could be exercised only for public mills. See Tyler v. Beacher, 44 Vt. 648, 8 Am. Rep. 398; Ryerson v. Brown, 35 Mich. 333, 24 Am. Rep. 564;
In some of the states where the taking of land for waterpower for running any kind of a mill has been upheld, the later decisions seem to doubt the validity of such acts. See Fleming v. Hull, 73 Iowa 598, 35 N. W. 673; Jordan v. Woodward, 40 Me. 317; Attorney-General v. City of Eau Claire, 37 Wis. 400; Harding v. Funk, 8 Kan. 315; Miller v. Troost, 14 Minn. 365.
It is claimed in argument that upon the authority of Kepley v. Taylor, 1 Blackf. 492, and Hankins v. Lawrence, 8 Blackf. 266, this State, is committed to the doctrine that the taking of land for water-power for running any kind of. mill or machinery is for a public use.
Kepley v. Taylor, supra, brought in 1818, was an action of trespass on the case for erecting a dam which caused the water to obstruct a ford. The defendant had previously procured a writ of ad quod damnum, and damages had been assessed in favor of the plaintiff’s grantor. The kind of mill for which the dam was erected is not stated, but the opinion does state that the ad quod damnum proceedings were based upon the act of the Territorial legislature of 1807. Ter. Stat. 1807, p. 194. That act authorized the writ only for gristmills, and from a consideration of that act the conclusion is irresistible that it intended to make such mills public agencies. The rates of toll are fixed, a penalty provided for excessive tolls, certain conditions imposed, such as grinding grain in turn, keeping correct sealed measures, and the like. As is said in the opinion, “The
' In Hankins v. Lawrence, 8 Blackf. 266, the Whitewater Valley Canal Company sought to condemn an acre of land adjoining a “certain lock and hydraulic power” on the canal, which acre “was and is necessary for a site for erecting and propelling by water, a gristmill, oil-mill, carding machine, and woolen factory.” It was alleged that the hydraulic power had been leased by the company for a term of years, and that “because of the diversion of water from Whitewater river into the canal said mills will be of great public utility.” This canal company was created by an act of the legislature approved January 20, 1842 (Local Laws 1842, pp. 37-45), and to it was given the uncompleted Whitewater canal'which the State had undertaken to construct, and failed, under the general internal improvement act, approved January 27, 1836 (R. S. 1838, pp. 337-350), the canal company succeeding to the State’s
We can not in this opinion set out the various provisions of the act of 1842, but it is manifest that these provisions made the canal company a quasi public corporation. The canal was made a public highway, with fixed and published tolls, and no other toll should be imposed for the use of the canal and “the works thereon erected,” but by 'the consent of the State it was authorized to take whatever land was “requisite for the most economically constructing and maintaining said canal and the works connected therewith and incident necessary to the navigation of the same.” The title taken under the act of 1836 was a fee, and not a mere easement, and the rights under that act were transferred to- the canal company by the act of 1842. Brookville, etc., Co. v. Butler, 91 Ind. 134, 46 Am. Rep. 580. The object of the company was to complete a public work in which the State retained an interest which the company was required to protect. The work itself was one of public concern. When the nature, powers, and purpose of the canal company are taken into consideration we do not think the case authorizes us to say that private property may be taken by condemnation for all kinds of mills. See Prather v. Western Union Tel. Co., 89 Ind. 501, 519; Whitewater, etc., Co. v. Boden, 8 Blackf. 130.
In the mine cases, a statute declaring that the mining of ores was a public use and that the right of eminent domain might be exercised therefor was upheld in Daton Mining Co. v. Sewell, 11 Nev. 394. And in Georgia it is held that land could be condemned for a ditch to conduct water for hydraulic mining (Hand Gold Mining Co. v. Parker, 59 Ga. 419), although in Loughbridge v. Harris, 42 Ga. 500, it is held that gristmills under public regulations were not a public use.
We do not understand that a pipe-line for the conveyance of gas or oil is necessarily a public use, or that it has been so held. The transportation and supply of natural gas for public consumption is a public use. Johnston’s Appeal (Pa. St.), 7 Atl. 167. See, also, St. Mary’s Gas Co. v. Elk County, 191 Pa. St. 458, 43 Atl. 321; Ridgeway Light, etc., Co. v. Elk County, 191 Pa. St. 465, 43 Atl. 323. And where a tube line for transporting oil is given the character of a highway, is for general use, and under police regulation, it is within the constitutional term “internal improvement,” and upon such a company the legislature may confer authority to exercise the right of eminent domain. West Virginia, etc., Co. v. Volcanic, etc., Co., 5 W. Va. 382.
In Wisconsin Water Co. v. Winans, 85 Wis. 26, 54 N. W. 1003, 39 Am. St. 813, 20 L. R. A. 662, appellant petitioned to condemn land to lay a pipe-line from certain springs at a distance from Milwaukee to the limits of the city, stating in the petition that it intended “to convey, distribute, furnish, and supply water from said springs
In the statute under consideration, the legislature evidently intended to confer the power of eminent domain upon such companies or corporations as are engaged in furnishing gas to the public. The statute uses the word patrons. Supplying gas to the public is the use for which it may take land. See Consumers Gas Trust Co. v. Huntsinger, 14 Ind. App. 156. And we think it clear that the instrument of appropriation should show such a purpose. Appellant asks to exercise an extraordinary privilege. It may be to its advantage to furnish all the gas it can produce to a single consumer. If it may ask in its instrument of appropriation that it he permitted to condemn land to lay its pipe-lines without stating the purpose for which it desires to furnish gas, it may ask to exercise the power to lay its pipes for furnishing gas to a single individual. There is no authority in the statute for saying that the public along such a line could demand and receive gas. The statute contains no such provision or regulation. After it has acquired the casement and laid its pipe-line
We think the instrument of appropriation is defective also for asking the right to take the fee under a statute which gives the right to acquire only an easement. The court.was asked to appoint appraisers to assess damages for the condemnation of a particular interest in the land. The statute has expressly limited the interest the corporation may acquire. If the instrument of appropriation may ask to condemn the fee, it may with equal reason ask to condemn a strip two rods wide instead of one. The court might properly refuse to grant the prayer of a petition asking more than the statute authorized. Ordinarily, a matter of this kind could be considered as having been amended, but as this is a special proceeding brought under a special statute it is no hardship on a party to require that he bring himself clearly within the terms of the statute.
Judgment affirmed.