after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
The condemnation of land in this case has been held by the courts of Virginia to be authorized by the constitution and laws of that State,, and we have no right to review that aspect of the decision. The law of Virginia permits no exercise of the right of eminent domain except for public uses.
Fallsburg Power Company
v.
Alexander,
101 Virginia, 98;
Dice
v.
Sherman,
We proceed to consider whether the uses of the spur track for which the land was taken were private, and therefore such uses for which a taking by the right of eminent domain is forbidden by the Fourteenth Amendment. The courts of the States, whenever the question has been presented to them for decision, have, without exception, held that it is beyond the legislative power to take, against his will, the property of one and give it to another for what the court deems private uses, even though full compensation for the taking be required. But, as has been shown by a discriminating writer (1- Lewis on Eminent Domain, 2d ed., sec. 157), the decisions have been rested on different gounds. Some cases proceed upon the express and some on the implied prohibitions of state constitutions, and some on the vaguer reasons derived from what seems to the judges to be the spirit of the Constitution or the fundamental principles of free government. The rule of state decision is clearly established and we have no occasion here to consider the varying reasons which have influenced its adoption. But when we come to inquire what are public uses for which the right of compulsory taking may be employed, and what are private uses for which the right is forbidden we find no agreement, either in reasoning or conclusion. The one and only principle in which all courts seem to agee is that the nature of the uses, whether public or private, is ultimately a judicial question. The determination of this question by the courts has been influenced in the different States by considerations touching the resources, the capacity of the soil,'' the relative importance of industries to the general public welfare, and the long-established methods and habits of the people; In all these respects conditions vary so much in the States'and-Territories of the Union that different results might well be expected. Some cases illustrative of the tendency of local conditions to affect the judgment of courts are
Hays
v.
Risher,
32 Pa. St. 169;
uses in conformity with its laws. In Missouri Pacific Railway v. Nebraska, ub. sup., it was pointed out (p. 416) that the taking in that case was not held by the state court to be for public uses. We must not be understood as saying that cases may not arise where this court would decline to follow the state courts in their determination of the uses for which land could be taken by the right of eminent domain. The cases cited, however, show how greatly We have deferred to the opinions of the state courts on this subject, which so closely concerns the welfare of their people.' We have found nothing in the Federal Constitution which prevents the condemnation by 'one person for his individual use of a right of way over the land of another for the construction of an irrigation ditch; of a right of way over the land of another for an aerial bucket line; or of the right to flow the land of another by the erection of a dam. It remains for the future to disclose what cases, if any, of taking for uses which the state constitution, law, and court approve will be held to be forbidden by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States)
Affirmed.
