9 Ga. 475 | Ga. | 1851
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
Our duty in this case is, first to determine whether, according to the case made in the bill, the Plankroad Company in locating and laying out. their road, have acted within their charter ? In doing so, we are to hold the facts stated in the bill to be true. It was charged in the bill, and I believe was admitted in the argument, that they had located their road on one of the public roads of the County of Pike, through the whole extent of that road from the City of Griffin to the County line. That public road, it is charged, was laid out and constructed under the law, by the County of Pike, and at the expense oí that County. It is a highway, and was at the time of locating the plankroad upon it,
The charter authorizes the company to construct their road on the public roads. Of this we have no doubt. The act authorizes the building of a plankroad from Griffin to West Point, and provides for the right of way over the lands of individuals, and the means of assessing the damages, in case of disagreement between the proprietors and the company. In the 6th section it is declared, “ That whenever it shall become necessary for said Plank-road Company to use any part of a highway for the construction
But I do mean to say, that a grant of the right to appropriate to the purposes of a plankroad, an existing public highway, is a restraint upon common right — a limitation of a privilege which by existing law, belongs to all the people in common, to wit: the privilege of passing upon the highways of the State in pursuit of business or of pleasure, free of charge. That clause of this charter which relates to highways is to be strictly construed. By the limitation of the use of the highway to cases of necessity, all idea of a grant of the right of using the whole highway is excluded. The Legislature say, that whenever it shall become necessary for the plankroad to use any part of a public highway, &c. They speak of a necessity to use not the whole, but any part. As a part is less than the whole, where the grant is limited to a part, it can not extend mathematically, or legally, to the whole.
Now, we are to give a reasonable interpretation to the words of this clause, having reference to the subject matter, and also to other provisions. The subject matter is the grant of the road privilege to the company. It is declared in the charter, that they shall have the right to construct the road between two given points, to wit; Griffin and West Point, considerably remote from each other. The inference is, that they are empowered to run this road, in the direction of the terminus from the starting point, in the route found by survey the most convenient and best adapted to the work. If in pursuing this route, it becomes necessary to use any part of a public highway, they are authorized to use it. Used as the word necessary is, in reference to the objects of the law, and in connection with its other provisions, such interpretation is to be given to it, as will make the grant which it conveys available to the company. It is not to be so strictly construed as to defeat beneficial results to them. We consider that the necessity contemplated by the Legislature, is not an absolute, insurmountable necessity. For example : they did not
This they must do. Thfe Legislature did not intend that this assessment should be a matter of form, or that the benefits and damages should be imaginary values, to exist only in verbal reckoning. They intended that they should be found in dollars and cents — should be respectively stated, and be maintained as a memorial, by being filed in the Clerk’s office of the Superior Court • and that the public and the company should thus have the means of knowing what was the action of their agents. This requirement was intended to hold the commissioners to a strict accountability for the execution of their trust, by requiring them to record in detail, their judgment — and making it open to the inspection of all men. From the award of the commissioners an appeal lies in behalf of the company and of the Road Commissioners. This right of appeal may not be defeated, and must be held inviolate. In short, this company is bound, as well as all others, to pursue their charter. Neither we nor they can sit in judgment on the reasonableness or expediency of its requirements. They are bound to conform to the legislative will, and it is our duty to constrain them to a strict conformity. In thus plainly speaking, I am not to be understood as censuring the company. If the facts be true which the bill states, they would be fit subjects for judicial censure. Our judgment is founded on the case made in the bill. It may be true or not; we are to take it as true, for the purposes of this opinion. Nor are we to be understood as being at all unfriendly to the enterprise of this company. I speak what I know to be the opinion of each member of this Court, when I say that as citizens, we most cordially approved, and rejoice to see that this kind of improvement is likely to obtain to a great extent in our State. And farther, that the public spirited citizens who projected it arejentitled to the thanks of the State, for being among the first to move in a work which promises great good to the republic. But we need scarcely add, that it is our earnest endeavor to hold the scales of justice steady, ¡asid as Judges, to know neither men nor corporations, Kings nor Kaisers.
The complainants in this bill having stood by and permitted this company to construct a part of their road, without moving to enjoin them from so doing, the judgment of tins Court awarding the injunction, does not extend to so much of the plankroad as was in fact built before the application for an injunction was made to the Circuit Judge.
The Inferior Court have judicial functions. It is not necessary to inquire particularly what they are. They also have ministerial functions. They are the agents of the County for many purposes. They are authorized by law to lay out and opera roads — to appoint commissioners of roads in the several districts; of the County. They are the supervisors and managers of the property of the County — its Court-house and jail, and public bridges, for example. They impose the taxes authorized by law for County purposes — appoint the County 'Treasurer, who is amenable to them. Through him they keep all the funds of the County — appropriate and disburse them. These powers characterise them as agents; and for the purposes of their agency, they are collectively a corporation with limited powers. The
The easement in a public road, is a property in equity, belonging to the County at whose expense it is constructed. It is subject to use by the public at large — hence, as I before have said, it appertains to the public. Yet this is not inconsistent with the idea of an equitable interest or property in the County. The public use may be considered as a limitation upon that property. The interest which a County has in a public highway, springs equitably out of the fact, that that County, and not the whole public, have paid the costs of construction. The right to lay out and open the road, is derived from the Inferior Court, acting under the Legislature. The easement is a legislative grant. The people of the County make the grant available by the outlay which is necessary to open the road, and so long as the grant is unrevoked, the road, that is the easement, is an interest or property in the County. The Inferior Court are the depositories of this property, as well as any other. It is their duty to protect it, as much so as to protect the Court-house, and if it is violated, they have the right, as the agents or trustees of the County, to go into a Court of Equity for redress. Secondly, have the Inferior Court the right to sue in Equity, by injunction, to constrain the company to pursue their charter in the assessment of damages ? The charter, as well as the general law, settles this point. By the general law, the damages would be payable to the County Treasurer, and be subject, in his hands, to the order of the Inferior Court. They are the County agents for the receipt and disbursement of it. By law, no one else has the control of the fund when in hand, and no one else can enforce that provision of the charter which requires the company to pay it. As the fiscal agent of the County, in their character as a corporation, they are authorized to constrain the assessment, and to enforce them, to make it in pursuance of the charter. But the charter itself, in so many words, makes the Inferior Court the agent of the County, to receive and apply the damages, for it directs it to be paid-to them,, and to be expended in improving-
Let the judgment be reversed.