53 Kan. 512 | Kan. | 1894
The opinion of the court was. delivered by
Isabella K. Fisher brought this action against the Kansas City & Southwestern Railway Company and the Missouri Pacific Railway Company to recover the value of a portion of her farm, which she alleged had been appropriated by the defendants for a right-of-way for a railroad, and damages to the land not taken. The petition is very long and circumstantial, and alleges an attempted condemnation of a right-of-way by the first-named railway company, and that such condemnation was invalid for various reasons, and specifically stated, among others, that the commissioners,
“before proceeding to so lay off said railroad route, never-*513 gave, or caused to be given, nor did the defendant ever give, or cause to be given, any notice whatever, by publication in any newspaper published in said Miami county, or any other newspaper, of the time when the same would be commenced, nor was any such notice ever given at all in Miami county or elsewhere Sy publication in any newspaper, as required by law.”
The defendants first filed an answer containing merely a general denial, but afterward filed an amended answer alleging a condemnation of the right-of-way by the Kansas City & Southwestern Railway Company. The plaintiff replied with a general denial of the averments of the answer. The trial was had before a jury, and a general verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $1,257.63 was returned; also, answers were made to special questions showing that the jury awarded $37 per acre for the land taken, and $5 per acre as damage to that not taken. None of the evidence is brought to this court.
It is contended that the averments of the petition are insufficient, and various allegations are criticised. We think, however, that enough is stated to show that the attempted condemnation was void, and that the averments with reference to the failure to give notice in the manner provided by the statute of the time when the commissioners would proceed to lay off the route is alone sufficient to avoid the condemnation proceedings. Inasmuch as the charge of the court to the jury contains the statement that “the records and proceedings in the condemnation of this land will be no bar to the recovery of damages by the plaintiff in this action,” we infer that the proceedings of the commissioners were offered in evidence, and were held by the court to be invalid. As the plaintiffs in error have not seen fit to incorporate a copy of these proceedings in the case presented for our consideration, it is to be presumed that the ruling of the court was right.
It is contended that the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, being a Missouri corporation, could not acquire a right-of-way
“That said defendants claim to be the owners of said railroad, so as aforesaid in operation across and over plaintiff's said above-described land, which said railroad is known and designated as the ‘Kansas City & Southwestern Division of the Missouri Pacific Railway;’ that said defendants are now in possession of and using said strip of land over and across the land of plaintiff, hereinbefore described, as and for a railroad track, on which to run their trains carrying freight and passengers, and thereby deprive plaintiff of any use of or control over said 7.82 acres of land, as above described.”
The petition also avers that the plaintiff is willing and elects that, upon payment of such damages as may be awarded upon final judgment in this action, the defendants may have and enjoy an easement and right-of-way for a railroad as though the same had been legally appropriated theerfor. While it may be true that a railroad company incorporated under the laws of another state cannot exercise the right of eminent domain to acquire a right-of-way in this state, we are unable to perceive how the defendants in this case could raise the question of their own want of power, nor do we perceive that a question of power to condemn a right-of-way is in issue. Railroad companies incorporated under the laws of any other state or territory of the United States may consolidate under the terms and conditions provided by statute with railroad companies owning lines of road in this state, or may purchase or lease the property of a connecting road, forming a continuous line with their road, in a neighboring state, under ¶¶ 1268 or 1269 of the General Statutes of 1889. There is nothing in the record to apprise the court of the nature of the contract between the two railroad companies. The general finding being in favor of the plaintiff, includes a finding in her favor upon all of the material averments of the petition.
Both companies seem to have rested their defense mainly on the condemnation proceedings instituted by the Kansas