Land v. Wilmington & Weldon Railroad

12 S.E. 125 | N.C. | 1890

The court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, setting (73) aside the judgment of the clerk of the Superior Court, wherein the statute of limitations was held to be a bar. From this judgment the defendant appealed. The defendant entered upon the land of the petitioner and constructed its road in 1886. It has no conveyance of the land, nor has it acquired any title by lapse of time. Its title, therefore, must be derived from the provisions of its charter, and this does not provide for the vesting of title in the defendant until, either at its instance (section 14 of its charter, Rev. Stat.), or that of the petitioner (sec. 18, ib.), the damages have been assessed and paid. This is also true of the general railroad act (ch. 49, Code), the privileges of which are extended to existing railroad corporations. Code, sec. 1882.

No such proceedings were instituted by either party until the petitioner filed this petition on 15 February, 1890. Unlike the charter of the North Carolina Railroad Company (sec. 29), there is no time prescribed in the charter of the defendant, nor in the general railroad act, in which the owner is to be barred of his right of entry or compensation. It must follow, then, that the defendant is occupying the land of the petitioner without any legal title, and that, in the absence of any statutory provision to the contrary, the petitioner could sue in trespass or in ejectment. The possession of the defendant, however, (74) is protected by a provision of its charter, to the effect that *89 where the defendant has entered without any legal proceedings no action of trespass, or of any other character, shall be brought by the owner, except a petition to have his damages assessed.

This takes away all damages for the precedent trespass, and confines the owner to the compensation provided by the statute. These extraordinary privileges which have been conferred upon the defendant ought to be sufficient, it would seem, to meet all the reasonable demands incident to the construction of its road. But it is insisted that, while it may occupy the owner's land and acquire title by an adverse possession of twenty years, the owner is powerless to prosecute his only remaining remedy, except within the first three years of that period.

We cannot believe that such an anomalous state of affairs was contemplated by the Legislature.

The defendant could have acquired title by instituting proceedings under its charter, but this it has failed to do, and it would be only following the dictates of common justice to allow the owner his compensation (not damages for the trespass) at any time before the possession of the defendant has ripened into an indefeasible title. In other words, so long as the defendant is content to occupy the land without title, the owner should not be prevented from pursuing his single remedy. In the absence of any legislation in the charter, or in the general railroad acts, the defendant relies upon section 155, subdivisions 2 and 3, of the Code of Civil procedure. Pierce on R. R., 192, says that such special remedies are not ordinarily barred by the general statutes of limitation, but that this is usually done "by some express provision in the statute which creates the remedy." Conceding, however, that the general statute applies, we are of the opinion that the present proceeding is not embraced in any of its provisions. Subdivision 3 relates only to actions of trespass which, we have seen, cannot be maintained (75) at all against the defendant. Apart from this, however, trespass is not the true character of this proceeding. In support of this view, we have a case directly in point from Pennsylvania (McClintonv. R. R., 66 Pa. St., 404), in which it is held that "the petition, properly used, is not for the recovery of past damages under an unlawful entry, but for compensation for a right to be invested in the company. Though the latter is often denominated damages, its subject is essentially different from the former. It is called damages only in the sense of an unliquidated demand; but, in its nature, it is the price of a purchased privilege. On the contrary, the claim for the tortious entry and illegal user of the land is purely and properly damages. It is obvious, therefore, that the statute of limitations is not applicable to the petition, which does not determine, unless by consent of the parties, the former damages for intrusion, but compensation only for the future use." *90

The other provision relied upon (subdivision 2) refers to actions "upon a liability created by statute other than a penalty or forfeiture." We are unable to understand how the liability incurred by the interruption of an owner's constitutional right to occupy and enjoy his property can be said to be created by any statute. It is true that, under the defendant's charter, the petitioner is shorn of all of the usual privileges of ownership, save only a right to have compensation by a particular method of procedure. This right to compensation is conferred by the Constitution, and the liability of the defendant is not "created," but only regulated by statute. The language of the provision mentioned is contained in the Codes of several States, and we have been unable to find any decision applying it to cases like ours. It means precisely what it says, "a liability created by statute," such as "an assessment for the reclamation of swamps and overflowed lands" (76) (People v. Hurlburt, 71 Cal. 72), or the claims of a district attorney for his commissions on debts recovered for the county, where the statute provides for his payment. Highby v. CalavarusCounty, 18 Cal. 176, and like cases. These references serve to illustrate the meaning of the words of the statute, and very clearly indicate that they do not embrace a mere regulation for the enforcement of a right secured by the fundamental law of the land. In conclusion, we will add the remarks of Chief Justice Thompson in Delaware v. R.R., 61 Pa. St., 378, that "The defendant has no right to complain of delay as a reason for invoking the statute. The company might and ought to have proceeded and had the damages assessed and paid them, if it did not intend that the plaintiff . . . might take his time to test the damage, inconvenience or otherwise, that the road would be to his property before proceeding." The petitioner is entitled to the relief prayed for.

Affirmed.

Cited: Liverman v. R. R., 109 N.C. 54, 55; Utley v. R. R., 119 N.C. 723;Narron v. R. R., 122 N.C. 859; Haskins v. Asheville, 123 N.C. 639;Dargan v. R. r., 131 N.C. 625; Abernathy v. R. R., 150 N.C. 108; Lloydv. Venable, 168 N.C. 533. *91