86 S.E. 599 | N.C. | 1915
Civil action heard on return to preliminary restraining order. The action was for the purpose of restraining defendant company for entering and trespassing upon plaintiff's lands without warrant of law, defendants claiming the right to do so under and by virtue of ch. 141, Laws 1915, entitled "An act to encourage the reclamation and improvement of swamp and lowlands."
On the hearing it was made to appear that defendants were proceeding to cut a large canal through the lands of plaintiff, and there was evidence on part of plaintiff that he was a minority landowner lying along the route of the proposed canal; that he had not entered into any agreement or in any way joined in the undertaking, and that the cutting of the canal as proposed through the lands of plaintiff would cause him great damage. There was judgment dissolving the restraining order, and plaintiffs, having duly excepted, appealed. After stating the case: With every disposition to uphold the drainage laws enacted by our Legislature, we are unable to reconcile this statute with the provisions of our Constitution, guaranteeing the rights of private property. Constitution, Article I, sec. 17; Connor and Cheshire's Annotations, p. 52 et seq. The act, Laws 1915, ch. 141, provides, among other things, that a majority of landowners or persons owning three-fifths of the land in a given area of "defined swamp or lowland" may contract in writing with any person, firm or corporation to cut a canal and drain along a proposed route, "whether the owners of *750 said land have consented thereto or not," and the contractor shall then have the necessary right of way for that purpose and "for all things incident thereto through any lands or timbers situated within said swamp or lowland." The act then provides that, "on completion, the minority landowner may be held liable for his proper part of the cost, and, at the instance of the contractor, he may be cited before the court and have the same assessed against him, and the amount is declared to be a lien upon his property within the given area." There is no provision made for paying the minority or other landowner in case the proposed canal shall cause damage to his land over and above the benefits conferred, nor is there any responsible paymaster or fund designated or provided for the payment of such damage if it exist. On the contrary, a perusal of the statute will disclose that no such payment is contemplated or allowed by the law, the only hearing referred to being to ascertain and adjudge "what amount shall be paid by the various landowners who may have failed to arrange for and agree upon the compensation to be paid for the said drainage."
It will thus be seen that the majority in number or three-fifths in ownership "in any defined swamp or lowland," a very indefinite term for the justification of such unusual and extended powers, without notice to the minority landowners or any consultation with them, may contract and agree with any "person, firm or corporation," however inefficient or irresponsible, and such contractor is then authorized and empowered to enter on the lands of a private owner with any force he may consider desirable, cut a canal of any size or character that may be agreed upon between these third parties, and no provision whatever made for compensation to such owner for any damage that may be done to his property, the single limitation being that collections to be made from him shall not exceed the benefits derived by him.
It has long been recognized here that our lowlands, particularly in the eastern part of the State, are of such extended area and give such promise of productive fertility and their proper drainage affects (664) the public weal to such a degree that the power of eminent domain, when properly safeguarded, may well be conferred upon corporations or companies engaged in this work when, in a given case, it is of such extent that the exercise of the power is required for the efficient carrying out of the enterprise. Newby v. Drainage District,
In his well prepared and thoughtful argument before us we were referred, by counsel for the appellee to the case, among others, of Brown v. Keener,
If the proposed scheme shall contain promise of benefit to the lands affected, it may be that some arrangement between all the parties interested can be made by which the work may proceed, but we are compelled to hold that no justification for this proceeding can be had from this statute which, in its present form and for reasons given, is not a valid law. On the record, there was error in dissolving the restraining order, and the judgment of the court below is
Reversed.
Cited: Proctor v. Comrs.,