1 N.E. 27 | NY | 1885
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *14 Among the numerous questions raised by the appellant, there are three which force themselves upon our attention. The proceeding is by the New York, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company to condemn the lands of the Union Steamboat Company, and so results in a collision of corporations.
1. It is claimed, on behalf of the resisting land-owner, that the railroad company has not legally established its corporate existence. In its petition, by which the proceeding was initiated, and which was verified, a due incorporation of the company was affirmatively alleged. In a special proceeding the moving affidavit, or verified petition if full and complete, is ordinarily a sufficient basis for an order founded upon it. If *17
its material allegations are not denied by some counter affidavit they stand sufficiently proved for the purposes of the ultimate order. But if these are denied by a counter affidavit, and so an issue of fact is distinctly raised, it is common and in many cases necessary, that such issue should be solved upon a reference, or by the court itself upon the examination of witnesses, and the production of appropriate proofs. (Matter ofLockport Buffalo R.R. Co.,
In Matter of N.Y. Bridge Co. (67 Barb. 295) it was held that the burden of disproving the allegations of the petition was wholly on the land-owner, whether there was a denial by affidavit or answer or not. But in Matter of N.Y. Central R.R. Co. (
2. It is further objected that the petitioner has lost its right to condemn lands by reason of its lease for the full period of its corporate life to the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Pennsylvania. We do not understand that the validity of this lease as between the contracting parties is seriously questioned. (Laws of 1839, chap. 213; Woodruff v. Erie Railway Co.,
3. It is further contended that the property sought to be taken is already so devoted to the public use as to protect it from condemnation to another public use. The proof shows that the Union Steamboat Company is a corporation created by and existing under the laws of this State, and engaged in the business of carrying by water passengers and freight on the great lakes of the north and using the property in question as a dock or wharf for the landing and delivery of a portion of its freight. In one sense, therefore, the property is already in use for public purposes, and quite as much so, it is contended, as it will or can be when devoted to the uses of the petitioner. Undoubtedly the facts bring us to the inquiry whether the use of corporate property for the public convenience and for purposes of a quasi
public character is sufficient to protect it from the *23
grasp, under the right of eminent domain, of another corporation whose property is held for similar public uses. The law did not confer upon the steamboat company the right to acquire land ininvitum, and that now held by it is held by purchase and by the same tenure as that of a private individual. The general authority conferred upon railroad corporations to acquire lands against the will of the owner is broad and comprehensive. In terms it covers all and excepts none. But because it could not be intended that the State, having authorized one taking, whereby the lands became impressed under authority of the sovereign with a public use, meant to nullify its own grant by authority to another corporation to take them again for another public use unless it so specifically decreed, it has been ruled that lands so held and impressed with a public trust were not embraced in words of general authority. Were the rule otherwise this evil would result: a corporation, number one, having the right of eminent domain, takes land from a similar corporation, number two, having the same right; number two thereupon proceeds again to condemn it for its own use and number one retaliates, and so the absurd process goes on. It is clear that the legislature never meant any such result, and hence, from any general grant containing in its terms no word of exception, there is necessarily excepted property already held upon a public trust by the authority and under the ward and control of the State. An examination of the cases in this court will show that the exception has gone no further. (Matter of B. A.R.R. Co.,
The order should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Order affirmed. *25