72 Mo. App. 271 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1897
The court, at the conclusion of all the evidence, declared, by an instruction, that under the pleadings and evidence the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.
oí way ¡special The interest which the defendant has in that part of the said lots which are occupied by its main and side tracks is merely a right of way. It is not a fee, nor a freehold estate; not a corporeal interest, but an incorporeal right; a mere easement that can not be taken on execution. Schulenberg v. R’y, 67 Mo. 442; McPheeters v. Bridge Co., 28 Mo. 467. It has been forty years since the supreme court of this state, in Dunn v. R’y, 24 Mo. 493, declared that it was against public policy to permit detached portions of a railway to be sold under an ordinary execution or under a judgment enforcing a mechanics’ lien. And this declaration has been several times since then repeated by the same high tribunal. McPheeters v. Bridge Co., ante; Schulenberg v. R’y, ante; Knapp v. R’y, 74 Mo. 374; Cranston v. Trust Co., 75 Mo. 29; Ireland v. R’y, 79 Mo. 573. These cases indicate a steady adherence by it to the policy declared in Dunn v. R’y.
The authority to make assessments for street improvements against the abutting lands to pay for the same is referable to the taxing power. Such assessments are not, however, taxes in the sense that term is usually employed. Levee Co. v. Hardin, 27 Mo. 496; Palmyra v. Morton, 25 Mo. 593; Shehan v. Hospital, 50 Mo. 155; St. Louis v. Allen, 53 Mo. 44; Keith v. Bingham, 100 Mo. 300; Independence v. Gates, 110 Mo. 374. As remarked by Judge Napton in the-first of the last cited cases, “the word ‘taxes’ means burdens, charges or impositions put or set upon persons or property for public use, and this is the definition which Lord Coke gives of the word talliage (2 Coke, Inst. 532) and Lord Holt in Carth. 438, gives the same definition in sub
The statutory provisions to which we have adverted do not, in our opinion, support the plaintiff’s contention. He would be just as well off had the statute not been enacted. It is doubtless true, as stated by plaintiff in the present case, that the able counsel who represented the plaintiff in Sweaney v. R. R., 54 Mo. App. 265, did not in their brief or argument call our attention to the said provisions of the statute, but since the bearing of the same upon the question there presented for decision is not perceived, it is not believed that had our attention been timely called thereto a different conclusion would have been reached. And we may here repeat, as applicable in this case, what was said by us in that, namely:
“Following then the spirit and evident trend of these decisions, the enforcement of these tax bills can not be permitted, as, in order to make the judgment available, some three hundred feet of this railroad highway must be segregated from the' continuous whole, and sold and conveyed to a third party. Indeed, if this lien should be allowed there is but one judgment that could be rendered and that is that the land sought to be charged be sold under a special fieri facias. * * * And since this detached part of the right of way can not be taken.and sold on execution, it is clear there is no valid lien. Dugan Stone Co. v. Gray, 43 Mo. App.*277 675.” This case is not distinguishable from Sweaney v. R. R., and must be decided the same way.
ZLl; : The plaintiff further contends that the rule forbidding the sale under execution of detached portions of any railway, though perhaps dictated by what was a wise public policy at the time of its announcement, has ceased to be so now, and that the legislature in view of that had reversed its policy by the enactment of said statutory provisions abrogating the rule. But we think the enactment of this statute was no more'than a recognition by the legislature of a rule established by the judiciary. It is an exception added to a general rule. If it indicates a change of policy it is only pro tanto.
The defendant cites City v. Eddy, 123 Mo. 546, in support of his contention that the lots described in his petition are subject to the lien claimed. In that case a certain block of ground in a city had been granted to the railway company for depot and yard purposes, and on it the lessees of the company maintained warehouses and elevators, which were reached by two railway tracks and on which tracks cars were stored. The two tracks wTere no part of the right of way. Here all the tracks are on the right of way. The two cases are not therefore analogous in their essential facts. The liability of the property in the one case to be charged with a proportion of the cost of the street improvement is as clear as the nonliability in the other.
The distinction between an assessment of a right of way and an assessment on land other than the right of way has been stated in a Pennsylvania case, Borough v. R. R., 20 Atl. Rep. 1052, in this way, namely: “That while the roadbed or right of way of a railroad company is not the subject of a claim for paving, it does not follow that a passenger or freight depot, the ground belonging to the company and used as a linn
UleldhA : Plaintiff further insists that the pleadings admit that the defendant is the owner of the fee in the lots which he seeks to have charged with the lien, and that therefore there can be no valid objection to selling the same under execution, subject to the defendant’s right of way. But in an examination of the pleadings we do not find such admission to be therein made. The admission of the answer is that it only “owns and uses the lots as a part of its right of way” and “for no other purpose.” The language can not be fairly construed into an admission that it is the owner of the fee. The ownership of the fee was in effect denied. There was no evidence tending to show such ownership by defendant. These suggestions sufficiently dispose of the insistance of the defendant last stated. The defendants were authorized by its charters to acquire a strip of land not exceeding one hundred feet wide for a right of way. R'y v. Seely, 45 Mo. 212; G. S. 1865, p. 332, sec. 2. The undisputed evidence is that the several tracks of the defendant are all on its right of way, which is less in width than it was authorized to acquire for that pur
It seems to us that there is much force in the argument that a railroad owning a right of way running through a city and abutting on a street should bear a part of the cost of the improvement of the street, but the argument is one that should be addressed to the law making power. We must declare the law as we find it.
Perceiving no error in the record, the judgment must be affirmed.