34 Wis. 271 | Wis. | 1874
Chapter 173 of the Laws of 1860 provides as follows : “ Section 1. The track, right of way, depot grounds and buildings, machine shops, rolling stock, and all other property necessarily used in operating any railroad in this state, belonging to any railroad company, are hereby, all and singular, declared to be, and they shall henceforth remain exempt from taxation for any purpose whatever; and it shall not be lawful to assess or impose taxes upon any property before named: Provided, however, that all the property hereinbefore mentioned shall be subject to special assessments, for local improvements, within cities and incorporated villages : And provided, also, that all lands owned or claimed by such railroad companies, not adjoining the track of such company, shall be subject to all taxes, to the same extent as though this act had not been passed.”
The enumeration in this statute of the kinds of property exempted from taxation is certainly sufficiently comprehensive to ■include the real estate described in the complaint. The corporations to whose property and franchises the plaintiff has succeeded, and the plaintiff, were the owners thereof during the
We have no concern on this appeal, with the parcels or lots which the county court held were thus exempt, but only with those which were held to have been liable to taxation. The question to be determined is, therefore, whether the property which the county court held liable to taxation, or any portion of it, was necessarily used in operating the railroads of the plaintiff or its predecessors, during the aforesaid years.
It must be admitted that all, or nearly all, of such property was used in connection with the business of the plaintiff and the other corporations above mentioned, and, in one sense, was used in operating their railroads. Conceding, for the purposes of the case, that it was used in operating such railroads, we come directly to the question, Was it necessarily so used?
To answer the question correctly, it becomes necessary to determine the sense in which the word “necessarily" is used in the statute. The term has no fixed, absolute significance, but is, to some extent, a relative one. There are different degrees of necessity. A thing is necessary in the highest degree, when it is inevitable — when it must be. In a lesser degree that is necessary which cannot be otherwise without preventing the purpose intendéd; that which is indispensable, requisite or essential. Webster’s Die. The term, therefore, signifies something more than mere convenience, and may signify something-less than that which is inevitable. In the case of Mil. & St. Paul Ry Co. v. The Board of Supervisors of Crawford Co., 29 Wis., 116, it was held that the law exempting certain railroad property from taxation should receive a fair and liberal construction in favor of the railroad companies, for the reason that' such exemption is not a bonus or- donation to the corporations,
In the case above cited (Railway Co. v. Supervisors, etc.), wo had occasion to construe this exemption law, and we there held that a building which was used principally as a hotel, and was kept in the manner hotels are usually kept, for the accommodation and entertainment of all persons, whether travellers upon the railway or not, together with the outbuildings and inclosures necessary to a hotel, and the land covered thereby and included therein, were not exempt from taxation under this law, although the hotel was adjacent to the railroad track, and was owned and controlled by the company, and portions of it were used as a station house or depot for the accommodation of travelers on the railroad of the company. The decision was put upon the ground that it is not usual or necessary for railway companies to carry on a general hotel business, and hence that the property was not necessarily used in operating the railroad, within the meaning and intent of the statute. That case also decides that if the property is principally used for a purpose not necessary to the operating of the railroad, and if, to a small extent only, it be necessarily used in operating the road, it is not within the exemption of the statute.
In looking through the adjudged cases on this subject, we find the rule laid down, that the exemption of railroad property from taxation is co-extensive with the right of the railroad company to take land for its use by condemnation; and that the limit of such right is the limit of the exemption. State, N. J. R. R. & Trans. Co. v. Hancock, 83 N. J. Law R., 315. This rule seems reasonable and just, and it may furnish a more certain test by which to determine, in any given case, whether
It is indisputable that the legislature has power to confer on a railway corporation the right of eminent domain only in those cases in which the property is sought to be condemned to some use of a public nature, that is to say, for some purpose pertaining to the obligations of the company to the public. And it is not to be presumed that the legislature has attempted or will attempt, to confer that right, except in cases where its exercise is a public necessity.
It is not proposed here to define the limits of legislative power in this behalf. It is sufficient for our present purpose to say that we do not find in the charters of the railroad companies to whose franchises the plaintiff has succeeded, or in the amendments thereto, any indication that the legislature intended to confer upon those companies this high prerogative of sovereignty any further than was necessary to enable them to fulfill those obligations which are strictly public in their character.
The original charter of The Milwaukee & Waukesha Railroad Company, approved February 11. 1847 (Laws of 1847, p. 194), as amended by ch. 49, Laws of 1850, conferred upon that company and upon its successor, The Milwaukee & Mississippi Railroad Company, the right to take, by condemnation, a strip of land four rods wide for its railroad, and adjacent lands beyond the four rods, “when necessary for the purpose of erecting depot buildings, station houses, and necessary fixtures for the operation of the business of said road, * * * and to obtain earth, gravel and other materials for embankments and struc-. tures necessary to the construction and repairs of said road.” (See. 2.)
The charter of The La Crosse & Milwaukee Railroad Company (Laws of 1852, ch. 198), as amended by ch. 280, P. & L. Laws of 1856, confers upon that company the same power to.
The principle upon which the state will permit the right of eminent domain to be exercised, is indicated by sec. 2, art. XI of the constitution: “No municipal corporation shall take private property for public use against the consent of the owner, without the necessity thereof being first established by the verdict of a jury.” Of course, the manner of condemnation there prescribed is not applicable to those cases where the right is conferred by law upon other than municipal corporations; but in the charters of the various corporations to whose franchises the plaintiff has succeeded, we find no grant of the right to take private property by condemnation, except where such taking is necessary to enable the corporations to perform their obligations to the public.
Furthermore, it is a question worthy of careful consideration, whether, under the general railroad law (Laws o£ 1872, ch. 119), a person cited to show cause why his land should not be condemned to the use of a railway company, may not defeat the condemnation by showing that the land proposed to be taken
It should be further observed, that, had the rule that the right of exemption from taxation is coextensive with and limited by the right to take property by condemnation, been applied in the case of The Mil. & St. Paul Ry Co. v. The Board of Supervisors of Crawford County, and had the case been determined solely upon the application of that rule, the decision would have been the same. And in the present case, the application of that rule alone, or of the rule hereinbefore stated for the construction of the exemption law, will lead to the same results.
Having thus determined the general principles of law applicable to the case, it only remains to ascertain therefrom whether the specific lots and parcels of land which the county court held liable to taxation during the years aforesaid, were so liable.
The business of providing warehouses and storing therein,
The proposition that the business of the warehouseman is separate and distinct from that of the carrier who brings to the former merchandise for storage, is recognized in the general railroad law of 1872, wherein the rights of private owners of elevators, warehouses and mills at stations on any railroad, are, to some extent, protected. (See sec. 47.)
The grain which is shipped by plaintiff’s railroad to Milwaukee, and which is to remain in store there, may as well be delivered into warehouses owned and operated by other parties as into those owned and operated by the plaintiff; and it is fair to presume that were the plaintiff not engaged so extensively in the warehouse business in that city, private capital and enterprise would furnish all necessary facilities for handling and storing all of the grain shipped to that place. It is no doubt true that entire harmony and concert of action between the carrier and warehouseman are important. These are important in a thousand other business relations of a purely
The relation of the warehouse business, as conducted by the plaintiff in Milwaukee, to its functions as a common carrier, is the same in principle as the relation of the hotel business in Prairie du Chien to such functions. In each case, the business is a convenience to the plaintiff, and promotes its business interests ; but in neither case does the law require the plaintiff to engage therein.
If the foregoing views are correct, it seems clear that the plaintiff cannot take property by condemnation for the purpose of erecting elevators upon it, for the storage therein, for hire, of grain shipped over the plaintiff’s railroad, after its liability as a common carrier, in respect to such grain, has ceased ; or, at least, that it cannot do so under existing laws.
It seems impracticable to separate the land from the structure thereon, for the purposes of taxation, and to hold that one is taxable, and the other is not; and no good reason is perceived for doing so. If the structure is taxable, it seems to us that the land upon which it is erected must be taxable also. Land and structure together constitute the realty, and are necessarily used together for the common purpose.
Our conclusion is, that the elevator property in question was not necessarily used in operating the railroad of the plaintiff, and hence, that the same was not exempt from taxation during the years the same was assessed and taxed, as stated in the complaint.
It is the duty of the plaintiff (as it was of its predecessors) to furnish all necessary structures in which to receive freight for shipment over its lines, and into which to unload freight from its cars for delivery to the owner, consignee or connecting car
In our opinion, these warehouses and sheds, and the land which they occupy, should not have been held liable to taxation.
It appears, however, that a portion of such blocks and lots have been taken for canal purposes. If the title to any portion of such lands has passed out of the plaintiff, of course for such portion it should not be taxed after it ceased to be the owner thereof.
It is only necessary to'add that all lots or parcels of land necessarily used by the company for its repair shops or yards, or depot grounds, or for the preservation and protection of its r.oad bed, or for the purpose of obtaining gravel and earth therefrom for its road (the same being adjacent to the railroad of the .plaintiff), are also exempt from taxation; but dwelling houses, and the land occupied by them, are not so exempt.
By the Court.— The judgment of the county court is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to that court to render judgment in accordance with this opinion.