116 Va. 142 | Va. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
' These cases are before us upon a writ of error to an order of the circuit court, denying the right of the plaintiff in error to have commissioners appointed to condemn the land of either of the defendants in error, and dismissing the proceeding instituted by it for that purpose in each case.
• The subject matter of the two cases being precisely the same, and the evidence the same in each, they are by agreement of counsel heard and considered together here.
The defendants in error resisted these proceedings in condemnation in the circuit .court on two grounds,, which are relied on here:
*144 (1) That neither under the Constitution of 'this State nor the general laws thereof, nor the charter of the Norfolk County Water Company, can said water company condemn the property of these respondents;
(2) That even if the foregoing objections did not exist, the said water company has already taken unlawful possession of the property sought to he condemned and must vacate the same and restore it to the owper in its former condition before it can take any steps to condemn the land involved.
The record does not show upon which of these grounds the circuit court rested its denial of the right to condemn, the final order in each case being silent on the subject. In the view we take of the matter it will only be necessary to consider the first ground relied on, which is, that the Norfolk County Water Company has no right under the Constitution or general laws of the State, nor under its charter, to condemn lands.
It appears from the record that the Norfolk County Water Company was chartered by the Circuit Court of Norfolk county in June, 1899, and that in January, 1900, an act was passed by the General Assembly ratifying and confirming this circuit court charter, and adding thereto the right in the company to condemn such lands as might be necessary for the building of its works, or any of them, the laying of its pipes or any of them, in the manner prescribed by the 46th chapter of the Code of 1887.
Before examining this charter to ascertain the rights and powers of the company thereunder, we will advert to the law that must control us in determining whether or not it contains the necessary requirements to make the company the proper depository of the sovereign power of the State, which permits the property of the citizen to be taken against his consent.
The question involved has been fully considered and
Citing Board v. Van Hoesen 87 Mich. 533, 49 N. W. 894, 14 L. R. A. 114, it is said, that “To justify the condemnation of lands for a private corporation, not only must the purpose be one in which the public has an interest, but the State must have a voice in the manner in which the public may avail itself of that use. . . . The use which the public is to have in such property must be fixed and definite. The general public must have a right to a certain definite use of the private property on terms and for charges fixed by law, and the owner of the property must be compelled to permit the general public to enjoy it . . : The use is private so long as the land is to remain under private ownership and control, and no
The law pronounced in the Fallsburg Case, supra, is upheld and reaffirmed in Miller v. Pulaski, 109 Va. 137, 63 S. E. 880, 22 L. R. A. (N. S.) 552.
Bringing the charter of the Norfolk County Water Company to the test of these principles, we find that the purposes and objects of the company, as declared in the charter, are, to purchase and otherwise acquire real estate, the amount to be held at one time in the State of Virginia not to exceed five thousand 'acres. To bore wells and extract water therefrom, to take water from rivers, creeks or springs, to build cisterns, tanks, dams, and other means of creating a water supply. To erect, equip and operate a pumping plant or plants, stand pipe or stand pipes, reservior or reservoirs for the purposes of pumping water and storing the same. To lay and maintain pipe or pipes for conducting water and also to repair such pipe or pipes. To conduct water through such pipe or pipes, and sell the same to individuals or corporations at such rents as it may deem expedient, and to collect such rent or rents therefrom. To manufacture, purchase, and otherwise acquire, hold, own, mortgage,
Tried by what the authorities cited pronounce to be a public service, it would be difficult to conceive of a charter falling more entirely short of the requirements. There is nothing to indicate that the power obtained under it is to be employed directly for the public use. Any sort of manufactory may be set up under it, and the company is not obliged in any manner to carry it on for the benefit of the locality, or of the State at large. All of
Because the legislature has assumed to grant the right of eminent domain, and the grant has been accepted, it does not follow that the plaintiff in error is a public service corporation. The legislature cannot make a use public by declaring it to be such. The question at last is whether the declared uses are in law public uses, and that is a question which the courts must determine. Miller v. Pulaski, 109 Va. 137, 63 S. E. 880, 22 L. R. A. (N. S.) 552.
It is argued that the Norfolk County Water Company has never done anything but a public service, has never used its water supply for its own or any other private purpose, but has devoted the whole to the use of the public generally. The status of a company as a public service corporation, with the power of condemnation, must be determined not by what it actually does, or intends to do, but by what its charter prescribes it must do by way of public duty. If the use the company has been making and intends to make of its property is to determine its right to exercise the power of eminent domain, then no grant of power at all from the legislature would be necessary. The claimant would only have, to set up his past dealings with his property and avow his good intentions for the future, to entitle him to take his neighbor’s property against his will. Such a view is obviously inadmissible. A like contention was made in the F all sburg Case, but the answer was that the charter itself, not the company’s business, must be looked to, and that the mere fiat of the legislature would not make a purpose public which was in itself private.
The general laws of the State do not, as contended,
In further support of the contention that all water supply companies are by the statutes made public service corporations with the right to condemn property, the plaintiff in error relies upon the following language from the opinion of this court in the case of Jeter v. Vinton-Roanoke Water Co., 114 Va. 769, 780, 76 S. E. 921,
This language of the court was used in a case where no question was raised as to the power of the company to acquire by condemnation property for use in supplying the town of Vinton and the inhabitants thereof with water. The company had the right under its charter to furnish water to the town of Vinton, and to such persons, partnerships and corporations residing and doing-business therein, and in the neighborhood thereof as might desire to use the same, and the sole question involved was the extent of the territory the company had the right to cover in supplying- water under the language, “in the neighborhood thereof.” The court was not passing- upon a charter where the incorporators were charged with no duty to render the public any service, and it was not intended that the utterance mentioned should be taken in the comprehensive sense assigned to it. The language of the court must be read in the light of the facts .dealt with. The court did not mean that all water supply companies, without regard to their natures, whether private or public, were made public service corporations by the statute, but it meant that all water supply companies having valid charters imposing upon them the duty to supply the public with water were made public service corporations, and that all such public service corporations had the right of condemnation. No other construction of the act cited by the court is
Having reached the conclusion that the Norfolk County Water Company has no power to condemn the lands involved in this controversy, it is unnecessary to consider the second ground of defense relied on by the defendants in error.
The judgments complained of must be affirmed.
Affirmed.