264 F. 546 | E.D.N.C. | 1920
The Norfolk Southern Railroad Company is a Virginia corporation. Defendants are citizens of Kinston, Lenoir county, N. C.
The Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company was incorporated by an act of the General Assembly of North Carolina, ratified on the 27th day of December 1852 (Laws 1852, c. 136), with authority to lay out, construct and operate a line of railroad from Morehead City to Goldsboro, passing through the town of Kinston, N. C. The road was constructed, completed, and operated during the year 1858. By the twenty-third section of its charter the company was authorized—
“to purchase * * * and hold in fee, or. for a term of years, any lands =s * * or hereditaments which may he necessary for said road, or the appurtenances therefor, or for the erection of depositories, storehouses, houses for the officers, servants, or agents of the company or for workshops or foundries to be used for the said company, * * * and for no other purposes whatever.”
By the twenty-fifth section it was provided that—
“When any lands or right of way may be required by said company for the purpose of constructing its road, and for the want of agreement as to the value thereof, or from any other cause, the same cannot be purchased from the owner or owners, the same may be taken at a valuation to be made by five commissioners * * * to be appointed by any court of record having common-law jurisdiction, * * and the lands or right of way so valued by the said commissioners shall vest in said company so long as the same shall be used for the purposes of said railroad, as soon as the valuation may be paid or * * * tendered. * * * That the right of condemnation, however granted, shall not authorize the said company to invade the dwelling house, yard or burial ground of any individual without his consent.”
By the twxnty-sixth section it was provided that the right of the company to condemn lands in the manner described by the act—
“shall extend to the condemning one hundred feet on each side of the main track of the road, measuring from the center of the same * * * and the company shall also have power to condemn and appropriate lands in like manner for the constructing and building depots, warehouses, buildings for servants * * * not exceeding two acres in any one lot or station.”
By section 27 it was further enacted:
“That in the absence of any contract or contracts with said, company in relation to lands through which said road or its branches may pass, signed by the owner thereof or by his agent, or any claimant or any persons in possession thereof, which may be confirmed by the owner thereof, it shall be presumed that the land upon which the said road or any of its branches may be constructed, together with a space of one hundred feet on each side of the center of said road, has been granted to the said company by the owners thereof and the said company shall have good right and title thereto, and shall hold and enjoy the same as long as the same shall be used for the purposes of said road and no longer, unless the person or persons owning the said land at the time that part of said road which may be on the said land was finished, or those claiming under him, her, or them, shall apply for an assessment of the value of said land as hereinbefore directed, within two years*550 next after tliat part of tlie said road was finished; and in case the said owner or owners, or those claiming under him, her or them, shall not apply within two years next after the said part was finished, he, she, or they shall forever be barred from recovering said lands, or having any assessment or compensation therefor.”
The Atlantic & North. Carolina Railroad Company, subsequent to the date of its charter, and its organization thereunder, entered upon the lands hereinafter described, for the purpose of constructing its road pursuant to the power and authority conferred upon, it by its charter, and during the year 1858 completed same and began operation thereof as a common carrier of persons and freight. Complainant alleges:
“That there was no contract or contracts with the railroad company and Walter Dunn, or any other owner or owners of any of said land lying between the southern line of Caswell street and the line of lot No. 151 and the expended line in relation to the land through which said railroad passes, owned by said Walter Dunn, or any other owner or owners, claimant or claimants, or any other person in possession thereof, limiting or in any wise modifying the width of said right of way, and under said statute, two years after the completion of said railroad through said land, it was presumed that the owner or owners thereof had granted the land upon which said railroad was constructed, together with a space of one hundred feet on each side of the center of said track to said Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company. * * * That more than two years have elapsed since the entry by the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company upon said road, and that no application has been made for an assessment of the value of said land, or one hundred feet on each side of the said road, or if such assessment was made the value so assessed was paid. That the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company is now the owner of said land subject to the rights of complainant, its lessee.”
The road was operated by the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company, under and in accordance with the provisions of its charter, until September 1, 1904, when it executed a lease to “the Howland Improvement Company” for a term of 91 years and 4 months “of its entire railroad, with all of its franchises, privilege rights and property.” This lease was held valid by the Supreme Court of North Carolina. Hill v. Railroad Company, 143 N. C. 539, 55 S. E. 854, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 606. The lease was conveyed and assigned by the lessee, November 26, 1905, to the Norfolk & Southern Railway Company. This corporation conveyed and assigned the lease, together with its other property, by way of mortgage, to the Trust Company of America, July 1, 1908.
Pursuant to the terms and provisions of the mortgage deed, a suit in equity was instituted by said trust company for the foreclosure of said mortgage in the Circuit Court of the United States, in Virginia and North Carolina, and in accordance with decrees rendered in said cause the property, including the said lease, was sold and purchased by complainant, the Norfolk Southern Railroad Company, and deed duly executed therefor, by the commissioners appointed for that purpose. All of this will fully appear by reference to the deeds, conveyances, and other records filed herein.
At the time of the construction and completion of the road, the company established and constructed a passenger and freight depot in
Pursuant to the orders of the commission, and with the concurrence of the citizens of Kinston, the two railroad companies, for the purpose of constructing the union depot or passenger station, acquired the tracts, or parcels of land, as indicated on said map, Exhibit A, and filed with said commission a plan showing the location, size, arrangements, etc. An order was later made directing changes in said plans, and further action was postponed by reason of the intervention of the war and the action of the national government regarding operation of the railroad. Copies of the several orders are in the record.
For the purpose of enabling it to comply with the orders of the commission and providing track and siding facilities rendered necessary to operate its trains and perform its duties to the public in connection with the new union or passenger depot, complainant filed this bill against defendants, in which it alleges, in addition to the facts and allegations hereinbefore recited:
"That, at the time said railroad was constructed and completed, the land lying along the line of said railroad and through which its main track passes as it runs northwestwardly from the southern lino of Caswell street, at its intersection with East street to the back line of lot No. 151, and to a line which is an extension of said line of lot No. 151 in the town oE Kinston, was owned by persons whose names are now unknown to complainant, except it is advised that so much of said land as lies east of the western line of East street was owned by Walter Dunn, and said line of railroad was constructed, completed, and put in operation through said land, during or about the year 1858, and said company had entered upon said land and begun the construction of said road prior to the year 1858.”
That, by virtue of the charter, leases, assignments, deeds, and court proceedings, the Norfolk Southern Railroad Company is the owner of a leasehold esfeite in, and entitled to the peaceful possession of, all of the rights of way acquired by the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company, and especially to that part of its track north of the southern line of Caswell street, extend*552 ing to tiie back line of lot No. 151, as shown on the plan of the town of Kinston, and said line continued.
That, until recently, the business of the Atlantic' & North Carolina Railroad Company and its lessees has not required the actual use of any part of its said right of way north of the southern line of Caswell street and extending to the back line' of lot No. 151, except that part occupied by its track and roadbed, and under me laws of North Carolina the'adjacent landowners are permitted to enter upon and occupy lands included within the bounds of the right of way, and put it to súch uses as shall not interfere with the operation of the railroad, until such time as it shall become necessary for the company to use and occupy its right of way.
That defendants, and those under whom they claim, have, in the exercise of such right, erected dwelling houses and other buildings and structures upon said land, the right of way of complainant, and are now in actual possession thereof, occupying the same, and thereby hindering and preventing the use and occupation thereof by complainant for railroad purposes.
That, in order to comply with the orders of the Corporation Commission, in respect to the erection and use of the union passenger depot or station at the place designated, and furnish safe and sufficient accommodation to the traveling public and depot facilities, for the purpose of constructing side tracks and tram tracks to enable its train to enter and switching facilities for its passenger and freight trains, it has become necessary to lay and construct tracks, switches, and other facilities through, over, and upon that part of complainant’s right of way above described, now occupied by defendants. That the use and occupation of said part of its right of way, by complainant, -is essentially necessary, in order that it may perform its functions as a common carrier of freight and passengers, and have proper ingress and egress to and from said union depot and to and from said freight platforms, with its engines, trains, and cars.
That complainant has given notice to the defendants in ample time that the use of its right of way located as above was necessary for the purposes above set out, and has requested defendants to remove their houses, fences, and other structures from the right of way and land of complainant, but they have refused and still refuse to do so, and continue to use same and prevent complainant from occupying and using said land and right of way for the purpose hereinbefore set out.
That, unless defendants are enjoined and restrained from further hindering and preventing complainant from using and occupying its right of way above described and building tracks and switches thereon, it will be prevented from properly entering and leaving said union depot with its trains, engines, and cars, and be hindered in receiving and shipping freight and performing and obeying the aforesaid order of the North Carolina Corporation Commission.
That the value of the right to use and occupy its right of way for the purposes stated, which right is now being invaded, and the use thereof prevented, by defendants, is in excess of $3,000.
Complainant prays for a mandatory injunction commanding the defendants, and each of them, to remove the buildings, fences, and other structures from the lands claimed by it, and that said defendants be restrained and enjoined from obstructing said right of way, or in any way preventing complainant from, the use and enjoyment thereof.
The defendants, answering the bill, admit many of the allegations, but deny: That no contract was entered into with the owners of the lands described in the bill, at the time the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company entered upon said land and constructed and completed its road thereon and thereover. That the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company acquired an easement on the lands described in the bill of 100 feet on each side of said road. That the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company has acquired title to
Defendants challenge the jurisdiction of the court and say that there is a misjoinder of parties defendant, and that the bill is multifarious. Defendants thus meet complainant at the threshhold of its suit, and for the several reasons set out, pray that the bill be dismissed. These objections must be disposed of before proceeding to consider the controverted allegations of fact. If either of them are valid, the bill must be dismissed.
The challenge to the jurisdiction of the court is based upon the allegation, made by defendants, that they do not own or claim the land upon which they have erected houses and other structures, under a common source of title, nor is it alleged that said defendants have any common interest, or have formed or are acting pursuant to any conspiracy, agreement, or common purpose; that the value of the alleged right of way over no one of defendant’s lands in $3,000.
“But in tliis case we are not required to take either side in that controversy, mere the jurisdiction in equity, as we have seen, is not dependent alone on preventing a multiplicity of suits. There are other and distinct grounds for equitable interference. The complainant seeks by injunction to prevent an obstruction to and interference with its right of way under, circumstances, as we have shown, that confer equity jurisdiction from the inherent nature of the ease, aside from the fact that the interposition of the equity court may prevent a multiplicity of suits. As to the alleged misjoinder of the defendants, the question here is: When may defendants be joined in a suit by a complainant, the. bill stating other grounds for equitable interference, and not depending for its equity on the doctrine of preventing a multiplicity of suits? The rule, we think, is plain that where the matter in litigation is entire in itself, and does not consist of separate things having no connection with one another, it is not necessary that each defendant should have an interest in the suit coextensive with the claim set up by the bill. He may have an interest in a part of the matter in litigation, instead of the whole. There can be no reason why one complainant, who has the same right against a number of persons — that right being such that it confers equity jurisdiction— may not have that right determined as to all the parties interested by one suit. The plaintiff’s claim is an entirety. It is a suit to protect a single indivisible right of way. The right claimed is exactly the same against each one of the defendants. All of the defendants are interfering in the same manner with the same right of way. * * * It is no objection that the several defendants each have a right to make a separate defense against the claim of the complainant, provided the complainant’s assertion of right is the same against each, and there is only one general question to be settled, which pervades the whole case. It is enough if the purpose of the bill is to establish a single right between the complainant and the several defendants.”
Prof. Pomeroy discusses the several classes of cases in which several defendants may be joined in one suit. Pomeroy’s Eq. vol. 1, § 274 (3d. Ed.). The decision of Judge Munger in Union Pac. R. R. v. Cunningham (C. C.) 173 Fed. 90, is, as said by him, clearly distinguished from this case.
“Tbe bill in this case does not assert distinct claims against several persons, and seek to aggregate them to make up the jurisdictional amount; nor is it a suit to condemn or appropriate a right of way across defendants’ lands. It is specifically alleged that the plaintiff many years ago ‘acquired and now holds’ the right of way as a perpetual easement. The property involved, and which the complainant seeks to protect, is the easement or right of way*555 acquired many years ago — the right to run its trains along its railway. The value of the thing involved in this suit cannot be ascertained by aggregating the value of the several strips of land covered by the right of way across the tracts owned by the defendants.”
If, as it avers, and pro hac vice must be assumed as true, complainant, by reason of the obstruction of its right of way, is prevented from operating its trains when the new union depot is completed it will sustain damage far in excess of $3,000.
The principle upon which, in such cases, the jurisdiction in respect to the amount involved is fixed, is illustrated in Pacific Live Stock Co. v. Hanley (C. C.) 98 Fed. 327. The complaint sought, by suit in equity in the federal court, to restrain a number of persons from obstructing the flow of waters of a creek and overflowing the lands of complainant. Defendants demurred to the bill, assigning the same grounds upon which defendants herein rely. The court said:
“The rule against multi Carionsness forbids the complainant to unite in one bill several distinct demands against several defendants who have no cominrn point of interest with each other. But if the cause of suit is entire in itself, and the relief sought does not consist in separate unconnected things, all the defendants connected therewith, and to be affected thereby, may bo brought into one suit, and it is not necessary that the interest of each defendant shall extend to the whole subject-matter of litigation. * * * The point of common interest between the complainant and the defendanis is the water of Silvies river. The right of the defendants to divert it is the question involved. The complainant asserts its right to the flow of the water as it was before the acts of the defendants had their inception. * * * The liability of the defendants, upon the facts stated in the bill, is not the sum total of a number of Individual items, each of which is definitely calculable. The injury is single, and the proportion which each defendant contributes to it is not in the nature of things ascertainable.”
Alter referring to decisions relied upon by defendants, he says that they are clearly distinguishable from the case in hand. In Bitterman v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 207 U. S. 205, 225, 28 Sup. Ct. 91, 98 (52 L. Ed. 171, 12 Ann. Cas. 693), wherein the company was seeking an injunction restraining ticket brokers or “scalpers” from dealing in railroad tickets it was said:
“The substantial character of the averment in the bill is to be tasted, not by the mere immediate pecuniary damage resulting from the acts complained of, hut by the value of the business to be protected and the rights of property which the complainant sought to have recognized and enforced.” Board of Trade v. Cella Coms., 145 Fed. 28, 76 C. C. A. 28; Am. Smelting Co. v. Godfrey, 158 Fed. 225, 89 C. C. A. 139, 14 Ann. Cas. 8; Kindred v. Union Pac. R. R. Co., 168 Fed. 648, 94 C. C. A. 112; Glenwood Light Co. v. Mutual L. Co., 289 U. S. 121, 86 Sup. Ct. 30, 60 L. Ed. 174.
“No bill is multifarious that presents a common point of litigation, the decision of which will affect the whole subject-matter and will settle the rights of all the parties to the suit; and it is not indispensable that all the parties should have an interest in all the matters contained in the suit, but it is sufficient if each party has an interest in some material matters involved in the suit, and they are connected with the others.”
It is not necessary that they should all be interested to the same extent. Howe v. Haugan (C. C.) 140 Fed. 182. The motion to dismiss for the grounds set out, must be denied.
“The jurisdiction pf a court of equity to protect a franchise from unlawful invasion or disturbance by injunction is clearly settled and has been recognized as benign and salutary. The ground of such jurisdiction is usually the prevention of irreparable injury, the avoidance of a multiplicity of suits and the abatement of annoyances in the nature of a legal nuisance. Another controlling reason for interference by equity in such cases is that the public at large have an interest in the protection of such a privilege as well as the party interested. And while the court will not interpose to prevent a mere trespass of an ordinary character, yet when a trespass or a series of trespasses will operate to destroy or seriously impair the exercise of a franchise, the apprehended injury will be enjoined.”
In that case the situation presented, upon this bill, is anticipated and used as an illustration of the necessity for equitable relief:
“If one may obstruct the right of way of a railroad company and prevent it laying its tracks, or otherwise providing facilities for transportation of freight and passengers, and be responsible only to an action for damages, it would be impracticable for the Corporation Commission to enforce its orders providing for union depots, double tracks and other means necessary for the convenience and safety of the public. Injunctive relief against interference with the use of the right of way of a railroad company is not given because of any special consideration for these corporations, but because they are public agencies, chartered, organized and given the right of eminent domain, in cohtemplation of law, to serve the public. They are a part of the system of highways of the state.”
The principle is announced, with citation of a wealth of authority, jn Pomeroy’s Equity, vol. 6, § 543 et seq.
“It Is clear that, from any point of view which we may take oC this case, the plaintiff acquired only an easement over defendants’ lands,” and that Its only remedy was a mandatory or prohibitive injunction.
These decisions are in accord with a uniform line of decided cases in this state. Railroad Co. v. Sturgeon, 120 N. C. 225, 26 S. E. 779; Earnhardt v. Railroad, 157 N. C. 358, 72 S. E. 1062; A. C. L. R. R. Co. v. Bunting, 168 N. C. 579, 84 S. E. 1009. The extent of the limitation upon the use of the right of way, both as to distance and purpose will be discussed later.
We are thus brought to the consideration of the first and essential controverted questiou of fact. Complainant alleges that its lessor, the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company, entered upon and constructed its road over the lands in controversy, in the absence of any contract with the owners or claimants or any other person, pursuant to the right to do so conferred by section 27 of its charter, as hereinbefore set out. Defendants admit the entry and construction of the road over the land by the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company, but deny that it did so in the absence of any contract with the owners, and allege that John Stricklin, one of these owners of the lands, “made and executed a contract of conveyance of a right of way across the said land 25 feet on either side of the center of the main line of said track, and that the other owners of the said land, the defendants unknown, also executed a conveyance of a right of way of the same width to the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company.” No such deeds or contracts, nor any record or copies of such, are produced or introduced, nor is any parol evidence offered showing that any person has ever seen, or heard any other person say that they had seen, such contract.
“that the land upon which the said road or any of its branches may be constructed, together with a space of 100 feet on each side of the center of said road, has been granted to the said company by the owners.”
The failure, for two years after the completion of the road, to apply to a court for an assessment of its value, relates to the claim! for compensation. This is upon the theory that the presumption of the grant arises upon the entry and construction of the road, in the absence of a contract. While the absence of a contract is in form a negative averment — that is, the nonexistence of a contract signed by the owner — it is an essential averment, without which the presumption of .a grant is not raised. The imposition, therefore, of the burden of proof upon the complainant of the absence of a contract is not based upon the rule that one who has or should have had in his possession the evidence upon which he bases his claim or title is required to produce it, but because the statute makes the absence of a contract the essential factor in the creation of the presumption of a grant. In such cases it is part of the complainant’s burden to produce evidence to prove the negative proposition of fact, as that a certain event has not happened, that a fact did not exist, that a given person has not done a certain tiling. Mere difficulty of making proof does not prevent the court from requiring of him that he show, as best he may, that a designated individual does not possess a certain thing. 2 Chamherlayne on Evidence, § 979. The rule is stated by Prof. Greenleaf, and quoted by Mr. Justice Matthews in Colorado Coal Co. v. United States, 123 U. S. 307, 319, 8 Sup. Ct. 131, 136 (31 L. Ed. 182), in which he says:
“To this general rule that tbe burden of proof is on tbe party bolding tbe affirmative there are some exceptions, in which tbe proposition, though negative in its terms, must be proved by the party who states it. One class of these exceptions will be found to include those cases in which the plaintiff grounds his right of action upon a negative allegation, and where, of course, this negative is an essential element in his case.” 1 Greenleaf, Ev. 78.
The rule is not affected by the fact that proof of the nonexistence of a contract, 60 years after the entry, is difficult. If defendants were required to prove the existence of such a contract, they would be met by the same difficulty. In the ahsence of any proof of the allegation made by the' complainant in regard to the absence of a' contract, it would simply fail to sustain the allegation upon which its claim to the easement depended. It has been held that—
“The degree of proof of a negative allegation is seldom measured by that required of an affirmative allegation. In some cases a negative may be positively and conclusively proved; * * * but in many cases this is impossible, and hence the amount of proof required to support the negative proposition, and to shift the burden will vary according to the circumstances of the case. * * * Frequently all that is practically possible, In the absence of direct evidence, is the introduction of testimony establishing some particular fact inconsistent with the converse, affirmative proposition.” 2 Chamherlayne, Evidence, § 981.
“This is not left to conjecture, l'or seeiion 27 of the charter * * * expressly so provides.”
That case presented a controversy with the taxing power of the city, in which the. company claimed that an erroneous method of assessing its property was being used. The question presented here did not arise. The learned justice overlooked, because there it was unimportant, that the presumption arose upon the language of section 27 only when the entry was “in the absence of any contract.” The language used there, in that respect, is obiter.
The writer, in Barker v. Railroad, 137 N. C. 214, 49 S. E. 116, overlooked what he now regards the distinction between a presumption arising upon possession only and one arising upon entry and construction in the absence of a contract required by the statute. I do not think that these two decisions constitute a construction of the statute, in respect to the burden of proof, which is binding upon the federal court. The question has been considered and decided by the Supreme Court of South Carolina upon a statute in'which the same language is found, in A. C. L. R. R. Co. v. Dawes, 103 S. C. 507, 88 S. E. 286, and Carolina & N. W. R. R. Co. v. Ford, 105 S. C. 80, 89 S. E. 809. These cases were followed, not only as controlling authorities, but with the approval of the construction of the statute, by the Circuit Court of Appeals of this circuit in Southern Ry. Co. v. Board of Coms., 246 Fed. 383, 158 C. C. A. 447. In all of these cases the question a.s to the burden of proof was presented. I concur in the reasoning of these courts and the conclusion reached by them.
“It has been represented to the Assembly that the lands of Will nun Heritage, tying on the North side of Nouse Elver, at a place called Adkins Banks, in Dobbs Connty, is a pleasant and healthy situation and commodious for trade and commerce, and the said William Heritage having acknowledged his free consent, to have one hundred acres of the said land laid off for a town and fifty acres for a town Commons, which will greatly promote a trade of the said river, a town is established on said land to be called Kingston.” Directors and trustees for said town are named, in whom “shall be vested an indefeasible estate in fee of the said one hundred and fifty acres for the uses set forth — to cause a plan of the town to be made and insert or mark a number to each lot and when this is done to take subscription therefor and appoint a day for the drawing of said lots which shall be done by ballot in open*560 manner, etc., and convey to each person drawing lots a deed therefor in half acres.” Laws 1762, c. 13; 25 State Records, 468.
By the Laws of 1784, c. 46, it appears that the land allotted for the town had been divided into lots. By section 6 “one-half of the lot comprehending the southern part thereof, known in the plat of the town by the number Seventy-Six” is set apart for a gaol for the use of the county. 24 State Records, 613.
It appears that in 1858, when the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad was built, the eastern limit of the town was marked by Bast street, and the western limit by West street. The General Assembly, at its session of 1848-49 (chapter 226), enacted a charter for the town of Kinston, tire seventh section of which recites that—
“Whereas, several persons in said town, from ignorance of its limits and tire exact course, of the streets, have partially encroached on the commons •s * * by the erection of buildings thereon; and whereas it would prove injurious rather than beneficial to said town to compel said persons to remove their buildings from said commons” — the commissioners are authorized to sell to such persons who have erected buildings on the' commons or on the streets, the ground on which such buildings have been erected, and apply the proceeds to the improvement of the town.
The limits of the town are fixed by this act “as being that land which has been laid off into lots and which the town might buy from adjacent owners.” On February 16, 1850, the governing board of the town of Kinston adopted the following resolution:
“That all that portion of the town commons which lies to the north of King street and between the present limits of the corporation on the west, the lands of Mr. John 0. Washington on the north and the lands of Mr. Walter Dunn, Jr., on the east, shall he laid off into two and a half squares. After allowing streets of the usual width around the same on the north, west and east sides thereof and the present streets of the town running east and west, to extend through the same and that each square shall be laid off and divided into eight lots, each lot of regular and equal size, the length of which shall run north and south and the width from east to west, to be numbered as the board may direct. * * * See plan of town.”
On November 20, 1858, the records of the governing board show that an order was passed directing the secretary to expose to public sale on the following Saturday, at the courthouse door, “the two town lots known in the plan of the town as lots No. 155 and 156,” and advertise accordingly. On December 4, 1858, the following order was passed:
“H. R. Strong reported that according to previous notice he had exposed to public sale the two lots No. 155 and 156 and that Dr. Woodley became the purchaser at the price of one hundred dollars — it is ordered that the sale be confirmed and that title be made to the purchaser.”
See affidavit of W. B. Coleman, city clerk, Exhibit 14.
These two lots were conveyed to Dr. Thomas Woodley and record made of the receipt of purchase money. These lots constituted, prior to their sale, a part of the town commons. They are now owned and occupied by defendants Carl W. Hartsfield, Mrs. Baura E. Grady, and Mrs. Kate M. Cobb on the south side, and by defendant J. T. ■Skinner on the north side, of the railroad, who claim under Dr. Thomas Woodley.
(1) By deed executed by John C. Washington, April 16, 1860, for that portion lying east of West street (on the west end) for 30 feet on each side of the center of the track, except where the depot was located, where it extends to 75 feet. Recorded April 16, 1860,
(2) Isiah Woods and William Fields, March 18, 1807, for the land lying east of the land conveyed by John C. Washington, 35^/2 feet from center of track. Recorded May 3, 1895.
(3) John Stricklin, April 15, 1858, for 25 feet on either side of center of track. The land is described as “being on Gordon street and known as lot 151 in the plan of the town of Kinston.” Registered May 25, 1895.
These deeds cover the right of way of the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company on the west, or Goldsboro, side, to the eastern line of lot 151. The controversy, therefore, is narrowed to the claim of complainant that its lessor, the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company, acquired a right of way, in the manner set out in its bill, to that portion of the town lying between lot No. 151 and East street and the land lying east of East street, owned and occupied by defendant Joseph Stricklin, of 100 feet on each side of the center of its track. This includes lots Nos. 149, 150, 154, 155, and 156.
To sustain its allegation, in that respect, complainant introduced the affidavit of P. E. Nicholson, chief of the engineering department of the Norfolk Southern Railroad Company, in which he swears that—
“It became Ms duty and that he has caused a thorough and complete search to be made, under his supervision and direction, of the records and deeds, contracts, and other conveyances, through and under which the said Norfolk Southern Railroad Company owns and claims title to its right of way along its several lines of railroad. * * * That a thorough search of all records relating to the rights of way of the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company from Goldsboro to Morehead City has been made under his direction and supervision, as well as a careful search of the records of Lenoir county, in which the land described is situate. A careful and thorough search also has been made of the old records and evidences of titles of the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company, now on file for careful preservation in the custodian’s office of the Norfolk Southern Railroad Company, and he has caused diligent inquiry to he made of and among persons who might have knowledge of any records oí contracts, whenever the same might be found, relating to the right of way described in the complaint. That upon such careful and diligent search and inquiry he and those under his direction and supervision have not been able to find any deed, contract, agreement, or other paper writing granting, restricting, defining, or otherwise relating to the right of way of the said Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company, described in the complaint in this cause in the town of Kinston, between the southern line of Caswell street and the back line of lot 151 in said town.”
He further says:
That the red lines on the map filed with his affidavit “show the portion of the land in the town of Kinston claimed by complainant. * * * That from*562 the western line of the land so shown in red the line of railroad and rights of way of said railroad company extend in a general westerly direction through and beyond the town of Kinston, and that said right of way, extending from the aforesaid red lines on said map westwardly, varies in width from 50 feet to 105 feet as defined and limited in certain conveyances.”
Affiant further says that for the rights of way west of the rights of way so conveyed hy Washington, being west of the western boundary of the town, he nor those who, under his supervision, made search, have found any contracts, conveyances, or other paper writing in regard to such rights of way.
In further support of the contention that no'contracts nor conveyances were made for the right of way through that portion of the town-of Kinston east of lot No. 151, complainant shows that the courthouse, containing the record of deeds and conveyances for lands and rights therein, was, during the year 1879 or 1880, burned, and all of said records, except a book containing an index of deeds, were destroyed. Reference to this index book discloses the registration of the deeds for rights of way from Woods and Fields and Strick-lin and Washington, but no other deeds to the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company for rights of way through the town of Kins-ton appear on said index.
The records of the governing board of Kinston disclose:
That on April 4,1857, an order was passed authorizing “the intendant to confer with the railroad authorities in relation to the lot taken up by the said railroad, and to fix with them upon a fair price to be paid to the town for the damage done to said lots by the said railroad.” That on January 23, 1858, certain citizens were appointed a committee to confer with the contractors and engineers of the railroad, to “cause them to fill up all the ditches, to make all .necessary embankments and suitable bridges on all streets and sidewalks of the town where the said road shall cross the same.”
It was, at said time, also:
“Ordered that Henry R. Strong be a committee to obtain from the county court the appointment of a committee to determine and assess the damages done to lots 55 [155] and 56 [156] crossed by said railroad, and cause the amount assessed to be collected for the use of the town.”
The town record does not show any action or any report by H. R. Strong pursuant to the said order, nor does it show that a deed was executed to the railroad company or contract made with it.
Defendants insist that the affidavit of F. D. Nicholson regarding the manner and extent of search made for a contract, deed, or conveyance for a right of way does not conform to the requirements of the law to admit secondary evidence of its contents. While such is not the purpose of the affidavit, but rather to lay the basis for the inference that no such paper was ever in existence, it is somewhat analogous, and reference to the rules governing secondary evidence of an alleged lost paper may be appropriately made. If such a paper was executed, it should be in the possession of either the officers or agents of the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company, or the complainant.
It may be conceded that, if the execution of the contract, and therefore its existence at one time, had been shown or conceded, and, up
“Where a document, the contents of which a party desires to prove, would ordinarily he in a certain place oi' deposit, or in the custody of a certain individual, a presumption arises that it is in that place of custody, in the absence of evidence to the contrary. * * * Evidence, therefore, to prove the loss or destruction of a writing must, in order to authorize the relaxation of the rule respecting the production of the original, show that reasonable diligence has been used in searching for the original document. A mere casual, indifferent,, or careless search will not he sufficient. Something more will be required; something tending to show that the proponent was actuated by a desire to find the alleged lost or destroyed instrument, and that ids efforts were exerted bona fide to accomplish that result. * * * In other words, it should appear that he lias exbreisod life same degree of diligence in his search for it that an ordinary person, actually desirous of finding and producing it, would have employed, which wouid require Ms looking for it in those places where one might fairly have expected to find it in the exercise by him generally of all reasonable endeavors to find it.” Evidence, voi. 6, 2570.
The last sentence of the ordinance of February 16, 1850, refers to the lots to be laid off “as that portion of the town commons,” and,
“And the balance of the town commons to be laid off and numbered into 20 additional lots.” '
Lots Nos. 155 and 156 were sold to Dr. Thomas Woodley December 4, 1858. It appears that he was mayor of the town at that time. The resolution of April 4, 1857, directing the intendant to confer with the railroad authorities to fix a fair price for the damage done to the lot taken up by the said railroad, and on January 23, 1858, appointing a committee to confer with the contractors and engineers to fill up all the ditches, embankments, and bridges, on all streets and sidewalks, where the railroad shall cross the same, indicates clearly that the ■company had, before then, entered upon the “lot," and the order directing Henry R. Strong to obtain from the county court the appointment of a committee to determine and assess the damage to “lots Nos. 155 and 156 crossed by said railroad, and cause the amount assessed to be collected for the use of the town,” shows clearly the existence of the conditions for which section 27 of the charter provided — “entry upon the land in the absence of a contract.” The town authorities evidently understood the provisions of the charter, the respective rights of the company and the town, and were pursuing the course prescribed by section 27 to secure compensation. The bill alleges that the road was •completed in 1858, and this is confirmed by tire history of the company. The index book shows that a deed was executed to Dr.. Woodley, but does not show its date.
W. B. Coleman, city clerk, testifies that a careful examination of the town records back to 1848 fails to disclose any evidence of the execution of a deed from the town to, or the execution of any contract with, the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company, or the grant of any easement or license to use any portion of the streets of the town. Dr. Woodley took title to the lots with notice that the road had been constructed through them, and therefore subject to such right as the company acquired under the charter by such entry. It is also clear that the board of commissioners claimed the damages or compensation for the talcing. The price paid indicates that the lots were of small value.
A careful consideration of the evidence and records of the governing board leads to the conclusion that the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company entered upon lots Nos. 155 and 156 and constructed the road thereon, without, or in the absence of, any contract with the town or any other owner or claimant. In respect to lots Nos. 149, 150, and 154, the evidence, so far as applicable, in regard to lots Nos. 155 and 156, sustain the conclusion that the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company enteréd upon and constructed its track through them during the year 1858, without any contract with the owners. There are no structures within the 100 feet claimed by complainant on lots Nos. 149 or 154, and only the rear end of defendant Curtis’ house on lot No. 150. No deed from the town for either lot is shown.
In respect to the lot owned by defendant Joseph Stricklin, lying ■east of East street, the testimony shows that in 1858 it constituted a
The question regarding the right of way acquired by railroad companies in this state, under provisions found in section 27 of the charter of the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company first arose in Railroad v. McCaskill, 94 N. C. 746, in which it was said:
“The presumption of the conveyance arises from the company’s act in taking possession and building the road, when in the absence of a contract the owner fails to take steps, for two years after it has been completed, for recovering compensation. It springs out of these concurring facts, and is independent of inferences which a jury may draw from them. If the grant issued, it would not be more effective in passing the owner’s title and estate. Thus vesting, it remains in the company as long as the road is operated, of the specified width, unaffected by the ordinary rules in reference to repelling presumptions.”
In Sturgeon’s Case, 120 N. C. 225, 26 S. E. 779, it was held that the statute created the presumption of a grant, not of the land, but of an easement, to be used to its full extent, when and as the necessities of the company for railroad purposes required. In Barker v. Railroad, 137 N. C. 214, 49 S. E. 115, discussing a similar provision in the charter of defendant, after noting the concurring conditions upon which the presumption was created by the statute, it was said:
‘■The statute fixes the term of two years within which the owner may prosecute his action, and in default of which the road acquires the easement described, to wit, ‘one hundred feet on each side of the center of the road,’ with the limitation fixed as to time and use. * * * The boundary is fixed at ‘one hundred feet on each side of the center of the road’ and we have no right to restrict it.”
In Parks v. Railroad, 143 N. C. 289, 55 S. E. 701, 12 L. R. A. (N. S.) 680, referring to the acquisition of a right of way by entry and construction, it is said that, where the owner acquiesces for two years—
“after the construction of the road over his land, with full knowledge of his legal rights and of the extent of the rights accruing to the company by such occupancy, he assents to the acquisition of the easement in the same manner and to the same extent as if the land had been condemned. We would find it exceedingly difficult, if not impracticable, to draw any line of distinction between the rights acquired by the different methods prescribed by the law.”
“Tiie presumption does not arise except in the absence of a contract, and it may be that where permanent structures have been erected by the owner of the land, within 100 feet of the main line, and have been used for a long time without objection, and also in localities where it is customary to acquire rights of way by purchase less in width than 100 feet, that the presumption would not arise when neither party introduces any evidence that there was no contract.”
With all deference to the learned justice, he appears to overlook the distinction between those cases in which, from long and continued possession and use of land, the law raises a presumption of a grant, wherein conduct on his part, either active or passive, inconsistent with the presumption, may be invoked to rebut it, and the case in which the statute provides that upon certain fixed conditions the presumption of a grant is created.
• Again, it is said that tire presumption may not arise when it is customary to acquire rights of way by purchase less in width than 10Ó feet. This condition may, with reason, be made the basis of contrary inference. The purchase from some landowners of a restricted right of way may be entirely consistent with the inference that the entry and construction of the road over the lands of other owners, without a conveyance or . contract, was made in the exercise of its statutory right. It is sáid, however, that the presumption may not-arise where neither party introduces evidence of the nonexistence of the contract.'
However this may be, here the complainant and defendants have both introduced evidence of the nonexistence of a contract; the burden being placed upon complainant and the fact found in accordance with its allegation. I am constrained to hold, in accordance with a uniform current of decisions of the Supreme Court of this state, in which the charter of this and other railroad companies containing the same language have been construed and dealt with, that unless prevented for other reasons, to be presently considered, the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company acquired a right of way of 100 feet on each side of its track over and through the land described in the bill for railroad purposes. Railroad v. Olive, 142 N. C. 257, 55 S. E. 263.
Defendants say the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company could not have acquired, by condemnation or presumption of a grant, a right of way over the lots in controversy, at the time the road was constructed, because of a provision in its charter forbidding “the company to invade the dwelling house, yard or burial ground of any individual without his consent.” Section 25. As we have seen, all of the town lots in controversy at the time the road was constructed, were owned by the town of Kinston. While affidavits are filed by several persons of advanced age, stating the location of houses on several lots, it must be kept in mind that more than 60 years have elapsed since the construction of the road: that the sale of the lots by the town was being made while, and doubtless because of, its com - ing. It seems to be conceded that there was on the lot occupied by defendant Skinner a gin house, around which there w.os a fence. On the lot occupied by defendant Stricklin there was a small tenant house. On the lot occupied by Mrs. Stroud, No. 154, there was, 60 years ago, a dwelling. No part of her dwelling is involved in complainant’s claim.
I have examined all of the affidavits filed by the parties and in the light of the town records and facts not in controversy I am constrained to conclude that the town had not, at the time the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company entered upon the land in controversy, sold the lots; that there were, at that time, no dwellings upon them which jr re vented the condemnation of a right of way over them.
The numerous cases found in the state and federal reports, in which conflicts between the exercise of the right of eminent domain by one public corporation over property held by another corporation have arisen, relate to efforts on the part of railroad companies to condemn rights of way over streets, or where one railroad company seeks to condemn a right of way over the property of another company. It is conceded that the Legislature has the power to confer such right. It is also held that it should be granted in express terms. The reason upon which the rule is based is thus stated in North Carolina & R. & D. R. Co. v. Carolina Cent. Ry. Co., 83 N. C. 489:
“We see no reason why land obtained under a legislative grant of the right of eminent domain should be exempt from its exercise when the public interest requires it for other public uses, any more than other lands held by individuals. The rights of property thus invaded are as sacred in the one case as the other, and equally protected in the fundamental law; and both are and must be subordinate to the demand of the state for public and useful purposes. The exercise of the power of eminent domain over the property of public corporations may be, however, subject to limitations not strictly applicable to other property. It is reasonable, as contended in the argument for the plaintiffs, that land of one such corporation, necessary for the exercise of its franchise and to the discharge of its duties, should not be taken and appropriated by another corporation no more important or useful, unless upon a clear expression of the legislative intent to confer it, and then the act itself would be a declaration that the condemnation was required for the public good.” Springfield v. Railroad Co., 4 Cush. (Mass.) 63.
The power to condemn land granted in general terms to a railroad company will not permit it to locate its right of way through land held by a town for the purpose of building a reservoir (State v. Montclair R. R. Co., 35 N. J. Law, 328), or land held by a county for the purpose of building a courthouse or a public schoolhouse (B. & O. R. R. Co. v. North, 103 Ind. 486, 3 N. E. 144) or by a state for an institution for the blind (St. Louis R. R. Co. v. Trustees, 43 Ill. 303). In United States v. Chicago, 7 How. 185, 12 L. Ed. 660, it appears that the United States owned a tract of land on which at one time it maintained a fort. After the fort was abandoned, the Secretary of War by authority of an act of Congress laid off squares and streets, calling it “Ft. Dearborn addition to Chicago.” A portion of the lots were sold; the government reserving the part on which the fort was situate, with the land immediately contiguous thereto. Sale was made only of the part outside the reservation. The city undertook to open the streets within the reservation, where no sales of land had been made, and where opening the streets would destroy some of the public buildings and materially injure and impair uses of the station. The United States applied for an injunction. The court enjoined the city. Mr.
“It is not questioned that land within a state, purchased by the United States as a mere proprietor, and not reserved or appropriated to any special purpose, may bo liable to condemnation for streets or highways, like the land of other proprietors, under the rights of eminent domain. Cut that was not the condition of this quarter section, being a part of the land originally ceded to the United States as the Northwest Territory, and afterwards specially set apart !! * * for military purposes. Here the opening of these streets would also injure, if not destroy, the great objects of the reservation.”
It is sometimes difficult to draw the line between property held by a municipal corporation for public and for private purposes.
“Property of a municipal corporation, which is essentially public in its nature and is held in trust for the public by the corporation, and is necessary for the exercise of its proper municipal functions, cannot be sold to satisfy the debts of the corporation. But the mere, private property of a municipality, held for purposes of income or sale, unconnected with any governmental use or function, may bo levied on and sold to satisfy a judgment rendered against a municipal corporation.” 20 A. & E. Ene. 1190.
In Klein v. New Orleans, 99 U. S. 149, 25 L. Ed. 430, it is said:
“The test in such cases is as to the necessity of the property for the duo exercise of the functions of the municipality.”
In Zehner v. Milner, 172 Ind. 493, 87 N. E. 209, 24 L. R. A. (N. S.) 383, it was held that a mill site which had been condemned for a public use had ceased to be used for such purpose, and was no longer operated for toll, but only for private use, was subject to condemnation for another public use. In the note it is said, and supported by many cited cases:
"It seems to be the universal rule that property, although previously condemned or purchased for a public use, but which never has been put to such use, or has ceased to be so used, is subject to condemnation, the same as property of a private individual.”
This is in accordance with the rule of law that, when the reason upon which immunity from sale of property ceases, the immunity also ceases. It is manifest that, anticipating the coming of the railroad and extending the growth of the town, the charter of 1849 was enacted. The board of commissioners, in accordance with the provisions of the new charter, at once decided that the land which had been set apart as a commons was no longer necessary for that purpose, and passed the order for laying it off into lots and selling it. This was a declaration on the part of the town authorities that it was not necessary for municipal purposes. The road was completed and ready for operation June 17, 1858. On April 4, 1857, the board of commissioners directed the intendant to confer with the railroad authorities in relation to the lot taken up by said railroad and fix upon a fair price.
On January 23, 1858, a committee was appointed to confer with the contractors in regard to the ditches and make embankments and bridges, and on the same day Henry R. Strong was directed to obtain from the county court the appointment of a committee to assess the damages to lots 155 and 156, and to collect the same for the use of
Assuming that the company had acquired, by presumption of a grant, a right of way of 100 feet on each side of the center of its track, and that the town claimed the damages or compensation therefor, its failure to prosecute its proceeding for two years conferred a perfect title and barred it, or Dr. Woodley, from any claim for compensation.
“The right of way of railroad companies is by judgment of condemnation made subject to occupation where and only where the corporation finds it necessary to take actual possession in furtherance of the ends for which the company was created. The damages are not assessed upon the idea of a proposed actual dominion, occupation and perception of the profits of the whole right of way by the corporation; but the calculation is based upon the principle that possession and exclusive control will be asserted only over so much of the condemned territory as may be necessary for corporate purposes, such as additional tracks, ditches, and houses to be used for stations and section hands. Unless the land is needed for some such use, the occupation and cultivation by the owner of the servient tenement will be disturbed only when it becomes necessary for the company to enter in order to remove something which endangers the safety of its passengers, or which might, if undisturbed, subject the.owner to liability for injury to adjacent lands or property.”
This language is quoted with approval in Sturgeon’s Case, 120 N. C. 225, 26 S. E. 779, where it was held that the company was not entitled to a judgment for possession of its right of way, unless it showed that such possession was necessary for its corporate purposes. In Shield’s Case, 129 N. C. 1, 39 S. E. 582, it was said:
“It was never expected that the roads would claim the actual possession * * * of any more of said lands than were necessary for their operation and protection.”
See Barker’s Case, 137 N. C. 214, 49 S. E. 115; Olive’s Case, 142 N. C. 257, 55 S. E. 263, in which the necessity for extending its use of its right of way was. caused, as here, by an order requiring the companies to build and maintain a union depot.
In the latest case in which the question is discussed (Railroad v. Bunting, 168 N. C. 579, 84 S. E. 1009), the court, citing the foregoing and many other cases, refused to enjoin the defendant from constructing a brick building on the right of way of the- company, because it did not appear that, at that time, the occupation and use of the land was necessary for the corporate purpose of the company. No proposition is more firmly settled and has been more uniformly enforced by the courts of this state than that first announced in Blue’s Case, su
•‘No railroad * * * company shall lie liarred of, or presumed to liave conveyed, any real estate, right of way, easement, leasehold, or other interest, in the soil which may have been condemned, or otherwise obtained for its use, as a right of way, * * by any statute of limitation or by occupation of the same by any person whatever.”
Neither the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company nor its lessee was barred, nor did any presumption of abandonment or release of its right of way arise by reason of the occupation or use thereof by the owner of the land. The language of the statute is too clear to admit of controversy. Beattie v. Railroad, 108 N. C. 432, 12 S. E. 913. Statutes protecting not only railroad companies, but cities and towns, from the effect of long and permissive, or hostile, use, by abutting landowners and others, of streets, commons, lands covered by rights of way, or other easements upon their claims, title, or interests have been expressive of the policy of the state for many years. They have been uniformly enforced by the courts. Revisal, §§ 388, 389.
The facts disclosed by the record in this case lead to the conclusion that the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company acquired by statutory presumption a grant during the year 1858 of a right of way over the land described in the bill of 100 feet on each side of its track, for railroad purposes, which it was entitled to use and enjoy whenever and to the extent it became necessary for the operation of its trains in the performance of its duties and obligations to the public as a common carrier; that this right of way, by the leases and assignments thereof set out in the bill, passed to and vested in the complainant ; that the duty imposed upon complainant to erect and maintain the new union depot, as located by the Corporation Commission,
We are thus brought to a consideration of the rights of complainant respecting the remedy to which it is entitled to enable it to use and enjoy its right of way. Consideration must also be given to the rights and duties of defendants in the enforcement of complainant’s rights. The prayer is for a mandatory injunction, commanding defendants to remove the houses, fences, and other structures on the lots over which the right of way is imposed and which constitute obstructions to its use by complainant.
The evidence tends to show: That the dwelling houses situate on the right of way were built many years since. The land upon which defendant Mrs. Laura E. Grady resides includes her home, in which she has lived for 18 years, being the only property which she owns, the result of her labor for many years.- “If taken from her without compensation in this proceeding, it will leave her without a home and practically without anything upon which to subsist.” That other buildings on the right of way have been there for many years, the lots being used for residences as far back as she can remember. That the dwelling in which she lives is of the value, independent of the lot, of $3,500.
Mrs. Kate Cobb is a widow, with three children, working for a livelihood. Her home in controversy is her entire estate, representing the saving from the labor of her daughters and herself. If taken from her, she and they will be left without a home or property. She is 62 years of age; • has known the property and the streets for 26 years -r there have been buildings on the lots, as now, during this time. Her residence is of the value of $3,500, independent of the value of the land upon which it is located.
The value of tire lots of Joseph Stricklin and J. T. Skinner is each $10,000. The value of the lot of R. L. Curtis is $4,000. The value of the lot of C. A. Hartsfield is $10,000, and the improvements $8,-000. The value of the lot of N. W. Jones is $10,000, and of Clyde Tyndall $1,500.
At the time the road was constructed through the town of Kinston ■the population did not exceed 500. It is now a prosperous and growing town of 10,000 population. The evidence of old citizens, whose memory enabled them to refer to conditions respecting the growth of the town and erection of buildings during the past half century, shows that there was, at all times, a general understanding and belief on the part of the citizens that the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company did not own, or claim, any wider right of wa)' through the eastern portion of the town than was granted to it by Col. John C. Washington and others through the western end, and that buildings, dwellings, and fences have been erected in accordance with this understanding and belief; that no claim or suggestion has been made,, either by the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad or its lessees, that any larger or wider right of way was owned or claimed, nor was any
These conditions are relevant only in dealing with the question of complainant’s prayer for a mandatory injunction, commanding defendants to remove the buildings and other structures from the right of way. If this were an action of ejectment, or for the recovery of possession of the land Covered by the right of way as in Railroad v. McCaskill, 94 N. C. 746, and same case, 98 N. C. 526, 4 S. E. 468, that case would be a controlling authority upon which defendants could successfully assert a claim under the North Carolina statute for betterments. Revisal 1905, § 652. In that case neither party was advertent to the authorities in other jurisdictions, there being none in North Carolina, that an action of ejectment could not be maintained to recover an easement:
“Ejectment is not maintainable tor incorporeal hereditament, which consist of rights and profits issuing out of, and annexed to, real property, .such as rights of way, of common, etc. * * * The right to enjoy an easement cannot be vindicated in this action, because an easement lyeth in grant and not in livery. * * * The action cannot be sustained to recover, as an easement to a mill, the right to use a wharf along a canal basin for ilio purpose of loading and unloading boats carrying wheat to and from the mill of the claimant.” Sedgwick & Wait, Trial Title to Land, § 140.
The most effectual remedy is by mandatory injunction, which will be granted to compel restoration of the claimant to the enjoyment of his right. Olive’s Case, supra.
“A mandatory injunction will issue for removal of obstructions to rights of way, or to other rights appurtenant to land. But the court will not, in every case of a permanent obstruction to the use of an easement, restore the aggrieved party to Ms former situation.”
In Smith v. Smith (1875) 20 L. R. 500, Sir George Jessell, M. R., discussing cases in which the court will grant a mandatory injunction, says:
“Without laying flown any absolute rule, in the first case, it is of great importance to see if defendant knew he was doing wrong and was taking his chances about being disturbed in doing it. The next point for consideration is the materiality of the injury to the plaintiff — but that alone was not sufficient; all the circumstances must be taken into consideration, not only the injury to the plaintiff, but also the amount which has been laid out by the defendant.”
American decisions are in harmony with the rule laid down by the learned Master of the Rolls. 12 Standard Enc. of Procedure, 998 et seq.
In Boyd v. Woolwine, 40 W. Va. 282, 21 S. E. 1020, a mandatory injunction was granted, commanding defendant to remove obstructions from a private way. Judge Holt said that if the right was established—
“no question is made that this is their proper remedy; in fact, their only plain, adequate, and complete remedy, seeing that it is the unobstructed use of the road they are after, and not damages for the obstruction of it.”
See Hershman v. Stafford, 58 W. Va. 459, 52 S. E. 533; Bernei v. Sappington, 102 Md. 185, 62 Atl. 365.
“A mandatory injunction is never granted unless very serious damage will ensue from withholding relief, and each case must, of course, depend upon its own circumstances.” 3 Street’s Fed. Eq. Prac. § 2289; Darrell v. Pritchard (1865) L. R. 1 Ch. 244; Great North of England R. Oo. v. Clarence R. Co. (1844) 1 Coll. Ch. Cases, 507; Westminster Brymbo Co. v. Clayton (1866) 36 L. J. Ch. N. S. 476.
_ There is no suggestion here that defendants either knew or had any reason to suspect that they, in constructing the buildings or other structures, were trespassing upon or interfering with the right of way of the complainant or its lessor. There was no record in existence from which defendants, or those under whom they claim, could have learned that the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad owned or claimed a right of way beyond the actual boundaries of the track and llie drain, or beyond the fences on the lots upon which they reside and those adjoining them, as the road was located through the town.
An examination of the county records would have disclosed that the right of way lying west of the town commons, for which the company took deeds, was confined to 35 feet on each side of the track. The course pursued by the company in locating its track and drains, and permitting for many years the owners of abutting lots to build fences and erect structures, was well calculated to create, and it is quite certain did create, the belief that it claimed a right of way through the lots which constituted the town commons of the same width as through the Washington and other property to which it took deeds. I do not entertain any doubt of the absolute good faith and well-founded belief on the part of the citizens of Kinston, including the defendants, that neither the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company nor its lessees claimed more than the width of the right of way included in the deeds from Washington and others. If this were a controversy respecting a private way, I would not hesitate to deny the mandatory injunction, anl leave the complainant to its action at law for damages; but it is manifest that, by reason of the relation which the complainant bears and its duty to the public, a judgment for damages would be totally inadequate to meet the situation.
Complainant will incur very heavy penalties, fixed by the state statute at $500 a day, for failing to erect and maintain with the Atlantic Coast Liue Railroad the union depot at the place fixed by the commission. The court may avail itself of knowledge acquired by personal examination and the uncontradictcd affidavits, with accompanying maps, that certainly a portion of the land covered by its right of way, upon which defendants’ dwellings and other structures are located, will he necessary for the laying of tracks, etc., to enable complainant to move its trains and cars into and out of the union depots. As said in Joy v. St. Louis, 138 U. S. 1, 49, 11 Sup. Ct. 243, 258 (34 L. Ed. 843):
“In the present case, the remedy in damages by an action at law would be entirely inadequate, and nothing short of the interposition of a court of etjuity would provide for the exigencies of the situation.” Wilson v. Northampton, etc., Railway Co., L. R. 9 Ch. 279.
*576 “Railroads are common carriers and owe duties to the public. The rights ■of the public in respect to these great highways of communication should be fostered by the courts; and it is one of the most useful functions of a court of equity that its methods of procedure are capable of being made such as to accommodate themselves to the development of the interests of the public in the progress of trade and traffic, by new methods of intercourse and transportation.” Id.'
With these equitable principles and precedents in mind, we must deal with the difficult situation presented in this case, with an anxious desire to preserve the rights of complainant, enable it to discharge its public duties, and, so far as possible, protect the defendants, who, without fault on their part, have encountered the march of progress of an ancient village to a modem commercial town. In the realization of the vision of William Heritage that “Adkins Banks is a pleasant and healthy situation and commodious for trade and commerce,” his plan for a “town commons” has been made to give way to the demands for “town lots” and these defendants must “move out.” One cannot but regret that the public spirit which prompted Col. Washington, with his broad acres, did not express itself in the grant of the standard right of way of 200 feet. This would have put the public upon notice of the width of the way claimed by the company through the town. But, as in so many other instances, each generation deals with its problems from its own viewpoint, and those who come after must take the succession cum onere, and deal with conditions as they arise.
Keeping in view the fact that the appeal of complainant to the in-junctive power of the court is because of the inadequacy of the only remedy which a court of law has tire power to render, it must also be kept in view that, in granting the remedy, regard must be had to the equities to which defendants are entitled, and to so mold the decree that, so far as possible, substantial justice be done to all parties. It is manifest that to command the defendants, at their own cost and expense, to remove or, if this be- not possible, to destroy their residences, depriving them, not only of their property, but of their homes, without compensation, would be harsh and oppressive. The court must keep in view the language of the learned Master of the Rolls, Sir George Jessell, that all of the circumstances of the case must be taken into consideration, that not only the injury to plaintiff, but also the amount which has been laid out by defendants, the circumstances under which the expenditure was made, the long time during which the-rights of complainant were unknown, the good faith with which all parties have acted, and must anxiously endeavor to conserve and guard the rights of all concerned.
No final decree should be made until the parties have had opportunity to endeavor to come to a fair adjustment of their rights, or until the court is better informed in respect to the extent to which the necessity of complainant demands the use of the land — the practicability of removing the dwellings on other parts of the lots and the cost of doing so. The case has been heard upon affidavits, in which these questions are left in uncertainty. It has been pending for an unusual length of time, because of the intervention of the war, resulting in
A decree will be signed, adjudging the right of complainant to a right of way of 100 feet from the center on each side of its track over the lands described in the bill, as shown on the plats in evidence. A reference will be had to three commissioners, to be named by the court, with direction to make an examination of the lots occupied by defendants separately and report:
(1) The number of feet over each lot which may be reasonably necessary, in their opinion, for the -occupancy of complainants for side tracks or other purposes, to enable it, after the construction of the union depot, to safely and conveniently move its trains, either passenger or freight, to and from such depot.
(2) The size of each lot, and whether the several dwellings thereon within 100 feet of the center of complainant’s track may be moved on other portions of each lot, and, if so, the probable cost of making such removal.
(3) If either of such dwellings cannot be moved on other parts of the lot of the owner, to recommend to the court such plan for moving such dwelling on other lots near by, together with an estimate of the cost of purchasing such lot or lots and of moving the dwellings thereon.
(4) Such other information which the commissioners may, in their judgment, deem relevant or of value to the court in dealing with the conditions which they may find.
The commissioners will, at as early a day as convenient to themselves and the parties, and after notice thereof, enter upon the premises, cause maps or surveys thereof to be made, showing the size, shape, location relative to streets and other lots, and the location of the buildings thereon, and hear, at a time and place to be fixed by them, such evidence, oral or written, as may be offered by the parties. They will have the evidence, so taken stenograph!cally, written out and sent to the court, together with all documents, maps, plats, etc., which may be offered, with a report of their conclusions and recommendations in the premises. Such report will not be binding upon the court, but for its information and aid in framing a final decree therein. The cause will be retained for other and further orders, etc.