Upon this reservation for the advice of this court, it was stipulated that the following facts were found by the trial court. The plaintiff is a Delaware corporation engaged in the business of supplying natural gas by pipe line. It holds a certificate of public convenience and necessity issued by the federal power commission pursuant tо the provisions of the Natural Gas Act of 1938. 52 Stat. 821, 15 U. S. C. § 717, as amended, 61 Stat. 459, 15 U. S. C. § 717f (h) (Sup. 4, 1951). The certificate authorizes the plaintiff to construct and operate natural gas pipe lines and appurtenant facilities in Connecticut and to sell its product to specified public utility corporations now engaged in distributing gas to the public in various sectiоns of the state.
The plaintiff is presently engaged in acquiring easements needed in the laying of a proposed pipe line within the state. The line, as planned, is to cross the defendants’ property in the town of Farmington. The plaintiff is seeking to obtain therein a right of way fifty feet in width. Only the inner thirty feet are sought for a permanent. easement. Thе outer ten feet on each side are needed solely for the purpose of providing ample space for the movement of heavy equipment used in the installation of the pipe. The temporary interest in these ten-foot strips will automatically expire one year from the completion of the construction wоrk on the defendants’ property but, in any event, not later than two years after the interest has been acquired.
In 1950 the General Assembly passed an act entitled “An Act concerning Natural Gas Pipe Line Companies.” Public Act No. 3, Spec. Sess., March, 1950; General Statutes, Cum. Sup. 1951, §§ 1072b-1078b. Pursuant
The parties seek our advice on the two questions stated in the footnote.
1
The first requires us to determine thе validity of the act of 1950 to which we have just referred. The act, as passed, consists of eight sections. The first recites that any corporation organized under state or federal law for the purpose of constructing and operating a natural gas pipe line is authorized to acquire by condemnation variously described interests in land which are necessary for the construction, maintenance and alteration of the pipe line, provided the corporation holds a certificate of public convenience and necessity issued under the federal Natural Gas Act, and provided, further, that the corporation shall pay all damages for the taking. Section 2 makes the exercise of the right of eminent domain contingent upon the filing with the secretary of state of a certified copy of the certificate of public convenience and neces
The defendants have assailed the constitutionality of the act. When a question of that nature is raised, we should approach it with great caution and examine it with infinite care. We must malee every presumption and intendment in favor of the act and sustain it unless it is invalid beyond reasonable doubt.
Mills
v.
Gaynor,
It is a fundamental principle of law that the power to appropriate private property for public use is an attribute of sovereignty and essential to the existence of government. 1 Nichols, Eminent Domain (3d Ed.) §§ 1.14, 3.1;
The defendants’ claims are stated in the footnote.
1
Several of them seem to indicate concern only with the phraseology of the act. Some, it will be observed, appear more to challenge form than to question substance. It is urged, for examplе, that the act is unconstitutional because it contains no express declaration that the transmission and the sale of natural gas are to serve a public use. A positive declaration of that
Nor is the act invalid because it fails to declare the necessity for condemning the defendants’ property. It is, of course, true that the necessity of taking property for a particular public use is a legislative question.
Waterbury
v.
Platt. Bros. & Co.,
Another claim is that the act imposes no duty upon the plaintiff to apply the condemned land to any public use. If by this the defendants mean that after acquiring a right of way in their lands the plaintiff may decide to use it, say, as a section of a race track or for some objective equally foreign to the purpose for which the property is to be taken, it is sufficient to observe that an obligation tо devote the easement to the specified
It is further claimed that the act is invalid because the plaintiff is not to supply gas directly to the public. Under the certificate issued by the federal power commission, the plaintiff may sell its product in Cоnnecticut only to certain specified utility corporations already engaged in distributing gas to the public, without discrimination, within the areas served by them. A taking of property for this authorized purpose is none the less a taking for public use.
Matlock
v.
Bloomington Water Co.,
Nor is there any merit in the claim that the act permits the plaintiff to take private property without making adequate provision for the payment of damages to the owner. As previously pointed out, one of the constitutional restrictions is that just compensation shall
We are unable to discover any merit in the several grounds advanced by the defendants. Moreover, if the question of claimed unconstitutionality is examined in its broadest aspect, the act can withstand any challenge. The General Assembly could legally authorize the plaintiff to exercise the power of eminent domain
The use is public. The plaintiff is a corporation in the business of serving the public, through other companies, with a commodity which, while not as vital as water, is comparable to electricity and promotes the health and welfare of large groups of the people of the state. The proposed taking is to the advantage of the communities to be serviced and is available for the benefit of the public without discrimination. The use thus meets the test enunciated in
Connecticut College
v.
Calvert,
The delegation by the General Assembly of authority to determine the existence of necessity is, as we have pointed out, valid. “In such cases the condemnor is vested, primarily at least, with the power to determine what land is necessary to be taken, and this determination is conclusive unless and until it is successfully attacked for unreasonableness, bad faith or abuse of power.”
Water Commissioners
v.
Manchester,
Finally, the constitutional restrictions have not been violated. Ample provision has been made to insure the payment of just compensation for the taking, and due process, though not questioned by the defendants, is thoroughly provided for. We hold the act to be constitutional.
It is within the province of the legislature to determine both the quantity and the quality of the estate which a condemnor may acquire. 3 Nichols, Eminent Domain (3d Ed.) § 9.2[1]. Thus, authority may be granted to take the fee or an eаsement.
Driscoll
v.
New
Haven,
It is often necessary to take privatе property temporarily for public purposes. Statutes which have faffed to grant that authority in express terms have frequently been construed to do so by implicátion.
Jerome
v.
Ross,
Indeed, grave doubt might be expressed as to the right of the plaintiff to take the entire fifty feet permanently. The property which it is privileged to take is rеstricted to that which will reasonably serve the public use; more than that would, in effect, be a taking for a private use and, hence, illegal as an abuse of power.
New Haven Water Co.
v.
Russell,
Our answers to the questions propounded are these: “No” to question (A); “Yes” to question (B).
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
(A) Is an act entitled “An Act concerning Natural Gas Pipe Line Companies,” passed аt the special session of the General Assembly held in March, 1950, and approved May 26, 1950, unconstitutional?
(B) Is the plaintiff authorized under the provisions of the act to acquire by condemnation a temporary easement for a right of way not exceeding ten feet in width on each side of and immediately adjacent and parallel to the permanent easement, to be used for construction purposes only?
The act is unconstitutional, according to the defendants, because:
(a) It contains no declaration of the necessity for condemning property within the state of Connecticut.
(b) It contains no declaration to the effect that its purpose is to serve a public use within the state of Connecticut.
(c) It imposes no duty upon the plaintiff: to use property condemned under the general provisions of the act for said public use or to dedicate it to a public use within the state of Connecticut.
(d) It imposes no duty upon the plaintiff to supply natural gas for any public use within the state of Connecticut.
(e) Section 7 of the act prohibits the plaintiff from supplying natural gas to any citizen or resident in the state except to a person, firm, corporation or municipality authorized to transmit or sell gas within the area to be supplied by the plaintiff.
(f) Section 7 of the act allows the plaintiff to institute condemnation proceedings for reasons other than the benefit to the general public of the state of Connecticut.
(g) The provisions of § 1 of the act permit the plaintiff to condemn land for purposes which are not for the public good.
(h) Under § 5 of the act, the plaintiff may take property without adequate provision for the payment of damages to the owners of the property so taken.
