The specific question now before this court is: Does The Ohio Power Company have the right under the statutes, particularly Section 9192-1, General Code, and under the facts presented in the record, to appropriate a right of way for the purpose of constructing thereon a belt conveyor to transport coal from plaintiff’s coal field to its generating station, a distance of approximately four miles?
The decision of this case requires a construction of Sections 9192-1 and 11046, General Code, and their application to the facts and circumstances established by the evidence.
Section 9192-1, General Code, provides in part :
“Any company organized for the purpose of manufacturing, generating, selling, supplying or transmitting electricity, for public and private use, may enter
Section 11046, General Code, relating to jurisdictional questions appears in the Chapter entitled “Appropriation of Property” and provides in part:
“On the day named in a summons first served, or publication first completed, the probate judge or the Court of Common Pleas shall hear and determine the questions of the existence of the corporation, its right to make the appropriation, its inability to agree with the owner, and the necessity for the appropriation. Upon all these questions the burden of proof shall be upon the corporation, and any interested person shall be heard.”
All jurisdictional questions arising under Section 11046, General Code, were decided by the trial court in favor of the plaintiff, except as to the
right
of the plaintiff to appropriate for a belt conveyor for the uses and purposes set forth in the petition. The Court of Appeals did not disturb that holding except to reverse with respect to the
right
of the plaintiff to make
It is conceded that the plaintiff: is a company “organized for the purpose of manufacturing, generating, selling, supplying or transmitting electricity for public and private use. ’ ’ In that respect it meets the requirements of the statute and is, therefore, empowered to appropriate so much of private land or any right or interest therein as is deemed necessary for the erection, operation or maintenance of an electric plant. Can the proposed belt conveyor, under the circumstances established by the evidence in this case, be considered a part of the plant? Following the word “plant” this section of the Code reads, “* * * including its generating stations, substations, switching stations, transmission and distribution lines, poles, towers, piers, conduits, cables, wires and other necessary structures and appliances. * * *” (Emphasis supplied.) What is the intended scope and meaning of the phrase, “and other necessary structures and appliances”?
This court recognizes the well established rule that statutes delegating authority to exercise the right of eminent domain must he strictly construed, but we do not believe that such construction should be so strict as to be unreasonable or strained. This thought was expressed by this court in
Toledo & Wabash Ry. Co.
v.
Daniels,
“That laws of this nature should be construed with strictness in favor of private right is conceded, but it should not be that narrow and niggardly strictness which utterly disregards the admitted policy of a law, and gives strained and secondary meanings to its language. in order to defeat that policy.” We adhere to that statement.
A belt conveyor for transporting coal is a recently developed mechanical device. We believe that it can qualify as a “structure” or “appliance” constituting part of an electric plant, provided its necessity is established.
The following evidence was introduced by the plaintiff and was uncontradicted:
The proposed electric generating plant is to consist of “three 150,000 kw units.” After two years study of location a site was selected near the town of Relief in Washington county on the Muskingum river opposite Moi'gan county. The necessity for using a largo quantity of water requires the plant to be located on a river. An economical source of coal or fuel is imperative. The cost of coal runs 65 per cent of the entire cost of production. To operate the first unit of the proposed plant would require 400,000 tons of coal a year. When the three contemplated units are completed and operating the requirement would be 1,200,-000 tons a year. The cost of coal affects the rates charged the customers for current. The rates go up with the cost of coal. It would not be practical to construct the proposed plant unless cheap coal could be procured. In designing this plant the necessity for providing a coal supply for about 25 years was solved by the plaintiff’s purchase of a coal field of approxi
The record establishes that the plaintiff accumulates large stock piles of coal at its other plants and that the coal so accumulated is transported from such stock piles to the point of use by belt conveyors. Belt conveyors at its other plants run from 800 feet to a mile in length. Under all these circumstances it is not unreasonable to consider the mines owned by plaintiff and located some four miles from its generating station merely as large stock piles of coal.
Helpful precedents are not plentiful upon the specific question now under consideration. Many decisions, however, announce general principles consistent with our conclusion, including the following:
Giesy
v.
Cincinnati, Wilmington & Zanesville Rd. Co.
(1854),
Ward
v.
Marietta and Newport Turnpike & Bridge Co.
(1856),
In
Davis
v.
Board of Education of Arundel County
(1934),
“It may be conceded that the general rule is that statutes of eminent domain are to be strictly construed * * *. But, while they should be strictly construed, the purpose and intention of the Legislature, when clearly manifested in the statute, should not be defeated by any narrow, strained, forced, or artificial construction of its language.”
In both
State
v.
Central New Jersey Telephone Co.
(1891), 53 N. J. Law, 341, and
Northwestern Telephone Exchange Co.
v.
Chicago M. & St. P. Ry. Co.
(1899), 7
In
Wilton
v.
County of St.
Johns,
In
Highland Boy Cold Mining Co.
v.
Strickley
(1904),
“In the opinion of the Legislature and the Supreme Court of Utah the public welfare of that state demands that aerial lines between the mines upon its mountain sides and the railways in the valleys below should not be made impossible by the refusal of a private owner to sell the right to cross his land. The Constitution of the United States does not require us to say that they are wrong.”
Thus it appears that the courts have recognized the propriety of placing a reasonable construction upon statutes authorizing condemnation of private land. This is particularly true when public utilities face practical problems which are the result of mechanical and scientific progress.
Even though Section 9192-1, General Code, does not specifically mention belt conveyor, the evidence outlined above justifies the conclusion that this belt conveyor is a “structure” or “appliance” which is here necessary in the generating of electricity and is so closely associated with other necessary elements as to become in effect a part of this ‘ ‘ electric plant. ’ ’
Our conclusion is in harmony with that of the Court of Appeals, that the “necessity” of the belt conveyor and the “necessity” of the appropriation of the right of way for its construction are established. The right to make the appropriation follows as a matter of course. The Common Pleas Court committed error in denying the plaintiff that right.
The defendant has argued that the petition is defective because the plaintiff did not plead or prove that it had secured permission from the United States War Department to cross the navigable Muskingum river with the belt conveyor. The opposing brief asserts that this question was raised for the first time in the briefs in this court, and that the record contains no evidence relative thereto. We do not believe that the problem of procuring permission to cross the river is in any way relevant to the issue of necessity of appropriating the land of the defendant for the purposes stated in the petition. The plaintiff might eventually be prevented from operating the belt conveyor be
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.
Judgment affirmed.
