11 P.2d 221 | Colo. | 1932
THE Pine Martin Mining Company sued out this writ to review a judgment of the district court dismissing a condemnation proceeding instituted by the company.
The mining company is a corporation. Among its objects, as stated in its certificate of incorporation, are these: To acquire and operate mines; to acquire mill sites; to acquire ditches, flumes and aqueducts for the carrying of water; to build a power plant to utilize water power rights; to operate a mill to concentrate its own *531 ores and the ores of others; to acquire by purchase or condemnation a ditch or flume; and from time to time to sell or otherwise dispose of its mines, mills, water rights and its other property.
In 1915 the company acquired a group of mining claims in Eagle county. It located and obtained a patent for a mill site in the same locality. Cress, one of the owners of the Brooklyn placer mining claim, over which a right of way is sought, surveyed the mill site for the mining company. In 1916 and 1917 the company erected on its mill site a concentrating mill. At the same time it made a water right filing, built a diversion dam in Eagle river, and constructed a pipe line to carry water from the river to the mill for power purposes in operating the mill. The pipe line crossed the Brooklyn placer mining claim, then owned by Coursen and Cress. A railroad spur was built from the main track to the mill to carry ore to the mill and to transport concentrates from the mill. The initial cost of these improvements was $45,600. Before constructing the mill and pipe line the company bought from the owners two acres of the placer claim. The president of the company testified that, at that time and as part of the same transaction, it was understood that the company should have a right of way for a water line across the rest of the placer. Before the work was completed Coursen informed the president that he did not want the pipe line to go through his property and threatened an injunction. Thereupon, on May 5, 1917, the company commenced a proceeding to condemn, for a right of way for its pipe line, a strip of ground 50 feet wide, containing a trifle over one acre. On May 21 the court made an order giving the company temporary possession of the premises sought to be condemned. Pursuant to such order, the company deposited $150 with the registry of the court, and thereupon continued the construction of the mill and the pipe line, completing the same in the summer of 1917. On October 15 Coursen and Cress filed an answer. On June 6, 1918, the Empire Zinc Company *532 obtained title to the placer claim. On November 16, 1927, it was substituted as respondent in the place of Coursen and Cress, and, upon stipulation of the parties, filed its answer, which was substituted for the answer of Coursen and Cress. The answer raised the question of the right to condemn. After a replication was filed, the zinc company moved to set for hearing the issue whether at the time of such hearing the mining company had the right to condemn. The issue was tried on June 21, 1928; the court found "that the right of petitioner to condemn and take said land does not exist, and that there is no necessity for such taking"; and thereupon the court dismissed the proceeding.
[1] 1. Counsel for the mining company insists that the court had no right to try the issue of the right to condemn, as the application for such hearing was not made in apt time. The application, having been made before the calling of a jury to assess damages, was in apt time. Kaschke v. Camfield,
[2] 2. It is not seriously contended that at the time of the commencement of the proceeding (May 5, 1917) the mining company did not have the right to condemn. Counsel for the mining company contends that the case should have been decided upon the facts as they existed at that time, and not, as the trial court held, upon the facts as they existed over eleven years thereafter, when the case was heard. But for some purposes the facts as they exist at the time of the hearing may be considered. Thus, section 6327, C. L., provides that in estimating the value of the property actually taken, the value at the time of the appraisement shall be awarded. That rule was applied in Colorado Central R. Co. v. Allen,
3. Counsel for the zinc company admit that when that company acquired title to the placer the mill was in operation and the pipe line in use, and the condemnation suit seemed to be in compliance with the law and in good faith; but they contend that later developments showed that the enterprise was not feasible and was a failure, that at the time of the hearing the right of way was not used for the purposes stated in the petition, or at all, and was not needed, and, therefore, that the necessity and the right to condemn had ceased.
The evidence upon which this contention is based indicates that at the time of the hearing the enterprise had a history not unfamiliar to those acquainted with the business of metal mining and milling. At first the company operated on its own account; then leased from time to time to various sets of lessees. At times the mill was in operation; most of the time it was idle. In 1919 lessees spent $1,000 in repairing the pipe line, and in 1925 the mill was put in good condition at an additional expense of $1,000. In 1926, the spur track was disconnected from the main track, but the railroad engineer testified that upon resumption of mill operations it would be reconnected. At the time of the hearing (1928) the mill and pipe line had fallen into disrepair; one witness said that the mill was dilapidated. It is evident that up to the time of the hearing the enterprise was not a success. *534 However, at that time there were pending negotiations with another company for the installation in the mill of a roaster and cyanide plant, which negotiations were at a standstill, awaiting the result of the condemnation proceeding.
[3, 4] The statute provides that the court or judge shall hear proofs and allegations touching the regularity of the proceeding. C. L., § 6316. Questions intended to defeat the proceeding must be raised in advance and be determined by the court in limine. If, for any reason of law or fact, a petitioner is not entitled to condemn a tract, or if it should not be taken, such matters are for the court to settle in advance and do not, strictly speaking, belong to the question of necessity. Wassenich v.City County of Denver, supra. Thus, whether or not the petitioner belongs to the class of persons entitled to condemn; whether or not the property sought to be taken belongs to the class of property that is subject to condemnation; whether or not the purpose for which the property is sought to be taken is one for which condemnation is permitted; whether or not the petitioner and the owner have been able to come to an agreement concerning a purchase of the land; and whether or not the act authorizing the proceeding is constitutional; these and similar questions, when raised, and for the court to determine in limine. However, the question of the necessity for taking the land is not for the court to determine, but, when a proper subject of inquiry, must be determined by a board of commissioners appointed by the court. C. L. § 6316; Kaschke v. Camfield, supra; Kern v.Minekime,
In finding that there was no necessity for the taking *535 of the property, the court went beyond its province and thereby committed error.
[5] The record does not support the finding that the mining company's right to condemn did not exist, and in so finding the court erred, unless, indeed, counsel are correct in their contention that in the present case a decree condemning the land would violate the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment; a contention that we will now discuss.
[6] 4. Counsel for the zinc company commence their argument on the constitutional question with the following quotation from the opinion in Madisonville TractionCo. v. Saint Bernard Mining Co.,
[7-9] Where practicable, state constitutions and statutes should be so construed as to avoid conflict with the federal Constitution. We believe that the constitutional provisions quoted above, and the statutory provisions, are not, when reasonably construed, in conflict with the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution. Although the words "private use" occur in our Constitution and statutes, it is obvious that they do not mean a strictly private use, that is to say one having no relation to the public interest. The fact that the Constitution permits private property to be taken for certain specified uses is an implied declaration that such uses are so closely connected with the public interest as to be at least quasi public, or, in a modified sense, affected with a public interest; and from our acquaintance with the history of this state and of the conditions existing here, we know that such implied declaration is in harmony with the general, notorious and acknowledged facts. Though we have not heretofore said so in so many words, the foregoing considerations prompted our repeated decisions to the effect that under our Constitution and statutes private persons have the right to take private property for the uses specified in the Constitution.Kaschke v. Camfield, supra; Lamborn v. Bell,
It is not necessary for us to consider what the effect would be if the state Constitution or a statute should attempt to confer the right of condemnation for a strictly private use, for this is not such a case. *538
[10] 5. Counsel for the zinc company say, and correctly, that the question whether the right to condemn exists should be determined as of the date of the hearing. They say that at that time the mining company was not engaged in operating the mill on its own account; that for some time prior thereto it had not been so engaged; that it showed no intention to operate the mill in the future on its own account, but only through lessees: and that the enterprise was not feasible or practicable; and they contend, therefore, that it does not clearly appear that the intended use would be affected with a public interest, or would be sufficiently connected with the public interest as to justify a taking of the property, and that such taking would be a deprivation of the zinc company's rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. This contention is commingled, to some extent, with the contention that there was no necessity for condemning the property; but, as we have seen, the question of necessity is not for the court, but for commissioners.
[11] The fact that the property had been leased from time to time, and may again be leased, does not deprive the mining company of the right to condemn. In UnionPacific Railroad Co. v. Colorado Postal Telegraph-CableCo.,
[12] Whether or not an enterprise is feasible or practicable, and whether or not it will be a financial success, cannot be inquired into even by commissioners charged with the duty of determining the question of necessity.Gibson v. Cann, supra; Haver v. Matonock,
[13] The contention that a condemnation in this case would be a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment cannot be sustained.
For the reasons stated, the court erred in dismissing the proceeding. The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings in harmony with the views herein expressed.