49 La. Ann. 1270 | La. | 1897
Lead Opinion
. The opinion of the court was delivered by
The only issue before us is as to the amount of compensation allowed. Appellants contend it is entirely too small
We have carefully examined the evidence in this case in reference to the amount awarded to the defendant company. Quoad that •question the burden is on them to make good their claims. The expropriation proceeding in this suit is of a character different from that with which we are usually called on to deal. Ordinarily such demands have been based on a prayer by a railroad company to obtain a right of way by original expropriation from the owners of the fee. In the case at bar the right of way is sought to be obtained from a railroad which holds its own right of wajq through having itself exercised a right of expropriation, or appropriation or both. In answer to a question propounded by the defendants’ counsel to those of the plaintiffs as to the nature and character of the rights plaintiffs were seeking to acquire herein, they answered they sought the acquisition in part of the fee of the defendants’ right of way •and the acquisition in part of an easement upon it.
It is generally accepted as true that lands devoted to one public •use can not be subjected to another, unless the authority so to do be given in express words or by necessary implication; that the Legislature is not presumed to have intended to allow that this should be done (Lewis on Eminent Domain, Sec. 267). In view of that fact statutes bearing on that-subject must be strictly construed.
In 1880 the General Assembly of Louisiana, by Act No. 124 of that year, enacted that corporations chartered or formed under the laws ,of this State or under the laws of the United States, for the purpose
On the 24th of July, 1866, Congress passed an act entitled “An act to aid in the construction of telegraph lines and to secure to the government the use of the same, for postal, military and other purposes,” by which it was enacted that any telegraph company now organized, or which may hereafter be organized under the laws of any State of this Union, shall have the right to construct, maintain and operate lines of telegraph through and over any portion of the public domain of the United States, over and along any of the military or post roads of the United States which have been or may be hereafter declared such by act of Congress, and over, under and across the navigable streams or waters of the United States, provided, that such lines of telegraph shall be so constructed and maintained as not to obstruct the navigation of such streams and waters, or interfere with the ordinary travel on such military or post roads.
In 1872 Congress declared all the railroads in the country which were then or might thereafter be in operation, post
What under the laws cited was the character of the right granted? Was it a right to dispossess railroad companies of the fee (if any they had) of a portion of land which they had acquired themselves by expropriation, or was the right limited to an “ easement,” and this right subject to be modified by changing conditions of the railroad companies as to their own necessities? Was it the intention of the lawmaker to make the prior acquired right yield permanently to the last one acquired? Was the latter a fixed right not susceptible of change, or was it a temporary one taken, subject to the paramount, ultimate right of the first company, to be regained and re-exercised in case of necessity.
Lewis (Sec. 267) declares that property not in use for railroad purposes and not necessary to the proper exercise of the corporate franchise may be taken by another company. He says (Sec. 269) that “ a telegraph may be established along a railroad right of way, it being no material interference with the use for railroad purposes,” adding: “ but a special authority to a telegraph company to build upon, over or under any public road, street or highway, is to be construed strictly, and when such new right is given, it must be so exercised as to do as little injury as possible to the old way or road.”
When the whole of the right of way of a railroad is needed longitudinally for railroad purposes, or when grounds, shops and the like, which are devoted to special uses in connection with the road and necessary to its operation and in constant use, in connection therewith, it should not be permitted to be ousted completely from its rights by a newcomer seeking to exercise a franchise of a different character, unless under most extraordinary circumstances, if at all.
We have noticed these general principles as the starting point for an examination of the character of. the right which is to be acquired by the plaintiffs herein, and of the extent it can be permitted
The State government, in the statute quoted, “ granted to telegraph companies, conditionally, the privilege of constructing and maintaining their lines over and along all State, parish and public roads or public works,” and “along and over the waters of the State,” and declared that such companies should be entitled to the “right of way over all lands belonging to the State and over the lands.
“ Upon the principle,” says Lewis (Sec. 278), “that statutes conferring compulsory powers are to be strictly construed it follows, that where the estate taken is not defined only such estate or interest will vest as is necessary to accomplish the purpose in view. Thus under an authority to take land for a highway, railroad or other use, only an easement can be acquired.” A right of way in legal meaning is a mere easement -on the lands of others. (Am. and Eng. Ency. of Law, Vol. 6, verbo Eminent Domain, p. 531.)
The basis of calculation would be different as between the parties to this suit from what it would be if the plaintiffs were seeking to obtain rights under an original expropriation from the original owners of lands for public purposes.
It would be difficult to ascertain the “ market value ” of the land taken up in the erection of a telephone line over a railroad’s right of way, even if the railroad company held the fee. When once the land which is included in such a right of way has become separated from the different tracts of which it originally formed part, it has practically become hors de commerce as land. The value of the lands from which they have become detached and which border the right of way furnishes a poor basis for determining that within the right of way, as the lacter has ceased to be available for general purposes.
The Civil Code directs the jury of experts, impaneled to assess the value of the land sought to be expropriated, to “ determine by their verdict, after hearing the parties and their evidence, what is the value of the land described in the petition, and what damages, if any, the owner would sustain in addition to the loss of the land by its expropriation ” (0. C. 2622), and declares that “ in estimating the value of the property to be expropriated the basis of assessment
The articles of the Code on this subject deal obviously with the question of expropriation and assessment as presented in its most’ usual form, and provide no standard where the object of the expropriation is the acquisition by one corporation of a right of way or right of occupation and use over a right of way already acquired by another.
Under such circumstances we are forced to construe the words “ value of the property to be expropriated ” to mean “ value of the; use and occupation of the property to be appropriated.”
The American and English Encyclopedia of Law in referring to-the subject of the measure of damages where they are demanded ‘ ‘ for running powers over another railroad ” declares that it is difficult to arrive at any rule for the computation of damages in such a case.
We find it laid down in that work under the authority of Griswold vs. St. Louis, etc., R. R. Co., 8 Mo. Ap. 582; S. C., 1 Am. and Eng. R. R. Cas. 626, that: “Where the use made of the land is simply temporary the measure of damage is not the full value of the land, but only a fair recompense to the owner for the use made of it and for any injury done to it.” We think the standard there adopted a just one, which can well be taken for the purposes of cases like the present. In determining what a fair compensation should be, the improved condition of the land sought to housed is a proper element in reaching conclusions. (Postal Co. vs. Morgan’s Co., 49 An. 60.) The defendants are not entitled to recover the original cost of improvements, but are entitled to reasonable-remuneration in view of the same. (Am. and Eng. Ency. of Law, Vol. 6, page 558.) In the case at bar plaintiffs’ telegraph poles are proposed to be placed on the outer edge of defendants’ right of way, considerably outside of any portion of the same which the railroad company has now in use, or is likely to call into use in the near future. We think the poles are sufficiently removed from defendants’ track to justify our designating danger from the same as a remote danger, even as to the sidings. The railroad right of way has-been already fenced in (in their own interest) in almost its entire length. Defendants are not called on to make any change in the same
“The right of way of defendants over which plaintiff seeks to expropriate a right of way for telegraph purposes is one hundred and five and forty-one one-hundredths miles in length. Of this right of way eighty-six miles pass through agricultural and prairie lands, or urban property, there being numerous towns on the railroad. Thirteen miles are through timbered land not swamp; four and a half miles through timbered swamp, and and one and a half miles through swamps not timbered. These nineteen miles through timbered and swamp lands have been made available for a right of way at a cost of much labor and money and it is kept clear and in suitable condition at a considerable annual expense, its maintenance in this condition being necessary for the proper and safe operation of defendants’ trains.”
“ If plaintiff were not going to avail itself of the work already done by defendants, it would cost four hundred and thirty-six dollars and eighty cents to clear a width of eight feet (the width of the arms of the telegraph poles) through thirteen miles of timbered land not*1281 swamp, and two hundred and sixteen dollars to clear the same width through timbered swamps. In two years time the undergrowth would reach such a height as to interfere with the operation of the telegraph line and the land would have to be recleared every two years at an expense of twenty dollars per mile, or ten dollars per mile per year, or one hundred and seventy-five dollars for the seventeen and a half miles of timbered and timbered swamp land. But this expense of maintenance is saved the telegraph company from the necessity the railroad company is under of keeping its right of way clear and free from undergrowth. From the foregoing it appears that it would cost the telegraph company to do what'has already been done for it to make the seventeen and one-half miles suitable for telegraph right of way, $436.80 x 216, or $642.80. That it is saved a cost of maintenance equal to one hundred and seventy-five dollars per year, which capitalized at five percent, is equivalent to three thousand five hundred dollars.”
“ Is not the value then of the right of way [on that score] over the seventeen and one-half miles worth, at least, three thousand five hundred dollars plus six hundred and forty-two dollars and eighty cents, or four thousand one hundred and forty-two dollars and eighty cents.”
We have reached the conclusion that the amount awarded to defendants is too small and that it should be increased.
For the reasons herein assigned, it is hereby ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment appealed from be and the same is hereby amended by ordering and decreeing that the rights described in plaintiffs’ petition be and the same are hereby condemned, expropriated and adjudged to petitioner, the Postal Telegraph Cable Company of Louisiana, as a right of way for the purposes and subject to the conditions set forth and prayed for in said petition, the same to vest in petitioner upon payment by plaintiffs to the defendants of the sum of twenty-one hundred dollars.
It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment appealed from, as so amended, be and the same is hereby affirmed, costs of appeal to be paid by the appellees.
Rehearing
On Applicatiok por Rehearing.
The object of this suit is to expropriate the use of, or an easement over the defendant’s right of way from the town of
Our opinion holds that plaintiff has the legal right to make such an expropriation, without disturbing the fee of defendant’s title; and increased the jury’s award of damages so as to allow the defendant the sum of two thousand one hundred dollars, the award of the jury having been fixed at eight dollars and fifty cents per mile,, equal, approximately, to eight hundred and ninety-two dollars and fift^ cents.
The opinion made reference to the case of Postal Telegraph and Cable Company of Louisiana vs. Morgan’s Louisiana and Texas Railroad and Steamship Company, 49 An. 58, in which the same plaintiff instituted proceedings to obtain a similar condemnation of the right of easement for its line of telegraph along the, route of the-defendant’s track from the city of New Orleans to the town of Lafayette; and it treated the instant suit as one for the extension of its line from Lafayette to the Sabine river.
It attracted attention to the fact that the jury, in the case cited,, awarded the defendant fifty-four dollars per mile, and that same, was approved by the judgment of this court on appeal.
In this application, the plaintiff’s counsel complain (1) that this-court improperly exercised the prerogative of amending and increasing the amount awarded by the jury; (2) that some explanation should be made of the grounds on which our opinion proceeds in making an increased allowance.
In the first place, we at once recognize the full force of the decisions quoted in counsel’s brief, to the effect that a jury of freeholders in matters of eminent domain possess, in a limited sense, the character of experts, and that their verdict has that authority in a general sense; and, that such is the jurisprudence of this court, as well as the courts of the country, none will doubt. But this concession does not imply that the power, authority, or jurisdiction of this court, as an appellate tribunal, is not adequate to deal with the verdict of such a jury as in any other case, having a due regard for and appreciation of the evidence upon which they acted.
The maxim resulting from that jurisprudence is, that the verdict of such a jury possesses greater weight than that of an ordinary
We were not unmindful of that maxim in rendering our opinion, and-in amending and increasing the jury’s award as we did.
Appreciating the manifest discrepancy that existed between the-jury awards in the two cases against the same company for the condemnation of a like easement on the right of way along the same line of railway, we felt it to be our duty to reconcile the same in the-only way in which it was practicable by increasing the award in the case under consideration.
In this effort we carefully examined the facts appertaining to the instant case, and found and, in our opinion, reported accordingly.
The increased^ allowance will be seen by asimple calculation to-have been based upon twenty dollars per mile for one hundred and-five miles in extent of railroad track; that is to say thirty-four dollars per mile less than the jury awarded, and this court approved in the other case the resulting difference, principally, growing out of the difference in the character and topography of the country the-line traverses, and that of the difficulties and expense attending the construction of same.
A careful examination of the application and record has satisfied our minds that our opinion is sound, as well as just and equitable.
Rehearing refused.