18 Iowa 327 | Iowa | 1865
This action of the court was clearly erroneous. This, if allowed, would make the witnesses perform the functions of the jury. The farthest courts have gone is to allow witnesses, otherwise properly qualified, to give opinions as to the value of property. Henry v. The Dubuque, &c., R. R. Co., 2 Iowa, 288; Dalzell v. City of Davenport, 12 Id., 437. No extension of the rule is allowable. There is a manifest difference between proving value and proving damages by the opinions of witnesses. As a direct authority against the ruling of the District Court on this point, we refer to the ■well-considered case of Morehouse v. Mathews, 2 Comst. (N. Y.), 514; and see, also, Dunham v. Simmons, 3 Hill (N. Y.) 609; Paige v. Hazard, 5 Id., 603; and Anson v. Dwight, infra, and authorities there cited.
III. The next point made by the county raises the question as to the nature and extent of the rights of riparian owners on the public water courses of this State with respect to ferries. The questions arise both upon rulings admitting testimony, and upon the instructions of the
Another witness was asked, “ what will be the damage to the plaintiff (Prosser), by laying out said road and taking his ferry right therein?” He answered: “The damage Prosser would sustain by taking his ferry right would be $5,000 to $6,000.” The plaintiff, who was examined as a witness, was permitted to answer the question, “ What is the ferry privilege worth, to cross at the point where the new road is located ?” The answer was, “ I can’t tell exactly, I have always considered that a good point to make a ferry, and that I should be damaged by laying out said road and giving the right to the public to have a ferry landing there, in the sum of $10,000.”
The following interrogatory was propounded to the plaintiff: “What is the gross amount of ferry receipts annually on that line of communication?” His answer was: “The gross receipts would be about $2,000, the expenses $500 or $600.”
Each of these questions and answers were duly objected to; the objections overruled, and exceptions properly taken; “ the court holding,” says the bill of exceptions, 1st, “ that damages might be thus proved, and 2d, that the plaintiff (Prosser), by law, é as a riparian owner, had a ferry right independent of the statute in the real estate sought to be condemned as a highway; that the laying out of said highway deprived the plaintiff of said right; that the same was property, and should be regarded by the jury in assessing the damages.”
At the plaintiff’s request, the jury were instructed to include in the damages “the loss of the use of the said ferry privilegealso, that “ the value of the ferry privilege at that point will depend much upon the amount of ferry business to be done, and the amount of the proceeds thereof, and it is proper for the jury to consider the same in arriving at the plaintiff’s damages.” In relation to the above questions asked the witnesses, and the answers thereto (except the one in relation to the earnings of the plaintiff’s ferry), it is sufficient to say that the court erred for the reasons stated in the second division of this opinion.-
The other matters involved in these questions, as well as the question in relation to the earnings of the plaintiff’s ferry, we will consider in connection with the charge of the court.
The court, in substance, charged the jury that Prosser, as riparian owner, not only had a ferry right but an exclu
* These are new questions in this State, and are of the highest importance. These considerations, as well as the loose and inconsistent statement in some of the authorities and books on this subject, have led us to examine it with great care. It will conduce to a perspic-' uous treatment to consider,
1st. The right of riparian proprietors at common law and aside from statute in relation to ferries,;
2d. Their rights, in this respect, under our statute; and
3d. Whether these rights are extinguished or taken away by the mere establishment of a public highway.
And here it is most essential to distinguish . ° between a public ferry and & private ferry. Some, confusion exists in many of the American cases from overlooking this distinction. The right to establish and keep a public ferry is, in law, termed a franchise, which is, in England, a royal privilege in the hands of a subject. 2 Bl. Com., 37; 3 Kent Com., 458. And it is perfeetty clear that the franchise of a public ferry cannot be set up or exercised by any of the king’s subjects without prescription, grant or license from the crown. Thus, says Chief Justice Willes (Willes Rep., 512; Blisset v. Hart, note), “ a ferry is publici juris. It is a franchise which no one can erect without a license from the crown. If a
And it is beyond dispute, in the English law, that a second public ferry cannot be set up without a license, even though the person owns the soil on both sides of the river. The common law rights of riparian proprietors, in this respect, are thus stated by Sir Matthew Hale, in his De Jure Maris, a work, to use the language of Chancellor Kent (3 Com., 412, 426), of “ great and accurate learning, and a text-book of the highest authority. ” Its varied and exhaustive learning well merits this high eulogium. Sir Matthew says: “ The king, by ancient right of prerogative, hath had a certain interest in many fresh rivers, even where the sea doth not flow and reflow, as well as in the salt, or arms of the sea; and these are those which follow: 1st. A right of franchise or privilege that no man may set up a common (public) ferry for all passengers without prescription time out of mind, or a charter from the king. He (the owner) may make a ferry for his own use or the use of his family, but not for the common use of all the Icing's subjects passing that way." And he proceeds to give the reason thus: “ Because it doth in consequence tend to become a common charge, and is become a thing of public interest or use, arid every man for his passage pays a toll which is a common charge, and every ferry ought to be under public regulation ; that is, that the owner give attendance at due times, keep a boat' in ■ due order, and take but a reasonable toll;
That a party cannot set up a public ferry franchise, even on his own land, without the consent of the State, see also the authorities above cited, and, particularly, Young v. Harrison, 6 Ga., 131; S. C., 9 Id., 359; Nashville v. Shelby, 10 Yerg., 280; 5 Id., 189; Sparks v. White, 7 Humph. (Tenn.), 86; Trustees, &c., v. Taiman, 13 Ill., 29; Pipkins v. Winans, 2 Dev. (Law), 402, per Henderson, Ch. J.; Cooper v. Smith., 9 Serg. & Rawle, 33; Murray v. Menefee, 20 Ark., 560; Id., 573; Milton v. Hoden, 32 Ala., 30; Dane Ab., ch. 67, p. 653; and well considered case of Stark v. McGowan, 1 Nott & McCord (South Car.), 387; Mills et al. v. St. Clair County, 2 Gilm. (Ill.), 197, affirmed by Supreme Court United States, 8 How., 569; Stark v. Miller, 3 Mo., 470; Gales v. Anderson, 13 Ill., 413; Bush v. The Peru Bridge Co., 3 Porter (Ind.), 21; The People v. Mayor, &c., of N. Y, 32 Barb., 102; Somerville v. Weinbish, 7 Gratt. (Va.), 205; Norris v. The Farmers', &c., Co., 6 Cal., 509; Taylor v. R. R. Co., 4 Jones (Law), N. C., 277 Johnson v. Erskine, 9 Texas, 1.
These authorities abundantly establish that, in this country, a ferry franchise must be conferred by the government; must be founded upon a grant or license, or upon prescription which presumes the existence of such grant or license; that ownership of the soil will not confer the right to set up or exercise the franchise; that the most such riparian ownership can do is to authorize the proprietor to establish a ferry for his own convenience and that of his family, or, at farthest, to ferry not for tolls, that is, for a fixed price independent of contract, but upon a contract express or implied, when not forbidden by statute, and when this does not injure or affect any established public ferry.
It is there declared, that in establishing a “new ferry, preference shall be given to the owner of the land,” but if, upon notice, “ he fails to make application for a license, or if he is an improper person to receive the same, it may be conferred upon any other proper applicant.” Rev., § 1203.
This, in addition to his common law rights as above defined, is the extent of the ferry rights, in this State, of the riparian owner. He has not a ferry franchise, but simply the preferable right, if a proper person, to the franchise of a public ferry, if the government or the board of supervisors, exercising authority therefrom, sees fit to establish such a ferry. That this is merely in affirmance of common law principles, we refer to the observations and authorities above, and particularly to Cooper v. Smith, 9 Serg. & R., 33; Pipkin v. Wynus, 2 Dev. (Law), 402, 404; Stark v. McGowan, 1 Nott. & McCord, 387; Young v. Harrison, 9 Geo., 359; S. C. 6 Id., 131; Nashville v. Shelby, 10 Yerg., 280; Gales v. Anderson, 13 Ill., 413. "While most of the States recognize the priority of rights in the riparian proprietor to a ferry, if the proper authorities deem it necessary to establish one. (Cloyes v. Keats, 18 Ark., 19; Murray v. Menefee, 20 Id., 561; Memphis v. Overton, 3 Yerg., 387; Allen v. Farnsworth, 5 Id., 189; 10 Id., 280; Sparlcs v. White, 7 Humph., 86; .Lawless v.
Our conclusion then is, that the riparian owner has not, either at common law or under our statute, the right without a license to erect a public ferry; and that his only right as such owner is to keep a private ferry under the restrictions and limitations before stated, that is, when not prohibited by law, and when it does not interfere with an established ferry, and to have priority (being a suitable person) if a new public ferry should be established. These views, it will be seen, are very different from, those taken by the court below in its rulings on the trial; and those rulings were therefore erroneous.
But of these rights, though they are much more limited than the plaintiff contended for and the court below supposed, the riparian owner cannot be deprived without just compensation. In point see Young v. Harrison, 9 Ga., 359; S. C., 6 Id., 131; Cooper v. Smith, 9 Serg. & R. 33; Pipkin v. Wynus, 2 Dev. (Law), 402; Bowman v. Watheu, 2 McLean, 376.
And here we feel compelled to yield our doubts to the almost if not quite uniform current of authority, and to hold that it does not. The argument is this: By the location of the- road, the public acquire simply the right of way over the soil, the bare right of passage and its incidents, nothing more. Deaton v. Polk Co., 9 Iowa, 594; Trustees, &c., v. The Auburn, &c., R. R. Co., 3 Hill N. Y.,
The property or freehold still remains in the owner of the land; how completely so, the cases last cited, with others there referred1' to, strikingly illustrate.
This question has arisen in several cases, and, among others, in Pipkins v. Wynus before cited, and which overruled Rayner v. Dowdy, 1 Murph., 279. Speaking of this subject, Henderson, Ch. J., says: “ For the uses and purposes of a highway it (the highwajr) is the sovereign’s — the public’s — for all other purposes it is the former proprietor’s. The right of using it as a landing place for a ferry has never been taken from him; and although there is scarcely a perceptible difference between stepping from a boat on the land and stepping from land to land, yet that has never been taken from the former proprietor for such purposes, as he has never been compensated for the rigid (limited as above stated) of transporting persons across the water course, as that was not considered when the price of taking the land for a highway was fixed, and although it is of but little value without the franchise, yet his ownership of the land gives him the preferable right to call for the franchise when the ferry becomes necessary. This right is valuable, for, unless there are good reasons to the contrary, the sovereign must grant it to the owner, as sovereigns are bound to be just.” * * * * “ If it be asked what is to be done if the owner of land, where a ferry is necessary, refuses to receive the franchise, it is answered pay him for the land and grant it to another.” ****** Let it not be taken for a road and used as a ferry.” It was accordingly held that compensation must be made to the owner of the fee for the use of the soil for the ferry right, although there is a public road leading to the river on both sides.
Whether the decision in Chess y. Manoun, above cited, is reconcilable with McManus v. Carmichael, 3 Iowa, 1, is a question of some difficulty. See, on this subject, Prosser v. Davis, infra.
Without committing ourselves to the entire correctness ■of all the positions taken in these cases, which we have ■referred to as illustrating the subject, we feel free in holding:
1st. That the dedication or taking of land for a public highway does not, in cases where the owner retains the fee, and the public have only an easement, deprive such owner of his preferable right to a ferry, if one is established.
2d. That a ferry license to a stranger will not authorize him, against the consent of the owner, or without compensating him therefor, to use the termini of such highway, ■certainly above high-water mark (see, on this point, Prosser y. Davis, infra), for the purpose of fastening boats and of ■receiving and discharging freight and passengers. Such a
For the same reasons, it erred also in allowing evidence to be given, and in directing the jury to consider the earnings of the plaintiff’s ferry, in ascertaining and assessing the damages in the proceeding. See Mills v. County of St. Clair, 2 Gilm. (Ill.), 197, 237.
Questions relative to the value of the riparian right of Prosser to a ferry are out of place in a proceeding intended to, and which can only determine the quantum of damages to which the land owner is entitled for the simple and bare right of way or easement of passage by the public.
Beversed.