27 S.E. 1007 | N.C. | 1897
The plaintiff company did not acquire its right of way by either condemnation or purchase. Its claim to the title and absolute and actual possession of the whole of the one hundred feet on both sides of its track is founded upon what it contends is the legal effect of one of the provisions of its charter, Sec. 9, Chap. 26, Laws 1863, which is in the following words: "That in the absence of any contract or contracts with said company in relation to land through which (227) the said road may pass, it shall be presumed that the land on which the said road may be constructed, together with one hundred feet on each side of the centre of the track, has been granted to the company by the owner, and the said company shall have good title and right thereto, and shall hold and enjoy the same as long as the same may be used for the purposes of the company, unless said owner, at the time of finishing the part of the road on his land, shall apply for the assessment of the value of the land within two years next after the finishing of such portion of the road; and said owner, for the want of such application within said two years, shall be barred from said recovery." The contention of the plaintiff is that, as the company had no contract concerning the land embraced in the right of way with the defendant, or those under whom he claims, and as no application for the assessment of the value of the land was made within two years next after the finishing of such portion of the road, the words of the statute (the company's charter) vest the estate of the owner in the company as effectually for all intents and purposes as if a grant for the land had, in fact, been issued. In support of *156
its contention, the plaintiff relies on the decision in R. R. v. McCaskill,
In Blue v. R. R.,
If McCaskill's case has not been overruled by the subsequent decisions of this Court above referred to, we are at least in a position to discuss without much embarrassment the question whether or not the right acquired by railroad companies in their rights of way under such charters as the one before us, is an easement or a conclusive presumption of conveyance of the estate of the owner. Under the statute (charter) where there is no contract between the parties, and after two years from the completion of the road over the owner's land, there is a presumption that the land taken for the right of way "has been granted to the company by the owner, and the company shall have good title and right thereto and shall hold and enjoy the same as long as the same may be used for the purposes of the company. * * *" What reasonable meaning can be attached to the words "for the purposes of the company," except that the land should be used for such purposes as are conducive and necessary to the conducting of the business of the company, that is, of safely and rapidly transporting and conveying passengers and freight over its railroad? That is the whole business of the company. They (230) need land for no other purpose than to properly construct their road beds and drain them, build side-tracks, when necessary, and houses for their employees, warehouses and station houses, with convenient egress and ingress, and, perhaps, for a few other purposes that may have escaped our attention. If the company should need the whole of the right of way for these purposes, it has the right to use the whole. This is what was in contemplation when the railroad charters were granted, when the right of way was laid out and when the road was constructed. Such lands have been condemned on the ground that they were for the use of the public, and they cannot be used for any other purposes than those contemplated when they were condemned. It must be understood, however, that if lands belonging to the right of way not necessary for the purposes of railroad companies should be cultivated by the servient owners, the crops must not be of such inflammable or combustible nature, when matured or maturing, as would endanger the safety of the company's passengers, or might likely cause injury to adjoining lands in case of their ignition by sparks and fire from the company's engines. In such case the companies would have a clear right to enter and remove such crops from their right of way.
Our opinion, therefore, is that in the case before us the plaintiff has only an easement in the land in dispute. The company would be entitled to the possession of the whole of the right of way if it appeared *158 that such possession was necessary for its purposes in the conduct of its business. But such did not appear to be the case on the trial. The complaint did not allege that the land occupied by the defendant was necessary for the purposes of the company, and the motion of defendant's counsel to dismiss the action for that reason must be allowed.
(231) Action dismissed.