51 S.E. 485 | S.C. | 1905
April 18, 1905. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an action for a perpetual injunction against condemnation proceedings instituted by the Charleston Union Station Co., under an alleged power contained in the act of the General Assembly incorporating the defendant company, approved February 20th, 1902, 23d Stat., 1168. The decree of the Circuit Court, reported herewith, refused injunction, and dismissed the complaint, after a full and able consideration of the questions presented. The plaintiffs appeal upon exceptions, reported in full herewith, which, without further statement, we proceed to consider.
The first, second, fourth and fifth exceptions make the point that the act under which the defendant seeks to condemn plaintiffs' property is unconstitutional in that no tribunal is provided for the determination of any question that may be made by the land owner as to the right and power of the defendant company to take plaintiffs' property. This contention cannot be sustained. While it is true, the condemnation statutes provide no special tribunal, except for the determination of the *483
amount of compensation to be paid, nevertheless the regular machinery of the Courts is available for the determination of any issue with respect to the right and power to condemn.Riley v. Union Station Co.,
The second specification of the second exception objects to that portion of the decree of the Circuit Court wherein the Court said, "Nor are the provisions of the fourteenth amendment of the Constitution of the United States violated. One of the attributes of State sovereignty is the right of eminent domain, the right of providing for the taking of private property for public uses. Each State, by virtue of its Statehood, has the right to exercise the power of eminent domain. This is doubted nowhere, and the provisions of the Federal Constitution do not relate to the eminent domain of the State." Appellants' ground of objection is that the provisions of the Federal Constitution, and particularly the fourteenth amendment, do relate to and control the law of eminent domain of South Carolina. The exception puts an erroneous interpretation on the meaning of the Circuit Judge. The objectionable language was in the quotation from 10 Ency. Law, 2d ed., 1052, which was based upon Barron v. Baltimore, 7 Pet., 243. The case cited was decided in 1833, and related to the fifth amendment, declaring that private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation, which the Court said was intended solely as a limitation on the exercise of the power *484 of the Federal government, and was not applicable to legislation of the States. Judge Dantzler did not intend to say that the provisions of the fourteenth amendment had no relation to the exercise of eminent domain by the State, but that such amendment was not violated by the statutes in question, as he proceeds to show that the condemnation proposed was for a public use, and that the statutes made ample provision for the protection of property owners and for compensation for property so condemned.
The third exception imputes error in holding that the property sought to be condemned is for public use; whereas, the facts show that it is to be taken for private use, in violation of art. I., sec. 17, State Constitution. This exception cannot be sustained. The defendant company was incorporated for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating a union passenger station in the city of Charleston, and, to this end, was given the right to acquire, by purchase, lease or condemnation, all property necessary for the same, and to have the general powers and to be subject to the general restrictions imposed by law upon railroad corporations. By section 3, power was given to acquire such real estate as may be necessary to construct, maintain and operate a union passenger station, comprising passenger depots, office buildings, sheds, storage rooms and yards; also main and side tracks, switches, crossovers, turnouts, bridges and other terminal railroad facilities, appurtenances and accommodations suitable in size, location and manner of construction, to perform promptly and efficiently the work of receiving, delivering and transferring all passengers, baggage and mail and express matter of railroad companies using said station, etc., with power to condemn lands for such purpose, under sections 1743 to 1755, Revised Statutes, 1893, and amendatory statutes.
If defendant company is not, in fact, a railroad company, its main purposes are clearly within the objects of a regular railroad company, and it is so closely analogous thereto as to warrant the Court in applying to it the same rule that would *485 be applied to a regular railroad corporation in determining whether the property sought to be condemned is for a public use.
If it should be conceded that the use of a union passenger station is private, appellant would have to reckon with the case of Boyd v. Granite Co.,
The first general principle which must control this question is, when the legislature, in effect, declares that the construction, maintenance and operation of the union passenger station in the city of Charleston is a public purpose so as to authorize the condemnation of property, this conclusion is binding on the Court if there be any reasonable ground to support it. Chicago Northwestern Ry. Co. v. Morehouse,
The fact that the Southern Railway Co. and the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co. are the principal stockholders in the defendant company and the officers of the defendant *487 company are officers in said railroad companies cannot affect this question, for the use is still a public use, whether considered with reference to the defendant company or with reference to the stockholding companies, as these railroad companies, as common carriers, are public agencies, and it is within the purpose of their organization to own or control depot facilities required for their business and the needs of the community. Nor is the question whether the use is a public use at all affected by the alleged fact that each of the railroad companies holding stock in the defendant company has one or more sites of its own said to be suitable for a union passenger station. The question whether the use is public depends upon the nature of the use and not upon the possessions of the particular individuals or corporations that may be interested in such use. Whether the last mentioned fact influences the question whether there is a necessity for condemning plaintiff's property belongs more properly to the consideration of other exceptions to be hereafter noticed.
The sixth exception raises the point that the act incorporating the defendant company violates sec. 7, art. III., of the State Constitution, in that it relates to more than one subject expressed in its title, since it not only incorporated the defendant company, but amended the existing charters of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad and the Southern Railway by a special law and not by a general law, which is forbidden by art. IX., sec. 2, of the Constitution. The title of the act is to incorporate the "Charleston Union Station Company," but in sec. 5, the statute gives the power to subscribe for and hold the stock and to guarantee and hold the bonds of the defendant company. The case of Connor v. Railroad,
The Circuit Court has disposed of this question very conclusively by construing these provisions of the Constitution together. Sec. 2, art IX., of the Constitution, quoted in full, is as follows: "No charter of incorporation shall be granted, changed or amended by special law except in the case of such charitable, educational, penal or reformatory corporations as may be under the control of the State or may be provided for in this Constitution, but the General Assembly shall provide, by general laws, for changing or amending existing charters, and for the organization of all corporations hereafter to be created, and any such law so passed. as well as all charters now existing or hereafter created, shall be subject to future repeal or alteration: Provided, That the General Assembly may, by a two-thirds vote of each house, *489 on a concurrent resolution, allow a bill for a special charter to be introduced, and when so introduced may be passed the same as other bills." The above proviso clearly makes an exception to the general rule forbidding a special law when a general law can be made applicable, by providing that a special charter may be granted under the conditions named. In this case, the conditions exist, and the statute recites the fact that a concurrent resolution allowing the bill to be introduced has been passed by a two-thirds vote of each house, as required by statute.
The ninth and tenth exceptions allege error in not holding that defendant company is not duly incorporated, organized and authorized to commence business under the terms of the act of corporation, because the act authorized the company to organize and commence business when $50,000 had been subscribed to the capital stock, the evidence shows that nine-tenths thereof is invalid stock subscriptions of Southern Railway Co. and Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co., such invalidity resting in the contention that the special act incorporating the company is void, under sec. 2, art. IX., of the Constitution. This contention has been overruled in the consideration of the seventh and eighth exceptions above.
The eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, nineteenth exceptions bring up the question of fact, whether the property sought to be condemned is necessary for the purposes of the corporation. The case of S.C.R.R. Co. v. Blake, 9th Rich., 228, shows that the grantee of the power to condemn lands is not the sole judge whether any particular parcel of land is required for the purposes of the road, and that the final determination of this question rests with the Courts. This is in accord with many authorities cited in 88 Am. St. Rep., 946, note. Nevertheless, it is right that weight should be given to the fact that the grantee to whom the statute has delegated the power to condemn has decided that the particular land in question is required. As said inSmith v. R.R. Co.,
We have carefully considered the testimony in view of these principles and see no just ground for overruling the decision of the Circuit Court that such reasonable necessity exists. It is strenuously contended by appellant that no reasonable necessity exists, because the testimony shows that the Southern Railway Co. and the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co., holding the greater portion of the capital stock of the defendant company, each have lots suitable for the erection thereon of a union station, and that equity and good conscience would not allow these companies associated under the name of the Charleston Union Station Co. to condemn the property of plaintiff for said purposes.
In a proper case the court of equity would undoubtedly look beyond the corporate entity to its constituent stockholders as the real parties in interest, associated under the name of the corporation. But we find nothing in this case which calls upon this Court to ignore the rights of defendant as a corporation to condemn the lands of others for a public use, founded in reasonable necessity. So far as appears, the defendant company owns no property which it may use for the purpose named. It would be a bold and far-reaching doctrine to announce that no quasi corporation could condemn property of a non-stockholder for public use as long as any stockholder had property which might be used for the purpose. Such a rule would lead the Court into an impenetrable maze to ascertain and adjust the rights and claims of the various stockholders as to whose property should be taken and whose left. The safer rule is that the *491
grantee of the power to condemn must not abuse the discretion confided by the legislature and spoliate private property by taking, for pretended public use, more than a reasonable necessity requires. We find no abuse of discretion or bad faith in defendant's proposal to condemn plaintiffs' property, and the general rule is that if there be no bad faith or abuse of discretion on the part of the grantee in the matter of location, his discretion will not be interfered with. 10 Ency. Law, 2 ed., 1057, and cases cited in note 1. A somewhat similar contention was made in Kansas and Texas Coal Ry.
v. Northwestern Coal Mining Co.,
The twenty-third exception, relating to striking out all the testimony of Mr. John Riley in reference to the introduction of the bill to incorporate the defendant, is untenable. The purport of the testimony was that Mr. Riley received no personal notice of the introduction of the bill in the Senate, and thus had no opportunity to attempt to have the bill amended in the Senate, by striking out the condemnation clause, although he knew, from the newspapers, of the passage of the resolution authorizing the introduction of the bill, and as a matter of fact was heard by *492 the house committee in opposition to the bill. The ruling of the Circuit Court was quite proper. The testimony was wholly irrelevant to any issue in the case, and even if it had been permitted to remain as a part of the record, it could be of no consequence in affecting the result of this case.
We find no error in refusing injunction sought and in dismissing the complaint.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.