102 Tenn. 111 | Tenn. | 1899
This is a proceeding instituted by the Louisville & Nashville Terminal Company, a corporation chartered and organized under Ch. 11 of the Acts of the General Assembly of 1893, seeking an order of condemnation, under the laws of eminent domain, of certain real estate, the property of plaintiff in error, in the city of Nashville.
The avowed purpose of this Act was 'to authorize the creation of railroad terminal corporations ‘ ‘ to facilitate the public convenience and the safety of
After obtaining its charter, as the record discloses, the present company entered into an important contract with the municipal authorities ■ of Nashville, by which there was conceded to it the right to operate and extend existing railroad tracks, and
Acting under the authority of its charter and this contract, the corporation began operations, and, in carrying out its enterprise, found, by the averments of the petition, which, not being denied, are taken to be true, that the property of the plaintiff in error was absolutely necessary in order to enable it to accomplish the purpose of its organization, and that it was situate within the limits defined- by its contract with the city. Failing in its effort to purchase this property from plaintiff in error, it asked the -aid of the Court in condemning the same in manner and form as the statutes prescribed.
Over the objections of plaintiff in error, made by exceptions to the reports of the jury of view, the cause progressed to a judgment of condemnation, from which an appeal, in the nature of. a writ, of error, has been taken to this Court.
No error is assigned on the ground of irregularity of these proceedings. The objections lie deeper than this; they challenge on constitutional grounds the corporate existence of defendant in error, and, if it have a legal existence, then its right to exercise the right to condemn private property under the doctrine of eminent domain.
While there are several assignments of error to the action of the Court below we think they are reducible to these two. We will deal with these objections in the inverse order of their statement.
1. • Is the use contemplated by Chapter 11 of the Acts of 1893 a public use? If so, then the defendant in error, so far as this question is concerned, is entitled on this record to the judgments of condemnation pronounced in the Circuit Court. That the Legislature regarded the use as a public use, and, by necessary implication, so declared it, is evident; this,-, however, is not conclusive. The necessity for and the expediency of the exercise of the right of eminent domain are questions political in their nature, and when it has been once determined by the legislative branch of the government that they exist, this determination is conclusive. Cooley
The Constitution does not define a public use; it simply provides that no man’s property shall be “taken or applied to public use . . .. without just compensation being made therefor,” clearly implying that it shall not be taken for a private use under any > conditions. So far as we have discovered, other State Constitutions in this regard are similar to ours. The Courts have equally avoided a definition lest it prove an embarrassment in subsequent cases and work mischief in practical application. . Lewis on Em. Dom., Sec. 159. They have not sought to fix a positive standard for the measurement of a public use, and, in the nature of the subject, possibly could not do so. Paxton v. Farmers’ Ins. Co., 29 L. R. A., 853.
However, even with this lack the subject “is not at large.” It has been so long and in such a variety of cases a matter of judicial inquiry there is
/The term £ ‘ public use ” is a flexible one. It varies and expands with the growing needs of a more complex social order. Many improvements universally recognized as impressed with a public use were nonexistent a few years ago. The possibility of railroads was not dreamed of in a past not very remote, yet when they came the Courts, recognizing the important part they were to perform in supplying a public want, did not hesitate to take control of them as quasi-governmental agents and extend to them the right of eminent domain in order to equip them thoroughly to discharge the duties to the community which followed their grant of franchises. This is equally true as to other appliances which now form important parts of a rapidly widening system of social and commercial intercommunication. So it may be said at the present time that “anything which will satisfy a 'reasonable public demand fox-public facilities for travel or for transmission of intelligence or commodities ” (In re Stewart (Minn.), 33 L. R. A.), and of which the general public, under reasonable regulations, will have a definite and fixed use, independent of the will of the party in whom title is vested, would be a public use., Mills on Em. Dom., Sec. 11.
A few cases taken from the many, serving to illustrate this statement, will be referred to. Grain
Upon the authority of these cases, and many others of a similar' character which might be referred to, we have no doubt the trial Judge was right in holding the enterprise in question was impressed with a public use, unless it be, as is insisted by plaintiff in error, our own cases have laid down a different rule, which, under the doctrine of stare de-cisis, we should adhere 'to.
We will now examine the cases relied on to sustain this -assignment of error. The first of these is that of Harding v. Goodlett, 3 Yer., 40, in which it
In Clack v. White, 2 Swan, 540, the Court simply held Ch. 60- of the Acts of 1811, which conferred upon the County • Court the power to grant a private road, where the lands of one person were surrounded by the lands of another, was unconstitutional and void, in that it sought to take the property of one citizen and apply it to the private advantage of another citizen.
It is clear to us that these cases give no support to the contention of plaintiff in error, but only announce the uniformly accepted principle that in the face of this constitutional provision one man’s property cannot be taken under the forms of law and given • to another.
The case, however, most relied on as establishing a rule peculiar to this State is that of the Memphis Freight Co. v. Memphis, 4 Cold., 419. The Act incorporating the Memphis Freight Company is found in §§ 13, 14, and 16 of Chapter 79 of the Acts of 1865-66. By Section 16 it was
We think a cursory reading of this section defining the purpose of the corporation and fixing the limits of its powers is sufficient to characterize this enterprise as exclusively private, lacking all color or pretense of public utility. The Legislature evidently so regarded it, for it conferred no power of condemnation in its charter. This power was claimed by the company under § 1325 of the Code of 1858 (§1844,- Shannon’s Code), which provides that “any person or corporation authorized by law to construct any railroad . . ' . may take real estate,” etc.
The railway tracks which the company was empowered to construct were the mere incidents of its business of handling and warehousing steamboat or barge freight. They were only to serve the con
But that case established no new or unique rule in this State as is now argued. While this is true, we entirely agree with the counsel for plaintiff in error that the fact that an enterprise will result in some convenience to the public— conferring incidental benefits upon the public by affording additional facilities for trade or manufacture — will not make the character of the use public. To this extent the argument of the opinion supports their contention, but no further. We agree the proposed improvement must go beyond that. It must in some way enlarge the resources, increase the industrial energies, promote the productive power of, or afford increased facilities for, the rapid exchange of thought or trade, or otherwise answer the growing needs of the com
After a careful examination of these authorities, we fail to find in them any principle settled or rule announced that constrains this Court to place itself out of line with the well considered cases coming from Courts of great eminence, some of which have been referred to.
On the other hand, we think the case of the N. & C. R. R. v. Cowardin, 11 Hum., 348, furnished strong support to the judgment of the Court below. By its charter there was conferred expressly upon the Nashville & Chattanooga Railway power to appropriate, by process of condemnation, the lands of private owners for a roadbed or right of way. In that case an effort was made to condemn land for a depot, and the owner resisted upon the ground that the right of eminent domain was, by its charter, confined to roadway purposes, and that lands for a depot could be secured in no other way than by purchase. This was held to be unsound. In disposing of the contention, this Court said, to effectuate the purpose contemplated by its charter — that is, “the transportation or conveyance of persons, goods, merchandise, and produce over ’ ’ the road, there must be a place of receiving and delivering the freight carried, or to be carried, over it, and that land upon which to establish this place was as
If it be true, then, that a depot erected by the Nashville & Chattanooga Road was a public use, why should a union depot, laid out and constructed for the accommodation of all the roads now concentrated at Nashville, where, for greater convenience, all travel and freight will be gathered, and to be used by these roads for no other purpose than this railroad would use its own depot, be any the less a public use? The rapid growth of population, the yearly increase in volume and value of commercial interests, the pressing necessity for the speedy handling, delivery, and transmission of freight to prevent accumulations and often ruinous delays, the vast economy of time and money to shippers and the traveling community in the matter of transfers, are among the considerations which have multiplied these depots in cities where railroads centralize, and we are satisfied no improvement in railway intercommunication more nearly touches the public than this. Fort Street Union Depot Co. v. Morton, 83 Mich., 265.
But it is said this is a private enterprise, because the Act on which the charter rests fixes no rates to be charged by the corporation for the use of its tracks, etc. This is immaterial. The corporation and its property being affected- by a public use will be under governmental control, and the Legislature may
Again, it is argued that this is essentially a private undertaking, because the Act shows that it is set on foot for profit to the corporators. This also is immaterial. The authorities concur in holding that an enterprise organized to meet a public demand is not reduced in its character because the parties instituting it have primarily in view private profit. Notwithstanding this it is still impressed with a public use. Mills oh Em. Dom., Sec. 13; Rand on Em. Dom., Sec. 54; Lewis on Em. Dom., Sec. 75.
It follows that the assignments of error to the action of the trial Judge in holding this to be a public use must be overruled.
2. We will now consider the constitutional objections urged to this Act.
It is insisted, in the first place, 'it is unconstitutional because it provides that a terminal corporation may keep at its passenger station a hotel or restaurant, or both, and also , a news stand, thus converting the use' which might otherwise be a public use into a private use. This objection is not well taken. By its terms the corporation is organized for terminal purposes only. The power of acquiring real estate by purchase or by condemnation is confined to these purposes. Among these, neither
It is next insisted the Act in question is obnoxious to that part of Section 17 of Article 2 of the Constitution, which provides: £<No bill shall become a law which embraces more than one subject, that subject to be expressed in the title.” This clause appears for the first time in the Constitution of 1870, and in 1872 it underwent a critical examination in Cannon v. Mathes, 8 Heis., 504. In the opinion in that case an extensive quotation is made from Judge Cooley’s work on Constitutional Limitations, and there was expressed entire concurrence with the views of the author. This quotation is as follows: ‘‘ The general purpose of these provisions is accomplished when a law has but one general object, which is fairly indicated by its title. To require every end and means necessary or convenient for the accomplishment of this general object to be provided for by a separate Act relating to that alone would not only be unreasonablé, but would actually render legislation impossible . . . The generality of a title is no objection to it so long as it is not
Measured by this rule, does the caption or title of this Act cover incongruous legislation ? This caption is as follows: “An Act to amend an Act entitled an Act to provide for the organization of rail
The provisions in the Act which it is urged violate the clause of the Constitution in question are found in the third section, and are those which empower railroad companies, which enter into contracts with a terminal company, to guarantee the principal and interest of bonds issued by such company, as well as other contracts made by it in regard to its corporate business, and also to subscribe for, hold, and dispose of the capital stock or bonds which may be issued by the terminal corporation.
The title gives clear notice to the Legislature and the public that the object of the Act is to provide for the organization of railroad terminal corporations, which shall be clothed with powers necessary' to effectuate the purpose of their creation. There could be no mistake, even at a glance, that a company so organized was designed to, and, from the nature of the case, must, be identified with the operation of railroads having terminal points at the place where such corporation is instituted. Without this a terminal company would have no excuse for existence, and, if organized, would serve only as a mon- . ument to the folly of its corporators. As might be anticipated, from the reading of the title, the body of the Act manifests the intimate relation which was contemplated between these terminal companies and such railroads.
The plan thus devised for the increased accom
What was more natural than such a corporation, created to give increased facilities to these railroads, should look to them for aid in such an undertaking and that these roads should be willing to furnish this aid. It was in view of this condition of mutual interest and interdependence these provisions were embodied in the Act.
In support of their contention the learned counsel for plaintiff in error have pressed upon us a number of cases, including Ragio v. State, 2 Pick., 272, and Bank v. Divine Grocery Co., 13 Pick., 603. All of these cases have been carefully examined and we are unable to find in them anything to shake our confidence in the conclusion we have reached.
In addition to what was said in the Frazier case may well be repeated here, “The subjects of legislation are infinite. The determination as to whether the several provisions of an Act are congruous and germane becomes largely a question of fact. Particular decisions cannot often be controlling in determination of subsequent cases arising out of this constitutional provision.” As each case is presented the Courts are bound to examine the Act in question as a whole, and applying to it the sound rule of construction announced in Cannon v. Mathes, supra, and their “own knowledge of affairs” (Frazier v. Railway Co., supra) determine whether its provisions are congruous or not.
After a' careful review of the case at bar, we are satisfied with the conclusion reached in the Court below. The judgment is therefore affirmed.