31 Cal. 367 | Cal. | 1866
Appeal from the judgment of the District Court of the Third Judicial District confirming the assessment of damages for lands taken for the construction of the railroad of said company.
The railroad company filed in the office of the Clerk of said District Court in and for the County of Alameda, in which county the lands proposed to be taken for the use of the company are situated, a petition containing therein the matters necessary to be stated as provided in the twenty-fourth section of the Railroad Act passed in 1861. (Laws 1861, p. 619.) A time for hearing the petition was appointed and the owners of the land proposed to be condemned to the use of the road were duly notified thereof. No objections were made by any of the owners of the lands described in the petition to their appropriation to the use of the company, and thereupon Commissioners were appointed to ascertain and assess the compensation to be paid for such lands. The Commissioners proceeded to view the several tracts of land described, and heard the parties interested and the testimony and proof offered, and
The railroad company excepted to this decision of the Court, and the appeal taken brings up the same for review.
The thirtieth section of the Eailroad Act of 1861 declares it to be the duty of the Commissioners appointed to ascertain and assess the compensation for the lands sought to be appropriated, to be paid by the railroad company to the person or persons having or holding any right, title or interest therein,
If this statute is not invalid on the ground of repugnance to the constitutional rights of the owners of lands sought to be appropriated to the use of the railroad, which provides that private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation, then we are at a loss to know on what ground the ruling of the Court was based or can be sustained. Whether the use of the property taken for the purposes of the railroad is a public use within the meaning of the Constitution, or the contrary, is involved in the question presented for consideration. But on this subject there is no room for controversy at this day, if respect is paid to the adjudications of the highest Courts of the land. Railroads are esteemed as public highways, constructed for the advantage of the public. “ Railroads,” said Mr. Justice Sutherland, in Bloodgood v. Mohawk and Hudson Railroad Company, 14 Wend. 57, “ though made by private corporations, when designed for travelling and transportation, are great public improvements. They can be made profitable to the proprietors only by affording the most liberal accommodations to the public. They are, from their very nature, devoted and exclusively devoted to the jmblic use, upon such. terms and conditions as the Legislature in their wisdom think reasonable and proper in order to insure to the owners of the stock a reasonable remuneration for the hazard and expense incurred in their construction.” The principles applicable to this subject are ably and elaborately considered in the arguments of counsel and in the opinion of Mr. Chancellor Walworth in the case of Beeckman v. Saratoga and Schenectady Railroad Company, 3 Paige, 45, 74. In the case here referred to, the Chancellor held that railroads for the conveyance of travellers or the transportation of merchandise from one part of the State to another were public improvements and for the public benefit, for the construction of which private property might be taken under the
The right of eminent domain is an attribute of sovereignty which is usually defined as the right to take and appropriate private property to public use whenever the public exigencies demand it. (Redfield on Railways, Ch. XI, Sec. 1.) We shall assume, for the purposes of this case, that the public exigencies required the faking and appropriation of the respondents’ lands for the uses and purposes of the railroad company, as upon this question no doubt is suggested on the respondents’ behalf. To this right of eminent domain the obligation on the part of the State or its representative to make just compensation for the lands so taken, is concomitant and inseparable. (Bonaparte v. C. and A. R. Co., 1 Bald. C. C. 226; Bloodgood v. M. and H. R. Co., 18 Wend. 9; Brad
In support of this view it is argued that the enhancement of the value of other property of the owner of the land proposed to be condemned to public use, which may be of the parcel of that taken, is merely the measure of such owner’s share in.the general good produced by the public improvement ; and why, it is asked, is not the owner in such case justly entitled to the increase in the value of the property thus fortuitously occasioned, without paying for it ? His share in the benefits resulting may be larger than falls to the lot of others owning property in the same vicinity, and it may not be so large, and yet he alone is made to contribute to the improvement by a deduction from the compensation which is awarded him by sovereign behest .as a pure matter of right,
The weight of authority appears to be in favor of allowing benefits and advantages to be considered in ascertaining what is a just compensation to be awarded in such cases, and it seems to us that the reasons in support of this view of the subject are unanswerable.
Just compensation requires a full indemnity and nothing more. When the value of the benefit is ascertained there can be no valid reason assigned against estimating it as a part of the compensation rendered for the particular property taken, as all the Constitution secures in such cases is a just compensation, which is all that the owner of property taken for public use can justly demand. The Constitution does not require the compensation in such cases to be rendered in money, though in the estimation of benefits their value must be measured by the money standard. (Betts v. The City of Williamsburg, 15 Barb. 256-259.)
What shall be the measure of compensation to the owner of
The judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings, and it is accordingly so ordered.
Mr. Justice Sawyer expressed no qpinion.