148 Ga. 180 | Ga. | 1918
-The Southern Railway Company reaches the City of Augusta, Georgia, from the South Carolina side of the Savannah river by a single track over a drawbridge capable of carrying only one track. About sixty feet from the southern abutment of the bridge, on the Georgia side of the river, a switch is inserted in the main-line track of the Southern Railway Company, which diverges toward its freight-depot and yards located between the intersection of Reynolds and Washington streets, and from this connection it furnishes also the railroad-tracks passing through its yards and across Center street and on to the embankment of the levee on the south side of the Savannah river adjacent to the city
The main contentions made by the Southern Eailway Company in its petition to enjoin the condemnation proceeding are: (1) The condemnor is not a railroad company within the meaning of the laws of this State, and therefore it is not authorized to institute and prosecute the condemnation proceedings. (2) Section 2656 and par. 6 of section 2585 of the Civil Code, giving a railway company the right to join its track with the track of another company of the same gauge, were repealed by the railroad commission acts of 1907 and 1908, and especially by so much of the latter act, now appearing as section 2664 of the Civil Code, as confers on the railroad commission the "power and authority, when in its judgment practicable and to the interest of the public, to order and compel the making and operation of physical connection between lines of railroad crossing or intersecting each other, or entering the same incorporated town or city in this State.” (3) The proposed connection is unnecessary, and will result in irreparable damage to the Southern Eailway Company, and will seriously impair ‘the enjoyment of its franchises and prevent it from carrying on its business as a common carrier of freight and passengers safely, properly, and conveniently, and will destroy the usefulness of im
1,2. We are of the opinion that the Savannah Eiver .Terminals Company is a railroad company. Its tracks lie wholly within a single city, Augusta, and its business is principally to transfer freights within the city from one common carrier to another; but within'its limited sphere it is a common carrier and its business is of a public nature. It is subject to the jurisdiction of the railroad commission of Georgia, and it is to be governed and controlled by the laws of Georgia applicable to common carriers of freight. It was chartered by the secretary of State as a railroad company. Bridwell v. Gate City Terminal Co., 127 Ga. 520 (56 S. E. 624, 10 L. R. A. (N. S.) 909). As a railroad company it has authority to take private property for public use, by first making just compensation therefor. Under section 2585, par. 6, codified from the act of 1892 (Acts 1892, p. 43), it also has the authority “to cross, intersect, or join, or unite its railroads with any railroad heretofore or hereafter to be constructed, at any point in its route, or upon the ground of any other railroad company, with necessary turnouts, sidings, and switches, and other conveniences necessary in the construction of said road; . . but in crossing another railroad, either over, under, at grade level, or otherwise, it shall be at the expense of the company making the crossing, and in such way and manner, at the time of construction, as not to interfere with said railroad in its regular travel or business.” Under an act of 1874 (Acts 1874, p. 94), codified as section 2656 of the Civil Code, it has the power, at its own expense, to join its track by proper and safe switches with other railroads of the same gauge, where such other roads touch it at any point along its line, or where such roads have the same terminus. And as a railroad company it may acquire the right, by condemnation, to cross, intersect, or unite its railroad with any other railroad heretofore or hereafter constructed in this State, subject to the constitutional provision that just compensation must be first made for all damages resulting therefrom. Section 2656, supra, though taken from the act of 1874, has never been repealed. In substance it was re-enacted in the general railroad incorporation act of 1892, and now appears in section 2585, supra, as par. 6 thereof. These sections were not
3,4. While the terminals company has the right and power to institute condemnation proceedings to acquire the right to cross the spur-tracks of the Southern Eailway Company and to connect with the main line of that company, its right to do so is not absolute in all circumstances and without qualification. We are not unmindful of the case of Savannah, Florida & Western Railway Co. v. Postal Telegraph Co., 112 Ga. 941 (2), 943 (38 S. E. 353), wherein it was ruled: “In a proceeding instituted by a telegraph company, under the provisions of the act of December 20, 1898, to condemn so much of the right of way of a railroad company as may be necessary for the erection, maintenance, and operation of its telegraph lines, it is not essential that the telegraph company should affirmatively show that, in order to erect, maintain, and operate its telegraph lines between the points proposed, it is necessary for it to condemn such right of way; nor is it essential for it to show that it is necessary for it to use, the particular portions of such right of way which it proposes to condemn.” Neither have we overlooked the ruling made in Savannah, Florida & Western Railway Co. v. Postal Telegraph Co., 115 Ga. 554 (2), 559 (42 S. E. 1), where it was ruled that the “necessity for taking private property for public use is a question for legislative determination.”
Some of the evidence considered by the judge upon the interlocutory hearing was objected to as mere conclusions of the witnesses, and conclusions upon the very question to be decided by the court. These witnesses, while qualifying as experts, nevertheless gave the grounds upon which the conclusions were based. Opinion evidence, though erroneously admitted on an interlocutory hearing for injunction, will not necessarily require a reversal, if there be legal evidence in the record sufficient to sustain the judgment rendered. Southern Cotton Oil Co. v. Overly, 136 Ga. 69 (70 S. E. 664). This rule, however, is to be cautiously applied.
Judgment affirmed.