30 Minn. 359 | Minn. | 1883
The plaintiff corporation'was authorized by its charter to acquire, by purchase or condemnation proceedings, such real estate as should be convenient and'necessary for the location and construction of depot buildings and appurtenances, and the construction and operation of transfer tracks, so as to unite in one gen
The record shows that, the business transacted at the depot is very large and increasing, ,and, as the court -finds, “more than 100 trains arrive and depart daily, almost continually coming and going within the day; that the depot is too small for the business transacted,” and “said depot grounds are cramped and cannot well be enlarged.” “Vehicles and teams conveying baggage to and from said depot are passing over said strip of land very often, almost continually during the day, and it is necessary for them to remain at rest at said baggage-room long enough to load arid unload such baggage.” The court also states in the finding that “if said street is opened as proposed, it will be a public street. The necessity of said street or its importance to the public has not been investigated in this action.” The sidewalk or platform next the depot building, over and upon which the baggage is handled, as at present constructed, occupies 12 feet in width,, and the strip of land in question, 19 feet wide, is by itself quite circumscribed for the purpose to which it is devoted. It lias been constantly used since the depot was built, in connection with
This presents the first and most important question in the case. The fact conclusively appears that the land in question is needed and. is actually used for a public purpose, authorized by plaintiff’s charter. This places plaintiff’s rights upon the same footing as if the necessity and propriety of its appropriation had been preliminarily-determined by the court or legislature. Plaintiff’s beneficial use is-practically exclusive, and cannot be appropriated or taken away except by express authority of the legislature, or by necessary implication. Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. Co. v. City of Faribault, 23 Minn. 167. This amount of land seems to be indispensable now, to say nothing of the future demands of plaintiff’s business, and the plaintiff is not necessarily limited to a use of this portion of its depot grounds without any modification of the present arrangement. It is entitled to make any changes in the side-walk baggage-rooms, or otherwise, which may better facilitate the use of the premises for depot purposes.
The power to extend streets and highways across railway tracks, at convenient and suitable places, is necessarily implied in the general authority conferred on cities and towns for such purposes, without express provisions on the subject. In like manner, railroads nee-essarily cross streets and highways on their routes. An adjustment of the two public uses is thus demanded by public convenience and. necessity wherever practicable, and may well be presumed to be contemplated in the legislation authorizing such improvements, and by corporations in accepting or acting under such legislation. Little Miami, etc., R. Co. v. City of Dayton, 23 Ohio St. 510; N. J. Southern R. Co. v. Long Branch Com’rs, 39 N. J. Law, 28. The same prin
It is also the general rule that a general statutory authority in a charter cannot be presumed to authorize the taking of land already lawfully appropriated and needed ás a site for a depot and its necessary appendages, or car-shops, etc., or land within the lines of the location of a railroad and parallel with the track, for the purposes of a street or highway, for the reason that it has already been set apart for a specific public use under the sanction of law, and it cannot, therefore, be diverted to another public purpose, except the power be expressly given or necessarily implied. And there can ordinarily be no necessary implications of the existence of such authority from the grant of a general statutory power to lay out streets, because there is ample authority to appropriate other lands, and especially where, as in this case, the public necessity for the particular street is not demonstrated. Albany Northern R. Co. v. Brownell, 24 N. Y. 345, 350; Boston & Maine R. Co. v. Lowell & L. R. Co., 124 Mass. 368, 373; City of Bridgeport v. N. Y. & N. H. R. Co., 36 Conn. 255.
In this case, while the opinions of the witnesses differ as to the effect of the proposed improvement upon plaintiff’s rights, there is no substantial dispute as to the facts. The conclusion of the trial court seems to be based upon the theory that the use in common of the entire street will so far add to the convenience of access to the depot that the use of plaintiff’s land for a public street can be so harmonized with plaintiff’s use thereof for depot purposes as practically to work no serious injury.
This position is not tenable, if it involves a surrender of any substantial rights in the land in question. The plaintiff cannot be-required to accept a beneficial use upon land to be taken from others
The necessity of handling so much baggage in time for its prompt delivery, and the nature of the business, would naturally necessitate such an occupancy of the street as to abridge and incommode the public right of passage, and be inconsistent with it. Rex v. Russell, 6 East, 426; People v. Cunningham, 1 Denio, 524; Angell on Highways, § 227. The two public uses, therefore, — the one requiring control by the city and free passage for the public, and the other, control by the plaintiff and such occupancy as its business requires,— are necessarily inconsistent.
Judgment reversed.
Dickinson, J., being absent upon the state board of canvassers, did not hear the argument in this ease, and took no part in the decision.