43 Minn. 524 | Minn. | 1890
The supervisors of the town of Kragero, in the county of Chippewa, laid out a highway which crosses the relator’s right of way and track; and they determined and awarded that the advantages and benefits accruing to the relator from said crossing were equal to the damages sustained, and so they allowed the relator nothing. The relator appealed, in relation to the damages, to a justice of the peace, who, pursuant to the statute, summoned a jury and the supervisors; and the matter was retried before the jury, and their verdict affirmed the award of the supervisors. The relator has brought the matter here upon a writ of certiorari.
On the trial, in order to show special benefits to be offset against the damages claimed, respondents asked one witness what were the advantages to the relator by the road being laid out. The answer was that, “if that crossing wasn’t made, the farmers would have to go to Appleton instead of going to Milan, and by going there they are just as liable to sell their wheat on the Manitoba as on the Milwaukee road.” To a similar question another of respondents’ witnesses said: “They will get more wood to draw west, and more wheat to draw east, and the company will have the advantage of the freight.” A motion seasonably made by relator to strike out these answers, as showing only general and not special advantages, was refused. This was error. In taking private property for public use, only such advantages and benefits as are direct and special to the land a part
The items of damage that relator claimed it was entitled to were for the cost of two cattle-guards, four cattle-guard wings, one crossing sign, ten crossing planks, and grading. As to the cattle-guards and wings and crossing sign, it was held in State v. District Court for Hennepin Co., 42 Minn. 247, (44 N. W. Rep. 7,) that imposing the duty of constructing and maintaining them at highway crossings on a railroad company is a legitimate exercise of the police power of the state in providing for the safety of the public, and that the company is not entitled to compensation for performing the duty so imposed, and therefore those items are not to be taken into account in estimating damages for laying a highway across the track. The same decision puts the matter of planking the crossing — and the grading would be of the same character, and for the same purpose — upon a different footing, and holds their cost to be legitimate items of compensation.
The relator argues that the acts of 1887 (c. 15) and 1889, (c. 222,) requiring railroad companies to construct crossings wherever highways intersect their tracks, are unconstitutional because they make no provision for compensation. But a legislative act providing for taking property for public use is not unconstitutional merely because it does not itself provide for compensation to be made, if there be another statute under which it must be made or secured before the property can be taken, and which does secure it as a condition of the taking. However it may be as to highways laid out across railroads prior to the passage of the acts referred to, highways to be subsequently laid out come within this proposition; for the statute
The verdict of the jury is set aside, and the case will be remanded to Elias Jacobson, justice of the peace, successor in office to the said justice, to be .tried before a new jury.