The Ford Motor Company, by writ of certiorari, has brought before this court, for review, the action of the district court confirming the proceedings by which the city council of the city of Minneapolis laid out and established an alley through the land of the company in block 9 of Hoag’s Addition in that city.
The company contends that the city is not taking its property for alley purposes, but, under the pretense of establishing an alley, is in fact condemning a right of way for a switching track from the Great Northern Railway to' the property of the parties who petitioned for the alley. In other words, that the city is exceeding and abusing the power of eminent domain, given it by the state, by taking property thereunder for an unauthorized purpose, under the guise of taking it for an authorized purpose. The city contends that the declaration, in the condemnation proceedings, that the property is being taken for use as an alley is binding and conclusive upon the courts, and that they cannot look beyond such declaration for the purpose of ascertaining the real use intended to be made of the property.
The power of eminent domain can be exercised only to taire private property for some public purpose; it cannot be exercised to take private property for any private purpose. Stewart v. Great Northern Ry. Co.
Whether a municipality which is seeking to take private property for a designated purpose, under the power of eminent domain, has been given the power to take private property for such purpose, and whether such' purpose is a public purpose, are questions for determination by the courts; but if the purpose for which the property is being taken be a public purpose, and the requisite authority has been conferred upon the municipality, the necessity, propriety and expediency of taking the property for such purpose is a legislative question over which the courts have no supervision or control. Milwaukee & St. P. Ry. Co. v. City of Faribault,
In the present case the city of Minneapolis has authority to condemn private property for streets and alleys but not for a railroad right of way. The proceedings under review purport to take the property in question for an alley; but the relator has presented evidence sufficient to establish that this is a mere subterfuge, and that the property is in fact being taken for the purpose of permitting it to be used as a right of way for a switching track from the Great Northern Eailway to property lying beyond the property of the relator. This presents the question whether the courts may look beyond the declared purpose of the proceeding and ascertain the real purpose sought to be accomplished.
The case of Kansas City v. Hyde,
“Could the city council by a false recital in the ordinance give it a validity which it would not have if it recited the truth ? And when the city comes to ask the aid of the court to carry the ordinance into effect, is it possible that the court must be a mere tool to do the will of the council with no power to enquire into the truth of the matter? * * * But our law is not so lame and our courts not so impotent. The courts in such case will hear the evidence and find the facts, if the truth lies only in an unwritten agreement or understanding it can be proven only by oral testimony, and that being the best evidence of which the fact is susceptible the court must receive it and weigh it. * * *
“If as the defendant offered to prove the real purpose for which these ordinances were passed was to make a way fox a switch track or switch tracks to property of an individual or any number of individuals, then it was a purpose for which the city council had no authority to condemn property and the passage of the ordinances was an abuse of its power, and the court should adjudge the ordinance void.”
In Farist Steel Co. v. City of Bridgeport,
In Stratford v. City of Greensboro,
In County of San Mateo v. Coburn,
In Ligare v. City of Chicago,
In Brown v. Gerald,
In Brown v. Gerald,
In re Niagara Falls & Whirlpool Ry. Co.
In Apex Transportation Co. v. Garbade,
See also Van Witsen v. Gutman,
While there is a strong presumption that property taken under the power of eminent domain is being taken for the purpose stated in the condemnation proceedings, we think that this presumption is not conclusive, and that it is the duty of the courts to intervene for the protection of the property owner whenever it clearly appears that, under the guise of taking his property for a proper purpose, it is in fact being taken for an improper purpose.
As already remarked, we think the evidence establishes that relator’s property is being taken for a switching track and not for an alley. Without attempting to summarize the evidence which leads to this conclusion, we will merely indicate a few of the undisputed facts. Block 9 of Hoag’s Addition lies between Fourth street north and Fifth street north and its northerly boundary is Fifth avenue north which crosses the streets at a right angle. Lots 4, 5, 6 and 7, being the southerly four lots of the block, belong to the Great Northern Railway Company and are covered by the railroad tracks of that company. All the remainder of the block, being lots 1, 2, 3, 8, 9 and 10, belong to the relator. Lots 3 and 8 adjoin the railroad right of way; lot 3 fronts on Fifth street and extends easterly to the center line of the block, lot 8 fronts on Fourth street and extends westerly to lot 3. None of the petitioners for the alley own any property in that block, but they own property in the blocks between Fourth and Fifth streets which lie beyond that block. An industrial switching track has been constructed from the Great Northern railway
The claim of the city that the relator is estopped from questioning the validity of the condemnation proceedings is without force. Conceding that the city is in position to invoke the doctrine of estopped, and giving the agreeement relied upon full effect, it would apply only as to lot 8 and not as to lots 9 and 10. The judgment of the district court is reversed.
