87 Minn. 195 | Minn. | 1902
This is the second attempt on the part of the citizens of the village of Emmons, situated on defendant’s line of road, to secure a depot building for the accommodation of the people residing there and in that vicinity.
Their first was in the year 1897, when they proceeded by petition to the railroad and warehouse commissioners, upon which a hearing was had, and an order filed requiring the defendant company to build and maintain a depot within a prescribed time. It refused to comply with this order, and the state, on the relation of the commissioners, sought to compel obedience by mandamus. On the trial the court below found against the company, and from a judgment, subsequently entered, an appeal was taken
Associate Justice LOVELY, having been- of counsel for the village in the former proceeding, was disqualified from sitting at the hearing of this appeal, and the cause was necessarily argued and submitted to the four remaining members of the court.
We assume that Laws 1901, c. 270, which in express terms requires railway companies to build and maintain depots or station houses in all villages through which their roads may pass, is in itself valid legislation, and not open to the objection that it is not within the legislative power to enact such a law. With this assumption no dispute has arisen over a construction of the act, to the effect that all incorporated villages within this state located on railway lines are prima facie entitled to depots. The commissioners have the power to order the erection and maintenance of depot buildings unless it is made to appear that such an order would be so unreasonable in its terms as to actually result in depriving the company proceeded against of its property without due process of law. The change made by the statute of 1901 simply affects or shifts the burden of proof, for prior to its enactment the burden was on the municipality to establish the reasonableness and necessity of a depot therein, while now a railway company appearing before the commissioners, or trying its case on appeal to- the district court, bears the burden of showing that such a
But while agreeing as to this interpretation of the law, we fail to reach the same conclusion in respect to the facts. We do not question the correctness of the conclusion reached when considering the former appeal. But two members of the court, Chief Justice START and Associate Justice BROWN, are of the opinion that from the evidence it appears that there has since been a substantial growth in the village, — a growth which makes an altogether different showing, — and that the company did not overcome the prima facie case arising by virtue of the statute, and therefore that the judgment appealed from should be affirmed. Associate Justices COLLINS and LEWIS are unable to agree to this. Their conclusion is that the testimonia fails to show that there has been a real or substantial change in the village, its needs or necessities, that the situation is practically as it was when the former proceeding was considered, and that the prima facie case made by the village has been wholly overcome by the defendant company.
With this difference of opinion, the judgment appealed from must be, and hereby is, affirmed.