39 Wash. 648 | Wash. | 1905
The respondent herein is a corporation, organized as a water power company and an electric power company, pursuant to the laws of the State of New Jersey, and has complied with the laws of the State of Washington respecting foreign corporations. The objects for which the respondent is incorporated, as set forth in its articles, are:
“To develop, adapt and utilize for commercial purposes the water power afforded by the White river and other rivers and streams and bodies of water in the State of Washington, by the diversion of a portion of the water of the said White river from a point on or near the line dividing Secs. 29 and 32, township 20, north, range 6 east of Willamette Meridian, Pierce county, Washington, by means of a ditch, flume or canal to the point or points of use, together with certain water rights, water and reservoir appropriations, land options and filings, to develop, adapt and utilize for commercial purposes the water power afforded by such other streams and bodies of water, and to construct, operate and maintain a plant or plants for the electric" transmission of power, light and heat from such source or sources of power to all cities, towns and other places economically accessible from said source or sources of power, to erect, own and operate a plant or plants for furnishing light, heat and power in such cities, towns and places, and to furnish light, heat and power therein for any purpose to individuals, and public and private corporations and municipal bodies, to store, transport and sell watpr and water power and privileges for any purpose, in connection with such rivers, streams and bodies of water, to purchase, erect, own and operate water works in connection therewith, to erect and maintain dams, reservoirs, mills, manufactories and other erections and to operate the same, to buy, own and sell real estate in connection with said business.”
The respondent proposes to erect and maintain a dam in the White river, near the town of Buckley, in Pierce county,
At the threshold of the proceeding, the respondent is confronted with the objection that it is seeking to take private property for a private use, in violation of section 16, art. 1, of the state Constitutioñ. If this objection is sustained, it will obviate the necessity of discussing or considering the other questions presented in the briefs and arguments of counsel. The section of the Constitution in question declares that,
“Private property shall not be taken for private use, except for private ways of necessity, and for drains, flumes,*662 oi’ ditches, on. or across the lands of others for agricultural, doxnestic, or sanitary purposes.”
The term “public use,” when applied to the law of eminent domain, is not easily defined. It has often been said that it is more easily defined by negation than otherwise. In determining the question of public use, courts have always been influenced, to a greater or less extent, by legislative declarations, and by local customs and conditions, and local necessities. In the states of Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Connecticut, New Jersey, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Wisconsin, and perhaps others, statutes permitting lands to be taken for the purpose of creating water power for milling and manufacturing purposes have been enacted and enforced, though not always without protest. The legislature of the state of New York has never authorized the exercise of the right of eminent domain in favor of mills of any kind, and it has been said that “sites for steam-engines, hotels, churches, and other public conveniences, might as well be taken by the exercise of this extraordinary power.” Hay v. Cohoes Co., 3 Barb. 42. It is safe to say that the courts of that state would not sanction the exercise of the power of eminent domain for any such purpose. In re Tuthill, 163 N. Y. 133, 57 N. E. 303, 79 Am. St. 574, 49 L. R. A. 781. The courts of Michigan and Georgia have denied the right of 'eminent domain in similar cases. Ryerson v. Brown, 35 Mich. 332; Loughbridge v. Harris, 42 Ga. 500.
On the other hand, the coux’ts of Alabama and Vermont have held that the right of eminent domain cannot be exercised in favor of gristmills, unless they are public mills, required by law to grind for all in due turn and for regular tolls. Sadler v. Langham, 34 Ala. 311; Tyler v. Beacher, 44 Vt. 648, 8 Am. Rep. 398. In Head v. Amoskeag Mfg. Co., 113 U. S. 9, 5 Sup. Ct. 441, 28 L. Ed. 889, the court upheld the New Hampshire statute, as a
The question is not a- new one in this court. It was fully considered, in relation to another statute, in the case of Healy Lumber Co. v. Morris, 33 Wash. 490, 74 Pac. 681, 99 Am. St. 964. The court there cites with approval, Lewis, Eminent Domain, § 165,
“Public use means the same as use by the public, and this it seems to us is the construction the words should receive in the constitutional provision in question. The reasons which incline us to this view are: First, that it accords with the primary and more commonly understood meaning of the words; second, it accords with the general practice in regard to taking private property for public use in vogue when the phrase was first brought into use in the earlier constitutions; third, it is the only view which gives the words any force as a limitation or renders them capable of any definite and practical application. If the constitution means that private property can be taken only for use by the public, it affords a definite guide to both the legislature and the courts;”
from Cooley, Constitutional Limitations, p1. 652,
“Nor could it be of importance that the public would receive incidental benefits, such as usually spring from the improvement of lands or the establishment of prosperous private enterprises; the public use implies a possession, occupation, and enjoyment of the land by the public at large, or by public agencies; and a due protection of the rights of private property will preclude the government from seizing it in the hands of the owner, and turning it over to*664 another on vague grounds of public benefit to spring from the more profitable use to which the latter may devote it;”
and said,
“But from a consideration of all the authorities and from our own views on construction, we are of the opinion that the use under consideration must be either a use by the public, or by some agency which is quasi public, and not simply a use which may incidentally or indirectly promote the public interest or general prosperity of the state.”
And again:
“It seems scarcely necessary to particularize to show to what extent this doctrine might practically be carried. Under such liberal construction, the brewer could successfully demand condemnation of his neighbor’s land for the purpose of the erection of a brewery, because, forsooth, many citizens of the state are profitably engaged in the cultivation of hops. Condemnation would be in order for gristmills, and for factories for manufacturing the cereals of the state, because there is a large agricultural interest to be sustained. Tanneries, woolen factories, oil refineries, distilleries, packing houses, and machine shops of almost every conceivable kind, would be entitled to some consideration for the same reasons; thereby actually destroying any distinctions between public and private use, for the principle in one instance is the same as in the other; the difference is only in degree.”
It will thus be seen that this court repudiated the broad and liberal construction adopted by the New Hampshire and other courts, and committed itself to the more restricted doctrine laid down by Judge Cooley in Ryerson v. Brown, and in his work on Constitutional Limitations, supra. In Ryerson v. Brown, the court, speaking through Chief Justice Cooley, said:
“Whether the use to which the machinery is to be put which is to be operated by the power can be declared a public use, is the question that remains to be considered. If the act were limited in its scope to manufactures which are of local necessity, as gristmills are in a new country not yet penetrated by railroads, the question would be some*665 what different from what it is now. But even in snch case it would be essential that the statute should require the use to be public in fact; in other words, that it should contain provisions entitling the public• to accommodations. A flouring mill in this state may grind exclusively the wheat of Wisconsin, and sell the product exclusively in Europe; and i-t is manifest that in such a case the proprietor can have no valid claim to the interposition of the law to compel his neighbor to sell a business site, to him, any more than could the manufacturer of shoes or the retailer of groceries. Indeed, the two last named would have far higher claims, for they would subserve actual needs, while the former would at most only incidentally benefit the locality by furnishing employment and adding to the local trade.”
And again:
“What, then is the necessity for the exercise of this extraordinary power in aid of manufacturing corporations? It is certainly not a necessity of the extreme sort which supports the like authority in aid of railways. A railway cannot run around unreasonable land-owners; but no one man and no number of men can prevent the establishment of a machine shop> or a sawmill, by refusing to part with the lands they may happen to own. No particular motive power is indispensable. At the worst the question presented in any case will be a question of different degrees of convenience or of probable profits. A mill at one spot on a stream may be more profitable than at another; a machine shop at one point may be more cheaply operated by water power-than by steam power; but steam is not excluded from any part of the state because of any general conviction that water power is more advantageous or more economical. When the owner of a mill site enters upon the calculation whether he shall improve the site in order to obtain operating power for machinery, or on the other hand provide steam machinery, the question that confronts him is not one of necessity, but of comparative cost, expense of operation and probable returns.”
In Varner v. Martin, 21 W. Va. 534, the court holds that before a corporation can exercise the right of eminent domain it must possess each and all of these qualifications:
*666 “First, the general public must have a definite and fixed use of the property to be condemned, a use independent of the will of the private person or 'private corporation in whom the title of property when condemned will be vested; a public use which cannot be defeated by such private owner, but which public use continues to be guarded and controlled by the general public through laws passed by the legislature; second, this public use must be clearly a needful one for the public, one which cannot be given up without obvious general loss and inconvenience; third, it must be impossible, or very difficult at least, to secure the same public uses and purposes in any other way than by authorizing the condemnation of private property.”
The court further says:
“IJpon the principles we have laid down it would follow that the legislature could not authorize lands to be condemned for the erection of dams, oi* for the overflowing of lands by dams erected for sawmills or manufactories generally, because they obviously want the first qualification we have laid down as necessary to confer this power on the legislature. The general public have no definite, and fixed use of any such mills and manufactories. They have no use of them which is independent of the will of the owners of such mills and manufactories, and they can be defeated in any sort of use of such mills and manufactories at the pleasure of the owner of them.”
In Fallsburg Power & Mfg. Co. v. Alexander, 101 Va. 98, 43 S. E. 194, 99 Am. St. 855, the court of appeals of Virginia approved the rule announced by the supreme court of West Virginia, and applied it in a .case very similar to the case at bar. The court quoted extensively from the decisions followed by this court in the Healy Lumber Company case, and held that the proposed use was not a public one. Speaking of the company and its objects, in that case, the court said:
“It is urged upon us that, although the charter in question does not command the performance of the company’s public duties, since it is ‘a public service corporation,’ the right of public control arises from the grant of the franchise of eminent domain; and, when the company undertakes to*667 devote its property and its products to the public use, it becomes subject to public regulations. This proposition is unquestionably sound, and sustained by the authorities cited,—Munn v. Illinois, 98 U. S. 113; Budd v. People of New York, 143 U. S. 538; Brass v. North Dakota, 153 U. S. 391,— to which many others might be added; but, this does not meet the difficulty in this case. The mere recognition of the corporation in its charter as an ‘internal improvement company’ does not malee it so, and bring it within the operation of the general laws of the state governing such companies and controlling their operations. The difficulty with the charter is that the purpose for which the property is authorized to be taken by the right of eminent domain in this instance does not clearly appear to be for a public use or a public purpose. On the contrary, the grounds of public benefit upon which the taking is proposed are vague, and the use which the public is to have of the property, or how the public is to be benefited by the use of it by the company, is by no means fixed and definite. Not only is the public benefit to spring from the use to which the company proposes to devote the property vague, indefinite, and uncertain, but, under the plain language of the charter, the public use of the property, or any use of it by the public, may be gainsaid or denied or withdrawn by the company at its will, since it is authorized to use, not only a part, but the entire- product of the work or works it proposes to establish for its own use or benefit. In such a case the private benefit too clearly dominates the public interest to find constitutional authority for the exercise of the power of eminent domain, and is the equivalent of taking of private property for a private use, against the will of the owner, which cannot be done in any case.”
This is equally true of the respondent company. It is not claimed that there is a present demand for the 50,000 electrical horse-power. It is not claimed that the respondent has a franchise to enter any of the cities or towns mentioned, or that it will or can obtain one. It does not appear that there are any street or other railways to utilize its product. It is not under contract or obligation to furnish electricity to any person, or for any purpose. Under its articles, it
“To justify the condemnation of lands for a private corporation, not, only must the purpose be one in which the public has an interest, but the state must have a voice in the manner in which the public may avail itself of that use. In Gilmer v. Lime Point, 18 Cal. 229, a public use is defined to be a use which concerns the whole community, as distinguished from a particular individual. The use which the public is to have of such property must be fixed and definite. The general public must have a right to a certain definite use of the pi'ivate property on terms and for charges fixed by law, and the owner of the property must be compelled by law to permit the general public to enjoy it. It will not suffice that the general prosperity of the community is promoted by the talcing of private property from the owner and transferring its title and control to a corporation, to be used by such corporation as its private property, uncontrolled by law as to its use; in other words, a use is private so long as the land is to remain under private ownership and control, and no right to its use or to dvrect its management is conferred upon the public.”
It is true, the supreme court of New Hampshire fully sustained the doctrine contended for by the respondent, in the case of Rockingham County L. & P. Co. v. Hobbs, 72 N. H. 531, 58 Atl. 46. But that decision was the natural outgrowth of a long line of decisions in the same court, which this court expressly declined to follow in the Healy Lumber Company case.
It is further contended by the respondent that the use in question is declared to be public by art. 21 o-f the state Constitution, which reads: “The use of the waters of this state for irrigation, mining and manufacturing purposes
“The improvement of the navigation of a river is a public purpose, and the sequestration or appropriation of land or other property, therefore, for such purpose, is doubtless a proper exercise of the authority of the state under its power of eminent domain. Upon the other hand, it is probably true, that it is heyond the competency of the state to appropriate to itself the property of individuals for the sole purpose of creating a water power to he leased for manufacturing purposes. This would he a case of taking the property of one man for the benefit of another, which is not a constitutional exercise of the right of eminent domain.”
In Missouri Pac. R. Co. v. Nebraska, 164 U. S. 403, 17 Sup. Ct. 130, 41 L. Ed. 489, the court said:
“This court, confining itself to- what is necessary for the decision of the case before it, is unanimously of opinion, that the order in question, so far as it required the railroad corporation to surrender a part of its land to the petitioners, for the purpose of building and maintaining their elevator upon it, was, in essence and effect, a taking of private property of the railroad corporation, for the private use of the petitioners-. The taking by a state of the private property of one person or corporation, without the owner’s consent, for the private use of another, is not due process of law, and is a violation of the- Fourteenth Article of Amendment of the Constitution of the United States.”
“But we do- not desire to be understood by this decision as approving of the broad proposition that private property may be taken in all cases where the taking may promote the public interest and tend to develop the natural resources of the state. We simply say that in this particular case, and upon the facts stated in the findings of the court, and having reference to the conditions already stated, we are of opinion that the use is a public one, although the taking of the right of way is for the purpose simply of thereby obtaining the water for an individual, where it is absolutely necessary to enable him to make any use whatever of his land, and which will be valuable and fertile only if water can be obtained.”
There is, however, a vast difference between the use of water for manufacturing and for irrigation. In the latter ease, there is no choice of means or location. The necessity is an absolute one, if the land is to be reclaimed at all. Not so, with a manufacturing plant. The question of location and motive power is one of economy and convenience at most. In In re Tuthill, supra, the court said:
“I do not believe that the people of the state can affect, or impair, the obligation of the social comp-act by adopting as a part of the organic law a provision which will permit of the taking of private property for a purpose which is essentially a private benefit, and which has always been held to be such.”
In that case the court declared a provision of the constitution of the state- of New York, authorizing the taking of private property for drains, invalid, because in conflict with the Constitution of the United States.
From a full review of all the authorities, we are convinced that the respondent is not a public service corporation, and that the use to which it intends to apply the property it now
Bor the reasons herein stated, the order must be reversed, with directions to dismiss the proceedings, and it is so ordered.