231 Mo. 449 | Mo. | 1910
This is an original proceeding in this court by which the relators ask a writ of prohibition to go to the respondents, the judges of the county court of St. Louis county, to prohibit them entertaining jurisdiction of a matter brought into that court on the petition of Jacob Studt, Jr., and others, asking that certain property of the relators be condemned and taken for a public wharf and ferry landing. The proceeding in the coirnty court of which the relators complain is founded on an act of the General Assembly entitled, “An Act to amend article 1, of chapter 107, of the Revised Stat
The first and second sections of the act are as follows:
“Section 1. The county courts of the several' counties of this State shall have, authority and are hereby empowered to establish public wharfs, piers and ferry landings for the use of the public on any of the waters of this State not entirely on the premises of one person, and outside of the limits of any incorporated town, city or village in this State, for the purpose of receiving and unloading passengers or freight on any public road of said county now or which may hereafter be established bounding or touching- the banks of any of said waters, and for, that purpose shall have the right to condemn such private property as 'may be necessary for the building of such wharfs, piers and ferry landings not exceeding one acre.
‘ ‘ Section 2. Upon the petition of five ox more resident freeholders living in the immediate vicinity of said proposed wharf, pier or ferry landing, setting forth that they are the owners of the land in the immediate vicinity of said wharf, pier or ferry landing, and that the banks of said waters are touched or bounded by a public road of said county at the point where such*457 wharf, pier or ferry landing is sought to he established, and that it is necessary, in order to receive and unload freight and passengers on said public road, that a public wharf, pier or ferry landing be made at some point where the said road touches, or near the banks of said waters, fully describing the place where said wharf, pier or ferry landing is sought to be established, and the quantity of land not exceeding one acre that may be necessary for the purpose of said wharf, pier or ferry landing, and the names of the owner or owners of the land on which said wharf, pier or ferry landing is supposed to be established, the county court of the county in which said land sought to be appropriated is situated shall make an order that the said owner or owners named in said petition shall be notified that said petition has been filed and that the same will be heard by the county court of said county on a day fixed by the court, which shall not be less than fifteen days nor more than twenty days after the filing of said petition, which notice, together with a certified copy of said petition, shall be served upon the owner or owners named in said petition, of the land sought to be appropriated, at least ten days before the day fixed by said court for the hearing of said petition.
Section 3 provides that on the day named the county court shall proceed to hear the evidence “and if the court finds that said wharf, pier or ferry landing is necessary for public use as aforesaid, ’ ’ it shall order the county surveyor to immediately lay off the wharf, pier or ferry landing, and if he can agree with the owners as to the price to be paid for the property taken or damages for the same he is to report it to the court and if the owners will not agree he must so report, whereupon the county court will appoint three commissioners to assess the damages and when the commissioners make their award, “the county court, or the petitioners, upon an order of the county court, shall immediately pay or tender to the owner or owners of
Section 4 provides that if the owners are not satisfied with the award of the commissioners they may demand a jury to assess the damages and thereupon a jury of six men may be impaneled “to try the question of damages.” And section 5 provides that either the petitioners or the landowners may appeal to the circuit court for a trial on the question of damages, but neither the application for the jury in the county court, nor the appeal to the circuit court, shall operate as a supersedeas or prevent the county court from taking immediate possession of the land. There is no appeal allowed except on the question of damages and no provision for the payment of the damages that the jury might assess. The language is: “Neither the filing of the exceptions, nor trial by jury in the county court, nor appeal to the circuit court, shall operate as a supersedeas or prevent the county court from proceeding to take immediate possession of said land and erect the wharf, pier or ferry landing as surveyed and located by the county surveyor. ’ ’ Where the money is to come from to pay for erecting the wharf, pier or ferry landing is not specified in the act. Section 6 gives the county court “the sam.e control and management as they now have of the public roads of the county and by proper orders, entered of record, shall regulate the use thereof.”
Section 7 provides that the notice to the owners may be served in any county in the State by an officer authorized to s,erve a writ of the circuit court.
Relators aver that the purpose of the act was not to serve a public necessity, or a public use, but to appropriate the property of relators to the use and benefit of the petitioners Studt and others, and certain facts are stated in relators’ petition tending to sustain
I. Section 28, article 4, of the Constitution is: “No hill (except general appropriation bills, which may embrace the various subjects and accounts for and on account of which moneys are appropriated, and except bills passed under the third subdivision of section forty-four of this article) shall contain more than one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title.”
There can be no doubt of the purpose of that clause in our Constitution or of its wisdom. If the design of the promoters of this act was, as is charged, to mislead the public and the members of the (General Assembly as to its object or to prevent a careful consideration of the bill before its enactment into a statute, or, whether so designed by its promoters or not, if such was its effect, it falls within the constitutional limitation above quoted. In Cooley on Const. Lim. (7 Ed.), p. 205, it is said: “It may therefore be assumed as settled that the purpose of these provisions was, first to prevent hodge-podge or ‘log-rolling’ legislation; second, to prevent surprise or fraud upon the Legislature by means of provisions in bills of which the titles gave no intimation, and which might therefore be over: looked and carelessly and unintentionally adopted; and, third, to fairly apprise the people, through such publication of legislative proceedings as is usually made, of the subjects of legislation that are being considered, in order that they may have opportunity of being heard thereon, by petition or otherwise, if they shall so desire.”
This court has said: “The evident object of the provision of the organic law relative to the title of an act was to have the title, like a guide-board, indicate the general contents of the bill, and contain but one general subject which might be expressed in a few or a greater number of words. If those words only constitute one general subject; if they do not mislead as
Does the title to this act conform to that constitutional prescription f
(a) It starts out with the proclamation that it is “An Act to amend Article 1 of Chapter 107 of the Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1899', entitled ‘Ferries.’ ” But when we turn to chapter 107 we discover that it does not relate to ferries and is not so entitled, its title is “Fish, Production and Preservation of,” and article 1 of that chapter is entitled “Fish Commission.” The chapter entitled “Ferries” is chapter 106 and it has no article 1; it is not divided into' articles, and there is no division of the subject. It relates only to the licensing of ferries and the regulation of licensed ferries. It does not even provide for the establishment of ferries; it presupposes the establishment of the ferry by the person interested, and puts restrictions and regulations on its use.
■ From what we have already said as to the evil against which the Constitution in this clause aimed to guard, before we condemn an act of the General Assembly on account of a variance between the subject as it is stated in the title and the subject as it is stated in the body of the act, we ought to be satisfied that the variance is to a material extent misleading and deceptive. Although in this case there is a clear variance between the statement in the title in reference to the number of the chapter and the correct number of the chapter indicated by the title “Ferries,” yet we do not think that that variance is so serious or of such a character as to justify condemnation of the act on that account alone. If only the number of the chapter had been given, without mention of its title, the variance might have been serious, but mention of the title is
(b) The title to the act proclaims that it is intended to amend the chapter in the Revised Statutes of 1899 entitled “Perries.” Are the provisions in the body of the act germane to the subject of ferries, or,if germane to that subject in any respect are they limited to that one subject?
A chapter entitled “Perries” has been in our statutes not only from the earliest days of the State but even in our territorial laws, and from the earliest date it is substantially as is the chapter under that title in the Revised Statutes of 1899. If therefore there is a chapter in our laws that ought to be as well known as any other to the people of this State it is the chapter that treats of ferries. The first section of that chapter is: “No one shall keep a ferry, so as to demand and receive pay thereat, without a license.” The other
In considering the question of whether or not the title was liable to mislead or deceive the members of the General Assembly it is lawful to trace the act in its passage through the Legislature. This bill was introduced in the Senate and referred to. the committee on Agriculture, Roads and Highways, Bridges and Ferries (Senate "Journal 1909, p. 511), and when put to the vote on its final passage it was carried unanimously. [Senate Journal 1909, p. 907.] In the House it was referred to the committee on Agriculture, and on its final passage was carried with but one vote against it. [House Journal 1909, p. 1030 and p. 1860.] The presiding officer in each house is usually guided by the title of the bill in selecting the committee to whom it is referred, and it is fair to presume that if either of those presiding officers had realized what there was in this bill he would have submitted it to the scrutiny of his judiciary committee, for it involves the constitutional rights of the citizen to be affected by the power of eminent domain. And it is also but fair to presume that if the members, of the General Assembly had realized that the bill was pregnant with the power given to the county court to do what the petition in this case avers, and the return does not deny, that this county court is attempting to do, that is, to take the property of the relators worth many thousands of dollars and deny them any appeal on the constitutional question of the right to do so, the bill would scarcely have passed the General Assembly unanimously in the Senate and with but one vote against it in the House; which vote, by the way, was of a member from Jasper e'ounty, who was a lawyer. When before did a bill fraught with such power, such consequences and such questionable constitutional authority ever pass the General Assembly in silence and without opposition?
A ferry landing is of course an essential in the operation of a ferry, but it is totally distinct from the ferry. From the beginning of the use of ferries in this State under the statutes above referred to, men have been granted licenses to operate ferries, but they have had to look to the riparian owners for the right of landing their ferries unless it was a ferry connecting the two ends of a public road, like a bridge, and thus was a part of the public highway, as in fact it usually is.
The word ferry as commonly understood conveys the idea of a means of transportation by boat across a stream or other body of water from one end of a public road to the other. In 3 Words and Phrases several definitions of the word “Perry” are- given, among which are: “A ferry, in a general sense, is. a highway over narrow waters, and is a continuation of the highway from one side of the water over which it passes to the other, and is for the transportation of passengers or of travelers, with their teams and vehicles-, and such other property as they may carry or have with them. [New York v. Starin, 106 N. Y. 1.]
“In the case of City of New York v. Starin, 106 N. Y. 1, 11, Judge Earl says: ‘A ferry is a continuation. of the highway from one' side of the water over which it passes to the other, and is for the transporta
“As a link in the chain of transportation by dry land, a ferry forms a part of a public highway, or a connecting link between places in which the public has rights; and as such it is a thing of public interest, in which the public have the right of way or use on paying certain specified tolls, regulated and prescribed by public authorities. [Hackett v. Wilson, 12 Or. 25.]
“Legally considered, a ferry is nothing more than the continuation of a road; and, as far as regards the authority of a State, it does not differ from a toll-bridge. [Gilman v. Philadelphia, 70 U. S. (3 Wall.) 713, 726, 18 L. Ed. 96.] With regard to the authority of the State, ‘a bridge’ and ‘a ferry’ are equivalent terms. Express power to establish a ferry necessarily implies power to establish a toll-bridge. [Oliff v. Shreveport, 52 La. Ann. 1203.]”
The idea of a ferry presupposes a road travelled by the public which is bisected by the watercourse, the ferry serving in a different way the same purpose that is served by a bridge. As the bridge is made for the road, not the road for the bridge, so is the ferry made for the road, not the road for the ferry; .the ferry is the incident, the road is the principal. As á general rule a property-owner is not required to .yield up his property as if for a public road, nor is a public road laid out and established at the expense of the county, to facilitate the operation of a ferry, or to enable some one to establish a ferry, but a ferry is an incident to the use of the road and presupposes the existence of the road. The ferry receives the traveler at one end of the road and lands him in the road at the other end. The idea of condemning a landing for a ferry boat which does not connect the two ends of a
A public ferry may land at a public wharf or pier and thus contribute to the use for which the wharf or pier was constructed, but wharfs and piers are not limited in their use to the landing of ferry boats, are not necessary to operation of ferry boats and 'are not constructed primarily for that purpose.
Neither the public in general nor the members of the Legislature would naturally understand that a bill proposing by its title to amend the statutes relating to ferries would contain in its body provisions for the condemnation of land for and the construction of wharfs and piers. If wharfs and piers exist' anywhere in this State outside of cities, they are private establishments.
(c) In the title it is said that it is an act to amend the chapter entitled “Ferries” by adding thereto six new sections relating to the establishment of wharfs, piers and ferry landings, and the condemnation of private property for that purpose. Thus, although wharfs and piers are mentioned in the title, yet they are mentioned in connection with ferry landings and as incidental to the landing of a ferry. If that is not the sense in which they are mentioned then the title calls for more than one subject in the one act.
(d) The title is further misleading by the use of the catchword “Ferries,” thereby implying thát the wharfs, piers and ferry landings, called for are designed, to be in aid of ferries present or future, whereas it is not essential to the fulfillment of the design to establish wharfs, piers and ferry landings as manifested in this act that there should be any ferry at all.
The bill in section' 6 gives the county court the power by orders entered of record to regulate the use of the wharf and pier. Let us interpret the meaning of that section in the light of the facts of this case. It is averred in relators’ petition, and not denied by respondents, that: “The land sought to be condemned for an alleged public use in said proceedings by the said Jacob Studt, Jr., et ais., lies along and is adjacent to the waters of a body of water known as Creve Coeur Lake in St. Louis county, Missouri, which lake is about three miles long and about one mile wide, its mean depth being only a few feet, 'so that said lake is not adaptable nor suitable for purposes of commercial navigation, but is used now and has ever been used exclusively by pleasure-seekers for recreation, sport and enjoyment; that said lake is located only a short distance from the city of St. Louis, which city contains many thousands of inhabitants, and said lake is easy of access to persons living in said city; that during the summer months of each year for many years past, many thousands' from said city and its vicinity have visited said lake for pleasure, sport and recreation, and the relators,. the United Railways Company of St. Louis, as owner and lessor, and the Bluff Scenic Railway Company, as lessee in possession, have expended and invested over two hundred thousand dollars in beautifying and improving the large tract of land owned as aforesaid by the said United Railways Company of St. Louis, along the shore and adjacent to waters of said lake; that said relators own and operate, principally during summer months, a pleasure resort at said lake upon said land, and to maintain which the
If this act was designed to accomplish the purpose there .expressed it could not have been more skillfully drawn, and if the act is valid it allows the county court to appropriate the property of relators to the use and benefit of their rivals in business,
II. Section 20 of article 2 of the Constitution forbids the taking of private property for private use, and declares that the question whether a proposed taking is for a public use is a judicial one, regardless of what the Legislature may have said on the subject.
Ordinarily when a statute provides for the taking of private property for a public use it provides also for the payment of the damages out of the public treasury, or by special taxbills in a district especially benefited, except when the party moving is a public utility corporation, in which case the law requires it to furnish the money. Possibly also an exception may be found in the statute regarding the opening of a public road when the county court does not deem the proposed new road of sufficient public necessity to justify paying the damages out of the county treasury, but allows the road to be opened if the petitioners deposit in court the estimated amount of damages to be paid to the landowner. But even in such ease it has been held that if private property be allowed by the county -court to be taken under the guise of a pretended public use, when in fact it is only for the convenience of private- persons who are willing to pay for it, ‘ ‘ such an act would be- an abuse of power and would violate a constitutional property right.” [Seafield v. Bohne, 169 Mo. 537, l. c. 551.] But in the act now under discussion we have a novel feature in reference to the payment of damages. It provides that any five freeholders who own land in the immediate vicinity may put the machinery of the law into motion by filing a petition in the county
There is no authority given the county court to pay such damages, or appropriate money to build wharfs and piers., out of the county treasury, and that fact itself shows the impotence of the act, and points with significance to the uncontradicted statement in the reiators’ petition that the proceeding was in fact an effort to take private property for the private use of the movers in the matter. The only provision that is made in the act looking to the payment of damages is in reference to the damages awarded by the commissioners in the first instance selected by the county court, and even that imposes no binding obligation on the county and only a questionable obligation on the movers; the only inducement to pay is that payment into court must be made before the county can take possession. There is nothing in the act imposing on the freeholders who petition the county court to move in the- matter a liability for the damages sustained by the parties whose land is to be taken or damaged. Whenever was there a statute providing for the taking and damaging of private property for a bona fide public use and no provision made for the payment of the damages suffered except from the voluntary contributions of private citizens ? The county court is here in the attitude of conducting in its own forum a proceeding that is to give it possession and control of very valuable property and is choosing its own commissioners to assess the damages to be sustained by the persons whose property is to be taken. When those commissioners report, if the movers in the matter see
It does not appear from the record in this case that the movers in the county court conducted a public ferry or were, interested in a public ferry, nor does the act require that they should be, nor does it appear that there was- a public ferry there, nor does the act require that there should be, but it does appear from the record that the movers are competitors of .relators in their business of furnishing refreshments, pleasure boats and amusements to the public for gain, and'that private interest is the only motive that appears in this record. The relators may be mistaken in their conclu
The chapter entitled “Ferries” has passed through all the revisions from the earliest period with that simple title, but the committee of the last General Assembly having in' charge the revision of 1909, seemingly appreciated the fact that that, title would no longer indicate the whole contents of the chapter and they have added to the title so that the chapter is now entitled “Ferries, Ferry Landings and ‘Wharfs.” And they have divided it into two articles, article 1 relating to “Ferries,” and article 2 to “Ferry Landings and Wharfs, How Condemned or Leased.” The committee were right in so doing, for the chapter, with this act added, contains two subjects.
This act is fraught with so much danger to the rights of the citizen to his private property that its passage through the General Assembly by practically a unanimous vote can be accounted for only on the theory that the members were misled by the title and were not informed as to its contents.
Other constitutional objections to the act are urged by relators, but enough has. been said.
We hold the act (Laws 1909, p. 511) entitled “An act to amend article I, of chapter 107, of the Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1899, entitled, ‘Ferries,’ by adding six new sections thereto to be known as sections 7447a, 7447b, 7447c, 7447d, 7447e, and 7447f, relating to the establishment of wharfs, piers and ferry landings of the waters of this State whose banks are
The writ 'of prohibition is awarded.