16 S.E. 181 | N.C. | 1892
The suit was for damages for flooding land. There was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff. Defendant appealed. The material facts may be gathered from the opinion of the Court.
In Jenkins v. R. R.,
Indeed, it would be impossible to anticipate the many and varied phases in which this difficult subject may be presented, and it is believed that any effort to do so would be attended with a practical denial of justice in many instances. We stated, however, that "if the watercourse is inadequate, and injury may result to a lower owner, the right to cut such ditches must be confined strictly to mere surface water," and that it would be an unreasonable exercise of the right if the ditches were so constructed "as to divert the surface water from a direction in which, by the general inclination of the land, it naturally flows."
In the present case there was abundant testimony tending to show the existence of the qualifying conditions just stated, and the charge of his Honor in this respect is fully sustained by the principles declared in the decision to which we have referred. If his Honor deviated at all from these principles (and we are rather inclined to the opinion that he did in a slight degree), it was in favor of the defendant, and it can therefore have no just ground of complaint.
As we understand it, the exceptions most seriously relied upon are addressed to the refusal of the court to give the instructions prayed for, and these substantially involve the proposition, that inasmuch as the Legislature has authorized the defendant to construct its road, (280) it is not liable to an adjacent proprietor for any damage incident to such construction, provided the work is necessary and is skillfully and carefully performed. In other words, it is insisted (notwithstanding our declaration to the contrary in Jenkins' case) that a railroad company, under such circumstances, is entitled to greater privileges than an individual, and that where the latter would be liable for a violation of the principles embodied in the maxim sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas, the former would be exempt from all responsibility whatever, *177 and this upon the theory that the damage is supposed to be "consequential," for which no action can be maintained. In support of this view it is asserted that a railroad is for the benefit of the public, and that, in the very authority to construct it, there is an implied subordination by the Legislature of the rights of individuals. This may all be true when compensation is provided, as where land is actually condemned and taken as a right of way, but it would be a strange measure of justice to require a railroad company to pay only for a narrow strip of land about fifty or one hundred feet in width, and at the same time practically confer upon it the privilege of destroying thousands of acres of the land of adjacent proprietors without either the duty of making compensation, or the liability to a common law action for damages. It would be of small comfort to the ruined proprietor to be told that he must bear his loss for the benefit of the public, and it would not be unnatural if he answered that if the public good required the destruction of his property, an enlightened sense of public justice should demand that he be compensated for his loss. In this he would be sustained by the words of Sir William Blackstone, that "the public good is in nothing more essentially interested than in the protection of every individual's private rights." 1 Blackstone Com., 138.
It is true that some of the cases from other states, cited by the defendant's counsel, go to the extraordinary length of sustaining his proposition; but these are not in accord with the more recent and better authorities, and they are rapidly being submerged by the steady (281) and increasing current of judicial decision. Mr. Lewis, in his excellent work on Eminent Domain, sec. 566, referring to cases of a similar character, remarks that underlying such decisions "is an erroneous assumption as to the rights acquired by the purchase or condemnation of property for public use. This assumption is that there is acquired, not only all the ordinary proprietary rights in the property taken, but also certain proprietary rights which pertain to the property not taken. . . . There is no warrant for this assumption, either in reason or authority, outside of the particular cases referred to. There is no reason why a railroad, in purchasing or condemning property for its use, should be held to acquire anything more than would be acquired by a private individual purchasing the same property for the same use." After speaking of the liability of such a private individual for any actionable injury to the adjacent land, "either by depriving the soil of its support, by interfering with the flow of running streams or otherwise," the author proceeds: "So, with a railroad when it acquires a right of way through a tract of land; it becomes an adjoining proprietor with the owner of the tract, with precisely the same rights and duties with respect to such owner as though the strip of land had been acquired *178 by an individual for ordinary use, except the unqualified right of operating the road in a reasonable and proper manner; and so with every description of taking for public use. In adapting the property taken to the use proposed, the public, or its agent, is subject to the law of adjoining proprietors, and to the maxim sic utere, etc. If, in such adaptation, the adjacent owner's rights of property are violated, he is entitled to compensation, not on the ground of a want of skill or diligence in constructing the works, but because his constitutional rights(282) of property have been violated."
At an early period in our history, some of the constitutions of the states contained no provision that private property should not be taken for public use without just compensation, but so repugnant to natural justice, as well as to the constitutional principles of the mother country, was the assertion of the right, that the courts of these states unhesitatingly pronounced against such an assumption of legislative authority. Some of them declared that it was against the fundamental principles of natural justice and equity; others rested their decision upon the ground that it was in conflict with a provision of the Federal Constitution upon the subject (which, however, is only a limitation upon the Federal Government); while others reached the same conclusion upon the more satisfactory principle that it was inhibited by certain provisions of Magna Charta which had been incorporated into their organic laws. All of the states, however, except North Carolina, now contain express provisions that "private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation," and owing to the restricted interpretation of the word "taken" (improperly, we think, applying it exclusively to property actually condemned), several of them have added the words "or damaged," or language of similar effect. We cannot ascribe to our law-makers, in authorizing the construction of railroads or other corporate works, the purpose of granting them privileges so violative of the rights of the private property owner, and, we feel assured, that in conferring such privileges, it was intended that they should be accompanied in their exercise with the same restrictions and duties as those which are applicable to adjacent proprietors. Had the Legislature done otherwise, its action would have been contrary to the principles of our Constitution, and therefore of no validity. It is true, as is said in S. v. Wilson,
In R. R. v. Davis,
The cases which hold that the use of the word "taken" in constitutional provisions for compensation excludes the common law, and indeed, all other remedy for the redress of injuries to adjacent property not actually condemned or purchased under circumstances where an individual would be liable, are, in our opinion, unsupported by either reason or principle. We suspect that they were influenced to a great extent by English decisions upon statutes which either expressly or by implication, deprived the adjacent proprietor of his right to damages. the above mentioned provision of Magna Charta, which was considered that, while the legislation upon which they are founded may be clearly in conflict with the constitutional principles of the English government, it is nevertheless valid because of the omnipotence of (284) Parliament, and it is therefore the duty of the courts to administer the law as it is enacted. With us, however, these principles operate as limitations upon the authority of the Legislature, and when it exceeds such limits its acts are invalid, and of no force whatever. Cooley Const. Lim., 6. It seems clear that such legislation is in conflict with the above mentioned provision of Magna Charta, which was considered broad enough by Blackstone and other writers, not only to inhibit the mere taking of property, but also to protect the owner in its "free use and enjoyment, . . . without any control or diminution." 1 Bl. Com., 138. The word "deprived," therefore, as used in our Constitution, has been substantially declared by the great commentator to be insusceptible of such a narrow and restricted meaning. Even if the word were synonymous with "taken," the weight of authority is decidedly against such construction. Without attempting to quote to any extent from the opinions of the various courts, we will reproduce the *180 following language of the Supreme Court of the United States (JusticeMiller) in Pumpelly v. Green Bay, 13 Wall., 166:
"It would be a very curious and unsatisfactory result, if, in construing a provision of constitutional law always understood to have been adopted for protection and security to the rights of the individual as against the government, and which has received the commendation of jurists, statesmen and commentators as placing the just principles of the common law on that subject beyond the power of ordinary legislation to change or control them, it shall be held that if the government refrains from the absolute conversion of real property to the uses of the public, it can destroy its value entirely, can inflict irreparable and permanent injury to any extent, can in effect subject it to total destruction without making any compensation, because, in the narrowest sense of (285) that word, it is not taken for the public use. Such a construction would pervert the constitutional provision into restriction upon the rights of the citizen, as these rights stood at the common law, instead of the government, and make it an authority for the invasion of private right under pretext of the public good, which had no warrant in the laws or practices of our ancestors."
It will be noted that this was an action of trespass for overflowing the plaintiff's land, and it was claimed that there was no "taking" and that the damage was a consequential result of a work authorized by the Legislature of Wisconsin. This case is, therefore, exactly in point.
In Eaton v. R. R.,
The clearness and strength with which the above principles are expressed must be our excuse for such lengthy quotations. They represent the better reasoning upon the subject, and are sustained by a considerable number of authorities, collected in Lewis on Eminent Domain, and other works of a similar character. Mills on Eminent Domain, 184; Cooley Const. Lim., 670;Armond v. Green Bay Co.,
We are not unmindful of Meares v. Wilmington,
In consideration of the foregoing reasons and authority, we are of the opinion that the principle laid down in Jenkins' case is correct, and that the authority granted to the defendant to construct its road does not confer upon it an immunity from liability for damages inflicted upon the lands of adjacent proprietors where such damage would, under the same circumstances, be actionable against individuals. We are also of the opinion, as we have before stated, that had such immunity been expressly granted by statute, such legislation would have been in conflict with the Constitution, and therefore void.
NO ERROR.
Cited: White v. R. R.,