(After stating the foregoing facts.)
Any railroad company owning or operating a railroad in this State, whether chartered under the laws of this State or any other State or States, is authorized and empowered, among other things, “to build and maintain such additional depots, tracks, and terminal facilities as may be necessary for the proper accommodation of the business of the company;” and it is authorized to acquire, by purchase or gift, and to hold such real estate as may be necessary for such purposes; and if the same can not be acquired by purchase or gift, it is authorized to acquire the same by condemnation. This right of condemnation, however, can not be exercised until the railroad commissiоn of this State shall first approve the
This proceeding was brought by Tift, as the owner of abutting, improved real estate, to set aside as null and void an order of the Public Service Commission, approving the condemnation by the railroad company of a portion of a public alley in, the City of Tifton as a right of way for the extension of one of its spur or industrial tracks which was already built and operated upon a portion of said alley. The plaintiff asserts that this order of the commission is null and void, because it approves the condemnation of said alley for a private use and not for a public one. This contention presents the only question in this case of pith and moment. Under the statute above dealt with, the Public Service Commission can only approve the condemnation by a railroad company of land for a public use. The commission is without authority to approve such condemnаtion for a private use. So the paramount question is whether the commission has approved the condemnation for a private purpose, and whether the railroad company is undertaking to condemn this alley for such purpose. All the authorities concur in holding that the question of public use is ultimately a judicial one. Parham v. Justices, 9 Ga. 341 (4); Loughbridge v. Harris, 42 Ga. 500; 20 C. J. 549, § 38. The courts havе never been able to formulate an exact definition of what is a public use. Nolan v. Central Ga. Power Co., 134 Ga. 201, 208 (
It is not essential, to make the use of a spur or industrial track a public one, that its use should be open to all the public. The facility or instrumentality of transportation may be limited in its use. Such track may be used for the delivery of freight in car-load lots, and the fact that the use of such a track may be denied to shippers of freight in less than car-load lots would not destroy the public character of the track. If such a track is open to all members of the public who may wish to ship goods in car-load lots over such a track, such track is one of public use. If such a track is intended to be used and can only be used by industries located thereon, in receiving inbound freight and in shipрing outbound freight, such track does not lose its character of one devoted to public use by reason of the fact that the carrier does not deliver to drays goods shipped over it, or receive from drays goods intended for outbound shipment over it. The evidence before the commission authorized the finding that the extension of this spur or industriаl track was of public service. It will serve a number of industries located on it. It will serve all patrons who desire to ship freight in car-load lots to such industries, and all patrons who should desire to receive outbound freight shipped in car-load
But it is insisted by counsel for the plaintiff, that before the railroad can extend this track it must procure the permission and consent of the city; that in granting its permission the city has the right to fix the conditions of the grant, which it has done; and that, whatever might hаve been the evidence before the commission as to the public use to which this track would be devoted, the use is fixed by the ordinance granting the city’s consent to the extension of this track, and that the use to which this track can be put under said ordinance is a private and not a public use. It is true, as a general rule, that a railroad company must obtain the written consent of the municipal authorities before it can lay a track on any street of a city in this State. Civil Code (1910), § 2585; Southern-Cotton Oil Co. v. Bull, 116 Ga. 776 (
We do not, however, think that the ordinance of the City of Tifton, granting to the railway сompany its consent to the extension of this track along this alley, creates a private use. The ordinance provides that the right of way in said street is granted for such ordinary use as the public may make of such privilege, and that said track is not to be used generally as a dray track. Properly construed, this ordinance provides that the railroad company may use this extension in the ordinary way in which industrial
It is next urged that the plaintiff has been denied due process of law in the rendition of this judgment by the Public Service Commission, for the reason that that body received and considered, in reaching its conclusion in this matter, after the conclusion of the introduction of evidence on the hearing and without the consent and knowledge of the plaintiff, a petition of certain citizens of the City of Tifton, favoring the'approval of the condemnation of this alley for the purpose of this extension. After the close of the introduction of evidence a petition was filed with the secretary, protesting against the approval by the commission of the condemnation of this alley. Thereafter about 400 citizens of the City of Tifton filed with the secretary a petition in favor of the approval of the condemnation proceedings by the commission. Counsel for the plaintiff earnestly insists that the reception and consideration of this latter petition by the commission denied to his client due process of law. Is this position well taken? In City of Atlanta v. Georgia Ry. & Power Co., 149 Ga. 411 (
The plaintiff next contends that under par. 18 of § 402 of the transportation act, which is now subsection 18 of § 1 of the interstate commerce act, a railroad company can not exercise the right of condemning this alley for the extеnsion of said track before it has' obtained permission from the Interstate Commerce Commission for such extension. By said subsection it is provided that “No carrier by railroad subject to this act shall undertake the extension of its line of railroad, or the construction of a new line of railroad or extension thereof, . . until there shall first have been obtаined from the commission a certificate that the present or future public convenience and necessity require or will require the construction or operation or construction and operation of such additional or extended line of railroad or the operation thereof.” By par. 22 of § 402 of the transportation act it is dеclared that the authority conferred upon the Interstate Commerce Commission by par. 18 of said section “shall not extend to the construction or abandonment of spur, industrial, team, switching, or side-tracks, located or to be located wholly within one state.” Transportation Act of 1920, 41 Stat. 456,
In denying a permanent injunction and in revoking. a temporary restraining order previously granted, the trial judge granted a supersedeas pending the final determination by this court of the case. The case was on final hearing, and the decree revoked a temporary restraining order and denied to the plaintiff the permanent injunction which he sought. The defendants excepted to the granting of such supersedeas, upon the ground that the judge was without power to grant the same. There are three methods of obtaining a supersedeas in this State. The first and most common one is that provided for in the Civil Code (1910), § 6165. This method is applicable where a judgment has been rendered in fаvor of one party against the other, such as a money judgment, a judgment for the recovery of property, or for specific performance, or some judgment determining the case or where there is an execution which may proceed against property. Mass. Bonding Co. v. Realty Trust Co., 139 Ga. 180, 186 (
The second method is that provided in the Civil Code (1910), § 5502. This method is applicable in cases-in which injunctions are granted or dissolved. In such a case either party may sue out a writ of error to this court from a decision against him, upon complying with the law applicable to the same; but no such writ of error shall have the effect to establish or deny any injunction independently of the order of the judge, who shall, on rendering the decision, or granting the writ of error, make such order and require such bond as may be necessary to preserve and
Applying the principles above ruled, the trial judge did not err in declining to grant an injunction as prayed by the plaintiff, in dismissing his suit, and in granting a supersedeas.
Judgments affirmed on both bills of exceptions.
