33 Neb. 171 | Neb. | 1891
The Missouri Pacific Railway Company on the 17th day of October, 1885, filed in the county court of Lancaster county its petition praying for the condemnation, for right of way purposes, of a strip 100 feet in width across the north half of the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 24, town 10, range 6 east. The county judge appointed six disinterested freeholders, residents of said county, to assess and report the damages sustained by Milton L. Trester, the owner of said real estate, by reason of the location of the railroad. The damages assessed and reported by the commissioners amounted to $2,500. An appeal was taken by the land-owner to the district, court, where the railway company filed a petition for removal of the cause to the circuit court of the United States for- the district of Nebraska, on the ground that it was a citizen of the state of Missouri, and the owner of the land was a citizen and resident of this state. The district court approved the bond, which accompanied the application, and made an order removing the cause to the federal court. Subsequently Trester filed in the court below a motion to vacate the order of removal, and to redocket the case for trial. The motion being denied, Trester prose
A motion for a rehearing was made by the railroad company, on consideration whereof it was adjudged by the court that the former judgment of this court be vacated and set aside, and the decision of the district court was reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings. In obedience to the mandate of this court, the case was tried, and a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff in error for $3,100.
On the motion for a rehearing, no opinion was filed. The legal effects of the decision, however, was to overrule the former opinion in so far as it held that the condemnation proceedings were void, and that neither the county judge nor the district court had jurisdiction to take any action in the matter. In the opinion filed it was rightly ruled that, under the provisions of our constitution, a railroad company not incorporated under the laws of this state cannot exercise the right of eminent domain. If, therefore, the defendant was not a domestic corporation when it filed its petition in the county court, it acquired no right to the plaintiff’s property by the condemnation proceedings, and the plaintiff could not recover compensation for the property attempted to be taken for right of way purposes, and the entire proceedings would be a nullity. The opinion filed, in declaring the condemnation proceedings void, was based upon the assumption that the defendant was not a domestic corporation. In other words, that the petition for removal conclusively established that the defendant was a foreign corporation. From the fact that the defendant alleged, in its petition for removal of the cause from the state court to the circuit court of the United States, that the defendant was a citizen and resident of an
One of the issues presented and tried in the lower court, after the reversal of the cause, was whether the defendant was a Nebraska corporation. Upon that question the parties changed positions, the plaintiff in error in his petition alleging that the defendant company is a non-resident corporation, which averment is denied by the answer. The proofs show that the certificate of organization of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company of Nebraska, and the articles of incorporation of said company were filed and recorded in the office of the county clerk of Douglas county, and subsequently in the year 1882 certified copies thereof were filed for record in the office of the secretary of state of Nebraska, whereby the Missouri Pacific Railway Company of Nebraska became a body corporate, pursuant to. and in accordance with the laws of this state.
On the 14th day of February, 1882, the Missouri Pacific Railway Company of Nebraska and the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, a corporation formed by consolidation of other companies, pursuant to the laws of Missouri and Kansas, entered into articles of consolidation, whereby the two companies were consolidated under the corporate name of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company. These articles of consolidation were ratified and
In State v. C., B. & Q. R. Co., 25 Neb., 156, Chief Justice Reese, referring to section 114, chapter 16, Compiled Statutes, in the opinion observed that this section, in •effect, provides that where a domestic corporation — that is, one organized under the laws of this state, and having its existence solely within this state — becomes consolidated with a corporation originally erected in another state, 4he new corporation is entitled to exercise the sanie rights
Counsel for plaintiff in their brief contend that neither the original nor the consolidated corporation ever filed its corporate articles in the county clerk’s office in any county in this state. Counsel are in error so far as the recording of the articles of incorporation of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company in Nebraska is concerned. The corporate articles of said company, as disclosed by the record, were recorded in' the county clerk’s office of Douglas county on the 8th day of June, 1881. It does not appear that the articles of consolidation were ever recorded in any county, nor, if we read the law correctly, was there any necessity therefor. Section 91 of chapter 16, Compiled Statutes, provides, in effect, that upon the making of the articles of consolidation, in the manner pointed out in the statute, and filing a duplicate thereof with the secretary of state, the consolidating corporations shall be merged in the new corporation provided for in such agreement,' to be known by the corporate name therein mentioned. There is no provision of statute which requires articles of consolidation of two or more corporations to be recorded in the county clerk’s office.
It is also urged that neither the original nor the consolidated company have corporate power to exercise the right of eminent domain in Lancaster county, for the reason that said county is not named in the certificate of organization of the original company, as one of the counties through which the road was to be constructed. The route and termini of said railway is described in the certificate of organization thus: “ The termini of said railway shall be the city of Omaha, in the county of Douglas, and state of
The second subdivision of section 73 of chapter 16, Compiled Statutes, requires that the certificate of organization of a railroad corporation shall state the names of the termini of the road and the county or counties through which the road shall pass. It is not claimed that the defendant’s main line of road was not constructed between the termini named in the certificate or on the route therein specified. The certificate of organization makes no mention of the branch line from Weeping Water to Lincoln, nor any other branch line. The question is, therefore, squarely presented, whether the certificate of organization must definitely fix and name the places of termini of branch lines, and the counties through which they will pass. The authority conferred by the legislature for the construction of branch lines, is found in section 75 of said chapter 16, which reads as follows:
“Sec. 75. Such corporation shall be authorized and empowered to lay out, locate, construct, furnish, maintain, operate, and enjoy a railroad with single or double tracks, with such side tracks, turn-outs, offices, and depots as shall be necessary between the places of the termini of the said road, commencing at or within and extending to or into any town, city, or village named as the termini of said road, and construct branches from the main line to other towns or places within the limits of this state.”
Construing the provisions of sections 73 and 75 together there is no room for doubt that it was the intention of the legislature to require only that the places of termini of the main line of railroad and the counties through which it would pass should be definitely specified in the certificate
The case of Attorney General v. West Wisconsin Ry. Co., 36 Wis., 466, cited in the brief of plaintiff in error, is not an authority on the question under consideration. In the precedent cited the charter of the railroad company specified the places of termini of the road. Subsequently the company abandoned one terminal point mentioned in the ■charter, and in an action by the attorney general to forfeit the charter, it was held that the corporation had no power to change the places between which the road was to run. The right to construct branch lines, without the places of termini being named in the charter, was not involved or passed upon in the case. The other authorities cited by plaintiff in error are to the same effect, and will not be further noticed.
We are of the opinion that the Missouri Pacific Railway ■Company of Nebraska, before the act of consolidation, possessed the power to condemn the plaintiff’s land for right of way purposes, and all the rights, powers, privileges, and franchise of the original company being merged in the consolidated company, the latter company was authorized to construct a branch from its main line into Lancaster ■county and exercise the right of eminent domain over the lands in question.
It is claimed that the petition filed by the railroad company for the appointment of commissioners to assess the damages, is so defective as not to give the county judge jurisdiction. The petition is as follows:
“ In the Matter of the Right of Way and Depot Grounds of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company.
Request for Commissioners to Appraise Damages-
“To Charles M. Parker, County Judge:
“ The Missouri Pacific Railway Company shows to your honor, that it has located its line over and through the grounds hereinafter described, and has located its switch yards and depots on the grounds hereinafter set forth and described, and that the appropriation of said lands to such uses is necessary to the construction and operation •of said railway, and that said company has endeavored to obtain the consent of the several owners and agree with them on such damages so occasioned to them by such appropriation,, but has been unable to make any personal agreement, and petitioner has given to non-resident owners notice by publication, as required by law herewith filed, and has given personal notices to resident owners, to-wit: N. J S. E. f of N. E. J section 24, Tp. 10, R. 6 E., 100 feet wide and through the same, M. L. Trester, owner, and said railway company prays appraisement of damages by commissioners, which owners shall sustain by reason of the appropriation of such lands to the uses' of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company.
“ The Mo. Pac. Ry. Co.,
“By Joseph R. Webster, and “W. E. Stewart,
“Att’ys for this Proceeding.”
It is objected, in the brief of counsel, that the petition is insufficient for the reasons that it is not dated, sworn to, nor signed by any officer of the company; because it. does not state in what place, manner, or course the defendant located its line of road over plaintiff’s premises, or the date of such location, and the petition fails to allege that the defendant is a corporation organized under the laws-of this state.
It is contended by the defendant that there is no provision of the law which requires that the application for the appointment of appraisers to assess the damages of the
It is also urged that there is no proof of any notice of the condemnation proceedings having been given to Trester. Counsel for defendant insist that the statute does not require that notice be given, except to a non-resident landowner. In this counsel are mistaken. Section 100 of chapter 16 of the Compiled Statutes provides for notice by publication to non-resident owners of land, and section 98 of the same chapter prescribes that the railroad company may have the damages assessed by the commissioners, by giving the owner or guardian ten days’ notice in writing, either by personal service, or by leaving a copy thereof at his usual place of residence. The statute contemplates that notice shall be given of condemnation proceedings, and the giving of notice is an essential prerequisite to be complied with by the railroad company before the property of an individual may be appropriated by the corporation, unless waived.
It will be observed that the application filed with the county judge for the appointment of appraisers alleges that personal notice was given to Trester. The plaintiff in error did not, in his petition filed in the district court, tender any issue upon the question of want of notice. The objection, therefore, cannot be considered. (R. V. R. Co. v. Hayes, 13 Neb., 489; Gerrard v. R. Co., 14 Id., 271.)
Again, the plaintiff in error by taking an appeal to the district court from the award of the commissioners, en
The objection that the appraisers were not properly sworn must be overruled. The plaintiff not only waived the objection by taking an appeal, but no such issue was raised by the pleadings in the court below. The only question passed upon by the appraisers was the amount of damages sustained by the plaintiff. On appeal that question was tried de novo, and it was then wholly immaterial whether the appraisers were sworn or not.
After the order of removal of the case to the United States circuit court was made, the cause was tried in the federal court before a jury, a verdict was rendered in favor of Trester for $3,678.81, and judgment was entered thereon. The defendant company pleaded in the state court, this judgment in bar. A transcript of the proceedings-had in the United States court was introduced in evidence on the trial of the case in the lower court, over the plaintiff’s objection and exception. It is claimed that this ruling was erroneous, and prejudicial to the rights of the-plaintiff in error. Conceding, for argument’s sake, that the entire proceedings in the United States court are a nullity, and that the exemplified copy of the record should not have been received in evidence, we do not see that the plaintiff has any just ground for complaint on account of the transcript of the proceedings being admitted in evidence. The only purpose of its introduction was to establish a bar to the plaintiff’s proceedings in the state court. The jury did not give such effect to the judgment of the federal court, but entirely disregarded the same and returned a verdict for the’ plaintiff. Had a verdict been returned for the defendant the plaintiff would then have been in a position to challenge the ruling of the trial court. But with a verdict in plaintiff’s favor, it is obvious that
The plaintiff is in no better position if we regard the proceedings had in the federal court as valid and binding upon the parties, until reversed, vacated, or set aside. If the circuit court had jurisdiction, both parties are concluded by the judgment, and it was a complete bar, when pleaded and proved, to the proceedings in the state court. But the plaintiff cannot complain of the recovery of a judgment in his favor, when, if the judgment of the federal court, was a bar, the verdict should have been for the defendant. The defendant company does not ask for a reversal of the judgment, and no .complaint is made by the plaintiff as-to the amount of the verdict. No reversible error has. been pointed out in the record, and the judgment is
Affirmed.'