168 Ind. 144 | Ind. | 1907
Appellee instituted this proceeding to condemn and appropriate a right of way across a forty-acre tract of land owned by appellant Vandalia Coal Company, in Greene county. Appellants appeared, and filed objections or answers, and a cross-complaint, all of which, upon appellee’s motion, were stricken out. The court thereupon appointed appraisers, and from this order the appeal was taken.
Errors have been properly assigned alleging that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to. constitute a cause of action, and that the court erred in striking out appellant’s several objections and cross-conrplaint.
The statute upon which this proceeding is founded was construed in the case of Morrison v. Indianapolis, etc., R. Co. (1906), 166 Ind. 511. We quote from the opinion in that case, as pertinent to the question in controversy, the following language: “The legislature, by the provisions of section five, intended that there should be what may be termed a preliminary hearing by which the landowner might controvert the right of the plaintiff 'in the proceedings to condemn and appropriate his lands and therefore have all such questions determined and disposed of by the judge in vacation, or the court in term time, as the case might be, before making the interlocutory order appointing appraisers to assess damages. In the language of the notice or summons provided by section three, such owner is required to appear on the day fixed and show cause why his property should not be condemned, as prayed for in the
Appellants filed objections or answers in six paragraphs, and also a cross-complaint. The first paragraph of such objections alleged that appellant coal company is a New Jersey corporation and the owner of all the coal, clay, minerals and mineral substances underlying a tract of land particularly described, containing 1,104 acres, .395 acres of which said appellant owns in fee simple; that all of said land is underlaid with strata of valuable coal; that said appellant owns the right to select and purchase sites for sinking shafts for the mining of such coal and minerals,
The second paragraph alleged that the construction of appellee’s road across said lands would take from appellant coal company valuable property rights, by interfering in numerous specified ways with the operation of the mines, entailing expense for additional machinery and requiring the maintenance of supports under the right of way, and that an appraisement of the lands to be appropriated should include an estimate of appellant’s damages to said lands as a whole.
The third objection alleged that appellant Union Trust Company is a Pennsylvania corporation, and is the holder of a mortgage lien upon the entire tract of 1,104 acres to secure bonds issued by its coappellant, and that the construction of appellee’s road across said lands will greatly
The fourth objection averred that appellant coal company owns the lands and property rights above mentioned, and that such lands lie in compact form in one body; that appellee has filed in the office of the clerk of the Greene Circuit Court a map or plan of its road, and has declared its intention to construct the same over lands, particularly described, situated in the center of said 1,104-acre tract; that at no time has appellee attempted to acquire the right of way through said lands as a whole, but has refused to negotiate concerning the same with said appellant; that it will be impossible for appellee to use the right of way sought to be appropriated herein without passing over other lands owned by said appellant, and that all of said lands should be condemned as one tract; that appellee having failed to offer to purchase the interests of said appellant in adjoining tracts, or otherwise to acquire such rights, the court is without jurisdiction as to said forty-acre tract.
The fifth objection alleged that section six of the act of 1905 (Acts 1905, p. 59, §898 Burns 1905) is in contravention of §21, article 1, of the Constitution of Indiana, which provides that no man’s property shall be taken without just compensation, nor, except in case of the State, without such compensation’s being first assessed and tendered, and is accordingly unconstitutional and void.
The sixth objection includes the allegations of the -first four preceding objections, and asks that the appraisers be directed to appraise and award all damages resulting from the construction of appellee’s railroad across the whole of said lands.
The only issues allowable upon this preliminary hearing are such as go to defeat or abate the asserted right to exercise the power of eminent domain. These issues may be of law arising upon the face of the complaint, or of fact tendered by specific objections filed. Morrison v. Indianapolis, etc., R. Co., supra.
The court properly rejected the several objections and the cross-complaint filed. Eo error appearing from the record, the order appealed from is affirmed.