175 Ind. 391 | Ind. | 1911
This is a special proceeding brought by appellee, •an interurban railroad company, to acquire by condemnation the right to construct, maintain and operate at grade its single track road across the right of way and tracks of the appellant, a steam railroad company.
The only error assigned is that the trial court erred in sustaining appellee’s demurrer to the sixth specification of appellant’s exceptions to the award of the appraisers. Under this assignment of error, appellant contends that section one of the act approved March 3, 1903 (Acts 1903 p. 125, §5666 Burns 1908), relating to the right of street and interurban railroad companies to construct their tracks across the tracks of steam railroad companies is in violation of article 1, §23, of the Constitution of the State, because said section grants to street and to interurban railroad companies certain privileges and immunities not granted to steam railroad companies upon the same terms, and that the section for the same reason denies to steam railroad companies the equal protection of the laws, in violation of the 14th amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
It is averred by appellant, as a part of its sixth exception to the award, and urged by points in its brief, (1) that an
The substantial right is the right to take private property by compulsory proceedings, and the manner of acquiring the property is clearly under legislative control. 1 Lewis, Emi
It is not, as counsel for appellant contends, either the practice or in accordance with the law to grant a change of venue from the county in controversies over the point of crossing of the tracks of one steam railroad by another. There is no provision that either specifically or inferentially gives the right in such case, and the express withholding of the right to a change of venue in §5666, supra, is not the withholding of a right in the one case that is given in the other. In both cases, the proceeding is special and summary, up to the review on exceptions to the award; and from then on they become governed alike by the civil procedure governing other actions. The provision against a change of venue in §5666, supra, applies only to the special and summary proceeding to fix the point of crossing.
The case of Wabash R. Co. v. Cincinnati, etc., Railroad
Nor is it true that a steam railroad company, over whose track and right of way another steam railroad company by regular proceedings in the lower court, has secured the right to cross, has the right, either specifically granted, or implied, to stop the physical crossing by injunction, pending appeal or the final determination of the proceedings. Cincinnati, etc., Railroad v. Wabash R. Co., supra, pp. 307, 308.
That there is such an inherent difference between steam railroads on the one hand and those named in §5666, supra, and designated therein as “ street railroads, interurban street railroads or suburban street railroads ” on the other, as justifies placing them in different classes for certain legislative purposes, is conceded by appellant to be settled. Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Railroad Com., etc. (1910), 173 Ind. 469, and cases cited and reviewed.
And if it be conceded that there is a material difference in the respects asserted, in the acts of the General Assembly granting the right to steam railroad companies to cross the tracks of other steam railroads, and the right granted by §5666, supra, to street railroad companies and interurban railroad companies, it cannot be said that the difference is not based on reason inhering in a manifest difference in the two classes of roads in the matter of track crossings. It may be conceded that the General Assembly in enacting §5666, supra, together with the grant of the principal right of a street or interurban railroad company to cross the tracks
It follows that the section in question is not open to the constitutional objections urged against it.
Judgment affirmed.