115 Wis. 617 | Wis. | 1902
Sec. 1299-i, Stats. 1898, under which the defendant obtains its right, if any it has, to maintain and operate its logging railroad over the plaintiff’s lands, provides, in substance, that when two or more owners of timbered land present to the town supervisors a petition for the laying-out of a temporary highway to give them access to said land, or therefrom to a stream or railroad, describing .their lands and the lands over which they desire to lay the highway, the supervisors shall view the premises, determine the necessity of such highway for the purpose of removing the timber, and the length of time it will be required (at the end of which time it shall cease), and lay out the same in the manner public highways are laid out. After some further provisions, not necessary to be stated, the section provides that such highway "shall he publicthat the petitioners shall pay all damages awarded, and all expenses of laying the road; and that upon such payment the petitioners may enter upon, open, and work the same at their own expense, and “construct logging railroads” thereon. It is further provided that the petitioners shall be liable for damages resulting to persons or property on account of defects in the highway, and that such liability shall follow the ownership of the land “for the ben-
This statute is vigorously attached by the appellant as un■constitutional, because it is said it attempts to authorize the •taking of private property for private use, thus falling under the condemnation of the rule announced in Osborn v. Hart, 24 Wis. 89. It is very evident from a mere reading of the section that the primary object thereof is to make it possible for private owners to have a road opened over the property of •other private owners to enable the first-named owners to' get •out their logs. The only thing in the section which savors of an intent to lay a public highway is the legislative statement that “such highway shall be public.” As noted in Chicago & N. W. R. Co. v. Morehouse, 112 Wis. 1, 87 N. W. 849, the constitution of this state does not define a public use, nor does it reserve to the courts alone the power to pass originally upon the question whether a given use is public or private ; hence the legislature has the right to pass on the question primarily, and its judgment that the use is public is binding on the courts, if there is any reasonable ground to support it; or, to put it in other language, unless it manifestly ■appears to the contrary by the provisions of the act. In the present law the legislature has declared that the highway to be laid out under it shall be a public highway. It must be public, or it cannot be laid out by eminent domain. To be ■public, it must not only be nominally open to use by the public, but it must be so located that the public can get onto it at some point. A strip of land lying entirely within the lines of private ownership', upon which the public cannot possibly ■enter without committing trespass on private property, cannot be held to be a public way. As said by Mr. Elliot in his work on Roads and Streets (2d ed.) § 192:
“The test is, not simply how many persons do actually use ■them ? but how many have a free and unrestricted right in ■common to use them? for, if the public generally are excluded, the way must be regarded as a private one.”
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and action remanded with directions to enter an interlocutory judgment for the-plaintiff as indicated in this opinion, and for further proceedings according to law.
The respondent moved that the judgment of this court be-modified by striking out that part which directs the entry of an interlocutory judgment for the plaintiff; and that the-judgment of this court be so framed as to preserve any right:
The motion was denied January 13, 1903.