156 Ga. 409 | Ga. | 1923
1. The State of Georgia in its sovereign capacity is the owner of the Western and Atlantic Railroad arid the right of way upon which it is constructed.
2. Section 6 of the act of 1852 (Acts 1852, p. 193), the caption of which
3. Under the doctrine of nullum tempus oceurrit regi, adverse possession as against the State of Georgia cannot provide the basis .for a prescriptive title; and the State is not affected by a statute of limitations unless it expressly consents to be held subject thereto.
(а) Under the facts of this ease a title by prescription could not be ripened by the possession of the predecessor in title of the plaintiff in error within the period of time when the State may be held to have waived the operation of- the statute of limitations.
(б) The plea of laches is not available as against a sovereign State. The State cannot be guilty of negligence or any other similar act involving the omission to perform a duty devolving upon an ordinary citizen.
(c) The sale to Hammett did not convey anything but personalty.
There are, in all, more than one hundred assignments of error in the present case. Under ordinary juridical rules we should first deal with such assignments of error as are raised by exceptions pendente lite to rulings upon demurrers or motions to strike. The present record calls for decisions upon exceptions of each of these classes. After consideration' of all of these exceptions we have reached the conclusion that the case must be decided upon the motion for a new trial, for the reason that the questions raised upon exceptions pendente lite, upon the demurrers and upon the motions to strike various portions of the defendant’s answer, are all involved and to be adjudicated, in our conclusion, upon the points raised by the motion for a new trial; and for that reason the same reasons which control our ruling upon the motion for new trial would affect and control rulings to the same effect upon the almost innumerable number of exceptions raised preliminary to the trial. In the economy of time we pretermit specific discussion of the various preliminary assignments
Considered in its ultimate analysis, the controlling issues in this case are very few. The action is one in which the State of Georgia seeks to remove alleged encroachments by the Western Union Telegraph Company from its right of way. The plea of the defendant, in its last analysis, "amounts to nothing more than an assertion of title which will defeat the suit of the plaintiff. The action is not strictly an action, in ejectment. It is an .equitable petition in the nature of an action of ejectment. Since the passage of the uniform procedure act of 1887, as has frequently been ruled by this court, legal and equitable remedies may be had in the same suit in a superior court. So, at last, the case turns upon the question whether -the evidence in behalf of the defendant is sufficient, to set up any legal reason why it should not be dispossessed of that portion of the right of way of the Western & Atlantic Eailroad which it asserts it is entitled to enjoy. It is not to be denied that in this action the plaintiff must recover upon the strength of its title, and not upon the weakness of the title of the Western Union Telegraph Company. Of the fact that the State of Georgia is the owner of the Western & Atlantic Eailroad the lower court could properly take judicial cognizance, and no proof was required to establish the State’s ownership. Therefore, upon the reading of the petition the plaintiff, even if this were a suit in ejectment, would have cast the burden upon the defendant to establish the validity of its claim of right or' title; and therefore the issue is still further narrowed to the single question as to whether the defendant in this case carried the burden of establishing its right to occupy any portion of the right of way of the Western & Atlantic Eailroad. We hold that there was a failure on the part of the defendant in the court below (plaintiff in error) to establish its contention that it was the owner of any interest whatsoever in the right of way of the Western & Atlantic Eailroad’ either by grant, prescription, or otherwise, and that for that reason any error committed by the court during the trial was powerless to prevent the verdict rendered by the jury and the judgment entered thereon.
1. There can be no question that the State is the owner of the right of way of the Western & Atlantic Eailroad, and has been its owner since the first beginning of the undertaking and from the time when the State invested its first dollar in the enterprise. It is immaterial at this time and for the purposes of this case to decide whether the ownership is in fee or only as an easement. But even if it be conceded for the sake of argument that the State only acquired an easement for its right of way, it must be held that no right, interest, or enjoyment of even what the plaintiff in error admits is owned by the State has ever been lawfully granted by the State to any one. It is insisted by the plaintiff in error that in granting the charter of the Augusta, Atlanta & Nashville Magnetic Telegraph Company in 1852 (Acts 1852, p. 193). the State ratified the contract which had previously been entered into by William L. Mitchell with the approval of Governor Towns (then chief executive of Georgia), and by the terms of which the Augusta, Atlanta & Nashville Magnetic Telegraph Company (under which defendant claims its, title) Avas granted the easement which the defendant claims. The correctness of this position must depend upon thé validity of section C of the act which relates to the contract entered into on the 11th day of October, 1850, by William L. Mitchell, chief engineer of the Western & Atlantic Eailroad, and E. W. Garst and J. M. Bean, as well as other.provisions of the charter to which we shall later refer more specifically.
2. In our opinion, section 6 of the act of 1852, supra, was and is unconstitutional and absolutely void. The caption of the act is as follows: “ An act to incorporate the Augusta, Atlanta & Nashville Magnetic Telegraph Company.” It will be noted at the out
Further, there is no intimation or suggestion that the additional powers attempted to be conveyed in the act, to which we shall presently refer, were intended to be given. The act is only to incorporate a named company, which, it might be assumed from the use of the word “telegraph/ would engage in the business of taking and sending messages by telegraphy. There is no reference, for that matter, to the fact that any' powers or rights of any kind were conveyed more than the creation of a corporation which would conduct a telegraph business. From the caption, one would as easily infer that the company had already acquired a right of way as that it was still to be acquired, or that the right of way was to traverse one route as well as another, provided communication was made between the cities named, to wit, Augusta, Atlanta, and Nashville. Certainly it would have taken an extraordinary imagination to conceive, or more than a prophetic ken to know, from a reading of the caption of the. proposed act upon which the
We have dealt with one peculiar, feature which avoids section 6 of the act of 1852, but there is nother. The contract which was sought to be ratified is as follows:
*415 “ Chief Engineer’s Office, W. & A. B.. B. Atlanta, Oct. 11, 1850.
“ Gentlemen: I have given much reflection to the subject of your note of yesterday, and I have had full and free conversation with his Excellency Geo. W. Towns, upon the subject; and we are fully satisfied, not only from the nature of the telegraph but from the experience of other roads, that there is no appendage more valuable in the efficient management of a railroad than a telegraph line, and we have come to the conclusion to submit to yura this proposition.
“ 1. To furnish and erect the posts from Atlanta to Chattanooga, which shall be 24 feet long with four inches in diameter at the little end, and be planted four feet in the ground.
“ 2. To grant you the use of our right of way for the telegraph company, and to pass your officers and material along the road free of charge. .
“ 3. Eor and in consideration of the foregoing, the W. & A. B. B. is to receive the sum of five thousand dollars to be placed to its credit upon the books of the Telegraph Company; and instead of interest on that sum, it is to receive dividends as they may be declared from time to time, and to be represented in the meetings of the company to that amount, by the Chief Engineer or such other person as may be appointed to represent the same.
“ 4. And in further consideration of the foregoing services and grant, all the telegraph offices between Atlanta and Nashville erected by the company shall be subject to the use of said road free of charge, and said company shall erect as many offices as the road may require in addition to the regular offices of the company, but the latter shall be at the expense of the road.
“ Yours respectfully, Wm. L. Mitchell, Chief Engineer.”
“Mr. David W. Garst and Mr. James- M. Bean. Atlanta, Ga.”
“Atlanta, Oct. 11, 1850. Sir: We hereby accept the proposition submitted in yours of this date. Yours respectfully,
D. W. Garst. J. M. Bean.
“ To W. L. Mitchell, Esq., Chief Engineer, Atlanta, Ga.
In the sixth section of the act which the legislature attempted to ratify there is no statement whatever as to the purport, scope, or provisions of the alleged contract. How, therefore, does it appear from the act that the legislature knew anything as to the terms of this contract; and how could they know that there was in this con
The plaintiff in error seeks to draw a distinction between its rights in Tennessee and those as related to the portion of its line in the State of Georgia, contending that in any event it cannot be deprived of its right to use that portion of the line of the Western & Atlantic Kailroad which is within the State of Tennessee. The privilege of making surveys in Tennessee was conferred " upon the State of Georgia.” Acts of Tennessee Jan. 24, 1838; Cobb’s Digest p. 420. The right to construct in Tennessee was given to the " State of Georgia to be enjoyed and exercised by that State.” Acts of Tennessee, February 3, 1848; Cobb’s Digest, p. 421. Thus it will be seen that the grant from the State of Tennessee to the State of Georgia was without words of limitation. That being so, the telegraph company will not be heard to question the capacity in which the State of Georgia acquired these powers from the State of Tennessee; and certainly this court will not supply words of limitation upon that capacity where none were demanded by our sister State. The State of Tennessee at least recognized that
3. But even if we were to concede that the verdict was not demanded by reason of the invalidity of the act incorporating the' Augusta, Atlanta & Nashville Magnetic Telegraph Company, the plaintiff in error could under no view of the evidence adduced have maintained its claim to a franchise, as against the State of Georgia, upon the ground of prescription, as is contended, under color of title and open, notorious, peaceable, adverse possession for a period of seven years. But the evidence in this case entirely fails to establish the existence of the statutory period of seven
I am authorized to state that Mr. Justice Hill and Mr. Justice Gilbert concur in the views herein expressed.
The State of Georgia as owner of the Western & Atlantic Railroad, and the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway as lessee from the.State of the Western & Atlantic Railroad, operating said railroad under the corporate name of Western & Atlantic Railroad, brought their equitable petition against the Western Union Telegraph Company, alleging, in substance, that the State is the sole and exclusive owner of the railroad, together with its right of way and properties, extending from Atlanta, Georgia, through certain counties named, to Chattanooga, Tennessee; that all of the property appertaining to said railroad, includ
Several acts of the General Assembly were pleaded under which defendant claimed the right to maintain the line as now operated. Further, it set up that on October 10, 1850, Garst and Bean, who proposed to organize a corporation and build a telegraph line from Atlanta to Nashville, subsequently made to embrace the Georgia Railroad and extend to Augusta, made known the proposal to the chief engineer of the Western & Atlantic Railroad, expressing a desire to procure the aid of the said railroad in the construction of a line of telegraph by a corporation to be called the Augusta, Atlanta and Nashville Magnetic Telegraph Company. Thereupon W. L. Mitchell, chief engineer, on October 11, 1850, wrote to them a letter offering to grant to them, for purposes mentioned, an easement on the right of way of the Western & Atlantic Railroad, “without limit and perpetual in its nature,” which proposition and offer was accepted by them on October 11, 1850; and thereupon Mitchell issued instructions for the carrying out of the contract so made. By the act of the General Assembly of Georgia of January 27, 1852, the State incorporated the Augusta, Atlanta
At the hearing a motion in the nature of a demurrer, to strike numerous paragraphs of defendant’s answer and amendments to its answer, was submitted'. Certain of these grounds were overruled by the court, but many of them were sustained. To the rulings sustaining the motion to strike, the defendant excepted pendente lite. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff. A motion for a new trial, was madé by the defendant, which was overruled, and it excepted to that judgment.
Conceding that the property involved in this controversy, including the railroad, its right of way and terminals, is exclusively owned by the State in its sovereign or governmental capacity, wé do not think that the conclusion reached by the Justices who are in favor of affirming the decision of the court below is sound. It is unnecessary to discuss the large number of subsidiary questions which are raised by exceptions to the rulings upon.pleadings and exceptions to the rulings made pending the trial. The holding of the trial judge, in effect (with which three of the Justices of this court agree), that the property involved here was held by the State in its sovereign and governmental capacity, that neither the statute of limitations nor prescription operated against the State, and that the State lost none of its rights by laches, is" conclusive as against the defendant, unless the defendant obtained the easement which is claimed in its answer by virtue of the contract between W. L. Mitchell, chief engineer of the Western & Atlantic Eailroad while
“ Chief Engineer’s Office, W. & A. R. R. Atlanta, Oct. 11, 1850.
“ Gentlemen: I have given much reflection to the subject of your note of yesterday, and I have had full and free conversation with his Excellency, Geo. W. Towns, upon the subject; and we are fully satisfied, not only from the nature of the telegraph but from the experience of other roads, that there is no appendage more valuable in the efficient management of a railroad than a telegraph line; and we have come to the conclusion to submit to you this proposition.
“ 1. To furnish and erect the posts from Atlanta to Chattanooga, which shall be 24 feet long with four inches in diameter at the little end, and be planted four feet in the ground.
“ 2. To grant you the use of our right of way for the telegraph company, and to pass your offices and materials along the road free of charge.
“ 3. E'or and in consideration of the foregoing the W. & A. R. R. is to receive the sum of five thousand dollars, to be placed to its credit upon the books of the Telegraph Company; and instead of interest on that sum, it is to receive dividends as they may be declared from time to time, and to be represented in the meetings of the company to that amount, by the Chief Engineer or such other person as may be appointed to represent the same. •
“ 4. And in further consideration of the foregoing services and grant, all the telegraph offices between Atlanta and Nashville erected by the company shall be subject to the use of said road free of charge,, and said company shall erect as many offices as the road may require in addition to the regular offices of the company, but the latter shall be at the expense of the road.
“ Yours respectfully, Wm. L. Mitchell, Chief Engineer.
To Mr. David W. Garst and Mr. James M. Bean,,Atlanta, Ga.”
“Atlanta, Oct. 11, 1850. Sir: We hereby accept the proposition submitted in yours of this date. Yours respectfully,
D. W. Garst, J. M. Bean.
“To W. L. Mitchell, Esq., Chief Engineer, etc. Atlanta, Ga.”
If Mitchell had the right and authority to execute such a contract as this as an agent of the State, the proposal and the acceptance of it gave to the telegraph company, for whom Garst and Bean were acting, an easement over the right of way of the Western & Atlantic Bailroad. But even if Mitchell was not vested with authority to conclude such a contract (and we do not mean to rule nor intimate that he was), if .the contract was after-wards approved and duly ratified by the General Assembly of this State, which did have the authority to grant and convey such an easement, then the contract became binding upon the State. On the 27th of January, 1852, the General Assembly of the State of Georgia passed an act entitled “ An act to incorporate the Augusta, Atlanta and Nashville Magnetic Telegraph Company:” By certain sections of this act the General Assembly incorporated the Augusta, Atlanta and Nashville Magnetic Telegraph Company, the company for whom Garst and Bean had been acting as agents or promoters when the contract between them and Mitchell, above set .forth, was entered into. In this act of incorporation is the following: “ Section 6. And be it further enacted, that the contract entered into on the eleventh day of October, 1850, by William L. Mitchell, Chief Engineer of the Western and Atlantic Bail-road, and D. W. Garst and J. M. Bean, on the part of said company, be and the same is hereby ratified and affirmed, and that at every election each share shall entitle its holder to'one vote, and absent stockholders may vote by -agent or proxy, on producing written authority so to do. And in case of an equal number of votes on both sides, the election shall be decided by lot, and the Chief Engineer of said railroad, or other officer having the chief control of said road for the time being, shall by himself, or his proxy duly authorized, cast the vote to which the State is entitled under said contract.” This section of the act is an approval and
It is contended that the section of the act last referred to did not have the effect of ratifying and making valid the contract between Mitchell and Garst and Bean. One ground upon which this contention is based is that the section of the act relating to this contract is not sufficiently explicit; that it does not show that the particular contract under consideration, and which we have insisted above was adopted and ratified, is the contract referred to. Surely this contention must fall, upon a mature consideration of the terms of the contract and the act ratifying it. It is true that the act does not set out all of the terms of the contract, but it sufficiently describes it to identify it and to make clear the fact that the intention of the legislature was to ratify the contract as contained in the proposal and acceptance. It describes the contract as “that contract entered into On the 11th day of October, 1850, by William-L. Mitchell, Chief Engineer of the Western & Atlantic Railroad, and D. W. Garst and J. M. Bean on the part of said company.” There is no suggestion in the evidence anywhere that there was any other contract to which this could refer; and there is no suggstion that there was ever any other contract between Mitchell and Garst and Bean. It is true the act in this section refers to “ said company,” without naming it, but. in other parts the act incorporating the Telegraph Company shows, beyond peradventure, the company to which it refers, and identifies it as the Magnetic Telegraph Company. With these facts before us, and no facts upon which to base any other suggestion, it seems to us established beyond a doubt that the contract ratified and approved is the contract which we have set out above, and under which the easement was granted.
But it is also urged upon the part of the plaintiff that section 6 of the act is unconstitutional, in that it contains “ matter different from what is expressed in the title thereof.” We are of the opinion that this contention is without merit. The title of the act is, “ An act to incorporate- the Augusta, Atlanta and Nashville Magnetic
Under the views here expressed, the court below erred in striking, upon motion of the plaintiffs, the part of the defendant’s answer which set up the grant of an easement along the Western & Atlantic Bailroad by express contract, subsequently ratified by the
We have not discussed the grounds of the motion for a neu trial, because, being of the opinion that the court erred in sustaining the demurrers to portions of the answer and amendments, we are further of the opinion that all that took place subsequently on the trial was nugatory. The answer of the defendant, including portions thereof that were erroneously stricken, set up a good defense to the State’s case; and we differ in toto with the three of our brethren who are in favor of affirming the judgment of the court below, upon the assertion that upon the case as a whole a verdict for the plaintiff was demanded.
Upon the question as to whether or not prescription would ripen against the State, or the lapse of time could be made the basis of prescription, or as to whether the State lost its: right to assert title to any part of its right of way by laches, we concur in the position of the members of the court in favor of affirmance, but not in all that is said in the discussion of the question.
In maintaining that a reversal by this court is required by the errors of the court below, we plant ourselves upon the proposition that in parts of the plea and amendments stricken the defendant
Presiding Justice Beck, Justice Atkinson, and Judge Custer concur in the foregoing views and opinion, in which they differ with the three Justices who are in favor of affirming the judgment of the court below.
Judgment affirmed by operation of law. Gross-bill of exceptions dismissed.