54 Tenn. 518 | Tenn. | 1872
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This cause involves the grave and important question whether a court of equity has the power to enjoin an incorporated railroad, company from the use and enjoyment of a portion of its road-bed located on the land of the complainant without his consent, and whose title to the fee has never been extinguished by the payment of its assessed value, the just compensation guaranteed to him by the Constitution.
The Chancellor below decreed that the complainant’s debt be paid within ninety days, or in default thereof that defendants be enjoined from the further use and occupation of so much of its road-bed as lies
The case was brought by the company by appeal before the Circuit Court, where there was a verdict and judgment against the company for a like amount. The civil war and the suspension of the courts having intervened, the case was not brought to trial
These bonds were authorized to be issued to the several companies from time to time as prescribed in the act, as sections thereof might be ready for the iron rails, upon condition of payment by the companies of the semi-annual interest accrued, and the ultimate redemption of the bonds at maturity, and upon the further condition that the bonds, when so issued, should constitute a lien upon the property of the company in said section, including the road-bed, right of way, grading, bridges, and masonry, upon all stock subscribed for in said company, and upon the iron rails, chairs, spikes and equipments, when purchased
The first issuance of bonds so made to defendant was on the 23rd of November, 1859, and the last on the 29th of July, 1868; and it is provided that when the whole of said road shall be completed the State shall be invested with a lien without a deed from the company, upon the entire road, including the stock, right of way, grading, bridges, masonry, iron rails, spikes, chairs, and the whole superstructure and equipments, and all the property owned by the company as ■ incident to or necessary for its business, and all depots and depot stations, for the payment of all said bonds issued to the company as provided in this act, and for the interest accruing on said bonds. Act 1852, c. 151. By secs. 1122 and 1123 of the Code, it is provided that a railroad company owning any main line. may contract with any other company owning a railroad connecting with such main line for the lease
On the 30th of September, 1867, the company then being very largely in arrears to the State, on account of said bonds so issued, the road was seized by the State, a receiver appointed, and the road thenceforth operated by the State until the 17th July, 1868, when the Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad Company concluded a negotiation with the State by which the said company leased the defendant’s road upon terms acceptable to the State, and not necessary to be detailed.
The answer of the Nashville and Northwestern Railroad Company admits the case as stated in the bill, but insists that the complainant might have secured • himself in the suit at law by requiring a bond of the company upon its appealing, and that at that stage of the case he might also have enjoined until his compensation was paid or secured, and that by his failure to do either, he has lost .the remedy he now seeks, and that as he did not ask the injunction at that time, and until the road wras completed and in operation, it is now too late, as the rights of others have attached. That the courts will not grant an injunction restraining a company from operating its road after it is in full possession and operation, and that an injunction will only be decreed to restrain it from taking possession of land illegally. The answer also recites the lease for the use of the State to the Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad Company, and admits the insolvency of the respondent. The answer of
The Chancellor permitted the State to rely upon its petition to be made a defendant as an answer. The defense set up by the Stateis predicated upon its statutory mortgage given by the acts already referred to,, and it insists upon the same defenses stated in the answers of its co-defendants, that complainant has lost his remedy by his laches at law, and that the State having a lien superior to all others, that lien and the means of its discharge can not be interfered with or restrained by one of its courts.
Under these complications, the question recurs, is the citizen utterly without remedy where his land has been seized without his consent and appropriated without compensation? The solution of the question must depend mainly upon the equities presented on behalf of the State, and which grow out of her peculiar relation to railroad companies which have received her bounty, and which have failed to discharge the obligations assumed in so doing. ~We do not assent to the proposition that the complainant has lost his remedy because he failed to demand security at law, or be
A' waiver is a relinquishment of or a refusal to accept, a right, t The waiver of one of several remedies, or the waiver of a remedy as against one of several par
The injunction of the law was upon the defendant to give the bond. It was not left to the mere option of the complainant to demand it, but it was the defendant’s duty at all events to give it. In failing to do so. the defendant was guilty of a palpable violation of the law, and can not be heard to excuse his own wrong by imputing laches to the complainant.
We have then before us the case of a citizen of Tennessee whose property has been taken without compensation by the government, under the indisputable right of eminent domain, and given to an insolvent corporation against which he is utterly without remedy at law. He appeals to a court of equity for relief. He stands upon the great constitutional guaranty that no man’s particular services shall be demanded, or property taken, or applied to the public use, without the consent of his representatives, or without compensation being made therefore. Const. Tenn., art. i, s. 21.
But the right of eminent domain is fettered by one obstinate condition, and that is, that the property taken must be paid for. This principle of indemnity is one of natural justice, and is of very ancient origin. Thus we are told that in ancient Borne such respect was paid- to the rights of private property that a scheme of the censors to supply the city with water by means of an aqueduct was defeated by the refusal of a proprietor to let it be carried through his lands; and afterwards it was decreed by the Senate that it should be lawful to take materials from the adjoining lands of citizens to repair public aqueducts upon an estimate of the value or damages to be made by good men, and doing at the same
These examples are given as evidence that the principle of indemnification is one of natural justice. But it is the approved opinion that property in this country when taken for public use need not be paid for before being taken. It is enough that provision be made for compensation afterwards, provided the payment be absolutely certain. Smith v. Helmn, 7 Barb., 416; 18 Wend., 667; Anderson v. Turbemlle, 6 Col., 151. The rule is we think well stated by Chancellor Walworth, that the compensation must be either ascertained and paid before the property is appropriated, or an appropriate remedy must be provided, and upon an adequate fund, whereby the owner may obtain his com
This learned jurist was of the opinion that in all such cases the compensation, or offer of it, must precede, or be concurrent with, the seizure and entry upon private property taken under the authority of the State. But this Court has held that it may be taken before compensation be actually paid, but only after certain provision has been made for the payment. Anderson v. Turbeville, 6 Col., 160. In that case it was held that a person whose land has been taken for public use, without compensation, has the right to enjoin the taking, and have it declared void, unless compensation is paid or provided. That was a controversy about a street, but the Court expressly reserved the question as to the application of the doctrines of that case to that of railroads and the like, when the property is to be used for a franchise and is granted to such corporation. Ib. 165. The effect
It is not claimed that the defendant has any title to the land in controversy here. The most that can be claimed by the appropriation is an inchoate right that may ripen into a perfect title upon the payment of the price. So it is held • that when the charter of a railway company provides that where the title of land condemned for the use of the company shall vest in the.company upon payment of the amount of valuation, no title vests until such payment, Balt. and Susq. R. Co., v. Nesbitt, 10 How., 395, and it is held that when the railway company enter into the possession of the land and construct their road without having paid the whole of the damages assessed therefor, a court of equity will enforce the payment by an order of such payment within a time named, and in default will restrain the company by injunction from using the land until the price is paid. 1 Redf. Railways, 241. Cozens v. Bangor Rail W. 12 Jur. N. S. 738; Cushman v. Smith, 34 Maine R. 247; 18 Wend. 9; Redfield’s Am. Railway cases, 225, 231, 233, 245. Stacey v. Vermont Central Railway, 27 Verm. R. 39. And so it is said by this Court that “the people, in whom the sovereign power resides in this free country, were not willing to leave this dangerous, though essential, right of eminent domain, a power to deprive a man of his property against his consent, unguarded by barriers of a permanent nature, but inserted in
It is stated as settled and fundamental doctrine that government has no right to take private property for public purposes without giving a just compensation, and it seems to be necessarily implied that the indemnity should, in cases which admit of it, be previously and equitably ascertained, and be ready for reception concurrently in point of time with the actual exercise of the right of eminent domain. This point was ably discussed in Thompson v. Grand, Gulf R. Co., 3 How. Miss., 240, and the decision was that compensation must precede the seizure. 2 Kent, 409. Such seems to be the opinion of the learned commentator last cited, but upon this point the authorities are in conflict. Vide 12 Serg. and Rawl., 366; 20 Johns., 745; 6 Wend., 634. We have already seen, however, that in this State the indemnity needs not precede the seizure, provided the statute secure it beyond all contingency. And the best security guaranteed under defendant’s charter is that the title in the fee remains in the owner until the indemnity is paid.
The complainant’s remedy, if anywhere, must ^be found in the injunctive powers of a court of equity. After enumerating many of the instances in which this power will be exercised, a learned author observes: “It would be difficult indeed
If, indeed, concludes Judge Story, courts of equity did not interfere in such cases, there would be a great failure of justice in the country. 2 Story Eq. Jur., s. 928. So it was held in Stewart v. Raymond et al., 7 S. and M., 568: “if a railroad company neglect to pay the owner of land the damages awarded for the right of way, equity will enjoin them from using the land until the damages are paid.” Hill. Inj. 520. And so in the case of Cozens v. Bangor Railr., 12 Jur., N. S., 738, already cited, it was held that where the railway company enters into the possession of the land, and constructs its road without having paid the whole of the damages assessed therefor, a court of equity will enforce the payment within a time named, and in default will restrain the company by injunction from using the land until the price is paid. 1 Redf. Rail., 241; and so in the case of Perks v. Wycombe Railroad Company, 3 Giff., 662, it is held that if a company is in possession under a legal title, the court will not interfere at the suit of a person alleging an adverse title, to restrain the company from continuing in possession, but if land has been taken by a company improperly, or if the conduct of the company has
We think we may safely evoke from these authorities an ample warrant for the opinion to which we are brought — that the complainant’s remedy in this character of case has not been mistaken by his bill, if there be no other complications in the cause by which that remedy has been defeated. We have been referred to one or more English cases in conflict with this current of American authorities, but we choose to follow our own, if for no other reason, because the right of the citizen here reposes upon an inviolable guaranty of the organic law, rather than the volatile breath of a mere act of Parliament, or the malleable doctrines of the English 'common law. The case of Deere v. Guest, 13 Eng. Ch. R., 516, was a controversy about a private right of way, am’d for a private use, — for a tram-road connecting a limestone quarry with the Dowlais Iron Works, in which the right of way had actually been given by a tenant in possession.
It rests upon different principles from those governing this case. The Lord Chancellor in that case disposed of the equities of the parties upon the ground that what was claimed by defendants was a mere right of way. If they are not entitled to that right, said he, then they are mere trespassers, -and the plaintiffs have their proper legal remedy. We have seen that no such remedy exists under the right of -eminent
It is assumed, then, on behalf of the State that she holds a statutory .mortgage upon the road-bed and all the appointments of the defendant which takes precedence of all other demands, and it is contended-that this lien, when acquired by the issuance of the bonds, has priority over all other claims existing, or to exist, against said company, and such is the provision of the statute, which, so. far as it undertakes to - destroy or impair existing contracts, is simply a nullity. But these bonds are to be issued as sections of the road may be ready for the iron rails, and it seems they were so issued in this case. When so issued, they are to constitute a lien and mortgage without deed upon the section for which they are issued, from the moment of issuance; and if to every section the bonds are issued during the progress of the work, then the entire road is burdened with the lien, the mortgage upon each section dating from the issuance of bonds to that section, and among the conditions to their lawful issuance is one, that the said section is not subject to any other lien whatever, and this must be made to appear to the Governor by the affidavits of the chief engineers and the president, together with the affidavit of a special engineer appointed by the Governor himself. Act of 1852, c. 61.
But the statement of a simple and familiar prin ■ ciple of law dissipates this whole complication as to the overshadowing liens and demands of the State. The defendant could not mortgage what was not its own. The general principle is that nothing is mortgageable unless it be the property of a mortgagor. The mere franchise, perhaps, of the defendants over the complainant’s land was the subject of mortgage, and such a mortgage would pass the defendants’ equity without derogation to complainant’s title in fee, and
In the case of the State v. Mexican Gulf Railroad, 3 Rob. Louis. R., 513, it is held that a railway, where the soil upon which it is laid belongs to another, the “owners not having been expropriated,” is not susceptible of being mortgaged unless authorized by the Legislature and that future property can never be the subject of conventional mortgage. And in the case of the Borough of Easton’s Appeal, 47 Penn. St. R., 255, it was held that a mortgage by a corporation of their franchises, property, and effects, given after their entry upon lands, and before judgment for damages, will bind their equitable interest therein, subject to the payment of the judgment for the purchase-money. The defendants then in this case not having a mortgageable interest in the fee, could make none to the State, nor could such a paramount lien have been acquired by the State upon the defendant’s land until his constitutional right to just compensation had been discharged. The case of Pierce v. The Milwaukie & St. Paul Railroad Co., 1 Am. R., 203, to Avhich we have been referred, bears but little analogy to this. In that case there had been a sale, and the contest was between the mortgage and the vendor’s lien. In this there has been a violation of the constitutional rights of the citize'n whose property has been taken without his consent. He has no technical lien upon the property itself, but he stands upon his constitutional right to indemnity, which can only be discharged in the manner required
We hold in this case that the State has never acquired such a lien upon complainant’s land as to divest or defeat his right to the just compensation secured to him by the organic law. The right of eminent domain, lawfully exercised, is entirely compatible with fair and honorable dealing .in the sovereign. It gives no sanction to an act of robbery under the forms of law.
The principles of this opinion have already indicated in the main the equities of the other defendants in this cause. It has been suggested that the Nashville & Chattanooga R. R. Co., pending this litigation, has become the purchaser of the Nashville & Northwestern Railroad. If this be true 'this changed relation can in nowise change or affect the liabilities of the parties, as the pendency of this cause fixes upon the said company a full and accurate notice of this litigation and all the equities of complainant in the cause. The defense of innocent purchaser, or contractor, or essee, as relied upon in the defendant’s answer, can avail nothing. There can be no innocent purchaser from one who was not seized of the title. Craig v. Leeper, 2 Yerg., 193.
We have given to this important cause that degree of consideration, investigation, and thought, which its magnitude demands, and we are brought to the conclusion that the equities of the cause are with the complainant.
We have been admonished at the bar that the ef-
A decree will be entered here against the Nashville & Northwestern Railroad Company for the complainant’s debt, interest, and costs, to be paid into the office of the* Clerk of this Court in ninety days from the final adjournment of the present term of this Court; and in default thereof, the defendants to this bill, and all other persons, parties, and corporations, will be enjoined and forbidden from the use, occupation, and operation, of so much of said Nashville & Northwestern Railroad as is located over the lands of the complainant, until his said “compensation” be paid.