76 W. Va. 21 | W. Va. | 1915
Upon application to the circuit court of Berkeley county, made in the manner prescribed by statute, for an adjudication of its right to appropriate to public use part of a tract of land owned by the Standard Lime & Stone Company and by it operated as a limestone quarry, the court held the applicant, the Williamsport, Nessle & Martinsburg Railway Company, to be a corporation duly chartered, organized, and empowered to invoke the aid of the statutory provisions in that behalf enacted, and, upon compliance with the due prosecution of the regulations requisite for such procedure^ permitted it to pay into court the compensation fixed by commissioners appointed for that purpose. Defendant, on writ of error, challenges (1) the sufficiency of the corporate organization of the applicant; (2) its right to condemn; (3) the lawfulness or bona fides of its purposes; (4) denies any attempt to agree upon the compensation for the land to be taken; (5) that such land is necessary for railroad purposes; (6) that the road is or will be devoted to public use in whole or in part, asserting that as to one parcel the sole purpose is to serve the Pittsburgh Limestone Company by a branch or spur connecting it with the Western Maryland Railway at Williamsport, such connection being the moving cause for the abortive attempt of the Western Maryland Railway Company to construct a spur track from Charlton, a station on its main line on the Maryland side of the Potomac, to the boundary line between the two states, the failure of which was due to want of authority to condemn a way through the lands now sought to be appropriated to serve none other than the competitor and rival of defendant; and, hence, (7) that the organization of the applicant was to effectuate what the Western Maryland Railway Company was unable to accomplish, under pretense of constructing a branch line from Williamsport opposite Piedmont by way of Nessle to Martins-burg.
Is the applicant a duly organized railway corporation? To it was issued a charter by the proper officer of the state, upon
This, it seems to us, prima facie establishes the sufficiency , of the corporate organization, and, in that respect, authorizes the company to proceed to exercise the right of eminent domain. Careita Railway Co. v. Coal Co., 62 W. Va. 185. Indeed, the applicant has done more than is reasonably deemed necessary; for it is not a condition precedent to the right to condemn that the certificate of incorporation shall be certified for recordation and recorded in the county wherein is the principal office or place of business of the company. Railway Co. v. Oil Co., 35 W. Va. 205.
Because in argument nothing is said in support of the assignment denying attempt by the applicant to agree upon a compensation for the lands to be taken, we assume defendant has abandoned it. And upon the fifth assignment we need not delay, as, within certain limitations, a railroad corporation may, preliminary to the exercise of the power •of eminelit domain, determine what and how much land of the citizen it Avill condemn for its purposes. And, so long as it acts within such limitations, its discretion is practically absolute. Courts will supervise the exercise of the power, but will not control the right to take any particular property except where the power is clearly abused. Gas Co. v. Lowe, 52 W. Ya. 662; Railroad Co. v. Railroad Co., 75 Va. 780. In response to the objection that the appropriation of the land is not for a public use in whole or in part, we cite Caretta Railway Co. v. Coal Co., supra, saying “a company organized
The other assignments may readily be simplified and reduced to the one inquiry, whether the applicant is endeavoring to appropriate property to a purely private purpose under the guise of a public service corporation. The argument urged in support of a negative answer to that inquiry is in the main predicated upon two propositions. The first is that the applicant was chartered and organized to accomplish that which the Western Maryland Railway Company had failed to accomplish in its effort to construct a branch line from Charlton to the property of the Pittsburgh Limestone Company, solely to provide shipping facilities for the product of the quarries of that company; and that, because the railroad company could not legally condemn the land of defendant for such private use, as held in Railroad Co. v. Iron Works, 31 W. Va. 710, it procured the organization of the Williams-port, Nessle & Martinsburg Railway Company. The second proposition, confirmatory of the first, is that through Fitzgerald, its president, the Western Maryland company provided directly or indirectly the funds necessary to finance the railroad corporation subsequently organized. As already observed, Fitzgerald did secure and provide the money used by the new corporation. But his testimony clearly shows no part of the funds so used was furnished by the Western Maryland Railway Company, the Pittsburgh Limestone Company, the United States Steel Corporation, the Carnegie Steel Company, or any one or more of them, or by any other company, and that none of them or any other company has agreed to provide the 'capital necessary to finance the construction, equipment and operation of the railroad contemplated by the applicant. He says, and no witness contradicts or denies the statement, that the money furnished and paid was his own personal private contribution; and he expresses his readiness and ability likewise to provide, or by negotiations with others than the corporations mentioned, to secure the capital necessary to build, equip au^ operate a railroad between the two terminals designated
This case readily may be distinguished from Railroad Co. v. Vencill, 80 S. E. 1103. The evidence in that case mainfestly showed a purely private purpose, and not a public one, as did also Railroad Co. v. Iron Works, supra.
Plaintiff in error does not undertake to controvert the fact, clearly apparent, that along the line of the proposed railroad valuable properties await the shipping facilities to be provided. Many ledges of limestone, lying in close proximity or readily accessible to it, await such construction and operation. When crushed or pulverized, limestone becomes an indispensable accessory in the manufacture of steel and iron. Defendant fully appreciates the value of these quarries, one of them being profitably operated by it. The railroad .will serve other manufactories, and afford facilities for the transportation of farm products, enlarge facilities for public travel by furnishing connection with the Western Maryland and other railroads, and enhance the value of all properties and serve many communities located along the projected route, all of which will and must be served alike by the applicant’s road when constructed and operated.
The lower court did not, nor do we, find from the evidence any substantial ground or reason for denying to the applicant the right it has invoked; a right by statute conferred upon all railroads chartered, organized and doing business in this state. A mere- suspicion of the want of good faith will not suffice.
We are. therefore of opinion to affirm the judgment sought to be reversed, and to -remand the case for further proceedings according to law; and an order will be so entered.
Affirmed and remanded.