Opinion
No. 6663.
February 15, 1922. Rehearing Denied March 1, 1922.
Appeal from District Court, Kinney County; Joseph Jones, Judge.
Suit by W. E. Whitehead and others against W. Fred West and others. From order granting a temporary injunction, defendants appeal. Reversed and rendered.
Boyle, Ezell Grover and Taliaferro, Cunningham Moursund, all of San Antonio, for appellants.
Martin Martin and G. B. Fenley, all of Uvalde, and Sonfield, Nall King, of Beaumont, for appellees.
The Kinney Uvalde Railway Company was chartered under subdivision 54 of article 1121 of the Revised Statutes, providing for the formation of private corporations in this state. The provision in question reads as follows:
"To build, maintain and operate a line of railroad to mines, gins, quarries, manufacturing plants, breweries and mills, and to condemn land necessary for the right of way for such road, from and between such mine, gin, quarry, manufacturing plant or mill, and the nearest line of railroad; but no corporation created under the provisions of this subdivision shall have the power to condemn private property until said corporation shall declare itself a public highway and common carrier, thus placing said road under the control of the railroad commission of this state."
In pursuance of the power of eminent domain given it in this act, the railway company instituted proceedings, under the general railroad condemnation statutes, to condemn for its use a right of way across tracts of land owned by W. E. Whitehead and another. W. Fred West and two others were appointed as commissioners to assess damages for the proposed use of the land, when Whitehead procured a temporary injunction restraining the commissioners from proceeding under their appointment, and the railway company from taking possession of the land over which the right of way was sought. This appeal is from that order. The injunction was granted, after notice, upon the verified pleadings of the parties, without hearing any evidence. Generally speaking, the only questions presented are: First, the constitutionality of the act quoted, in so far as it seeks to extend the power of eminent domain to corporations organized thereunder; and, second, whether or not, in the absence of an express provision in that act for that purpose, such corporation may resort to the method of procedure provided in any other statute in exercising the right of eminent domain.
The pleadings contain a great many allegations which in our opinion are immaterial to the questions raised, and which will not be noticed here. In general terms it may be said that the plaintiffs below base their objections to the operation of the act in question upon allegations that the railway company here involved purposes to run its line across an undeveloped section of the country, suitable only for pasturage purposes, and was organized solely for the purpose of transporting the product of an asphalt mine located at the terminus of the company's railway, and not for any public use; that it does not intend to comply with the law of the state governing common carriers; and that its financial resources are not sufficient to enable it to equip itself for general railroad purposes, or to pay the damages appellees may suffer as a result of the condemnation of their land. In short, it is contended that the company is organized solely for private purposes, and intends to devote its line of railway to purely private uses, and accordingly is not entitled to the right to exercise the power of eminent domain sought to be granted to it in the act in question.
It appears from the pleadings upon which the injunction was granted that the proposed line of railway is about eight miles long, extending from Cline, in Uvalde county, a station on the line of a general railroad, to a rock asphalt mine in operation in that county. It is conceded that the condemnation proceedings interrupted by the injunction were regular, and that that section of the statute under consideration is valid for all purposes, unless it is invalid in the provision extending to the corporations therein provided for the right to exercise the power of eminent domain, and that provision is attacked upon the one ground that it authorizes the taking of private property for a private, as distinguished from a public, use. The first question presented here, then, is whether or not under the facts disclosed in the pleadings the operation of the line of railway involved constitutes a private, and not a public, use.
We think it should be said at the outset that all allegations questioning the good faith or the intention of the incorporators of the railway company, with reference to the proposed method and purposes to be pursued in the operation of the road, should be disregarded. It must be presumed that in carrying out its objects and purposes the corporation will comply with the laws of the state. If the corporation has other intentions, or if it undertakes to evade the law, both the state and the citizens thereof are afforded adequate remedies by which obedience to the law may be enforced.
Declaring itself a public highway and common carrier, and expressly subjecting itself to the control of the State Railroad Commission, the company involved was chartered for the purpose of building, maintaining, and operating a line of railroad between the asphalt mine and Cline, a distance of eight miles. Under this charter the company is authorized, and under the law it is required, to accept, transport, and deliver to any point on its line, or to its connecting carrier, all commodities tendered it for such purpose by the public. It must furnish cars and other facilities, load, unload, and reload, receive, transport, and deliver, these commodities in accordance with such rules and regulations as the Railroad Commission may lawfully prescribe, and collect such charges for this service as that Commission may fix. Theoretically, then, the company's proposed operations constitute an ideal public use. But it is urged that as a practical matter the operation of the road will, after all, serve only a purely private use, in support of which contention appellees set out facts showing the short length of the road, the undeveloped character of the territory it traverses, and the assumed intention of the company to disregard its obligations under the law to serve the public, and perform no other function than to transport over its line the products of one particular asphalt mine, which is located at its terminus.
Of course it is true that the Legislature has no power to enlarge the right of eminent domain so as to authorize the taking thereunder of private property for other than public uses. It is presumed that the Legislature has this limitation in view when it enacts statutes extending such rights, and frames its acts in subordination to, rather than in violation of, the limitation, unless, indeed the infringement is apparent from the expressed purpose or obvious effect of the act. Borden v. Trespalacios Co., 98 Tex. 494, 86 S.W. 11, 107 Am.St.Rep. 640. Here the act in question provides for the incorporation of a railroad company, a public highway, and common carrier, subject to the same regulation by the state as are other corporations of that character, which are given the no longer questioned right of eminent domain. The purposes manifested by the terms of the act establish, conclusively, as we will show, a public use, to which end the private property of the citizen may be taken, if the citizen is compensated therefor in the manner provided by law.
It seems to be a settled rule that where the use for which property is sought to be taken under the power of eminent domain is public, the necessity and expediency of exercising the power, and the extent to which the property thereunder is to be taken, are political or legislative, and not judicial, questions, the legislative determination of which is conclusive, and not reviewable, by the courts. Those questions rest wholly within the legislative discretion. 2 Elliott, R. R. § 952; Lewis, Em. Domain, § 255; 20 C.J. 624; 10 R.C.L. §§ 158, 159; Croley v. Railway (Tex. Civ. App.) 56 S.W. 615; Railway v. Malone (Tex. Civ. App.) 190 S.W. 809.
It is equally well settled that the question of whether the use for which private property is taken is a public use is a judicial question, to be determined in the courts, although where the Legislature declares a particular use to be a public use the presumption is in favor of this declaration, and will be binding upon the courts unless such use is clearly and palpably of a private character. Elliott, R. R. § 952; 1 Lewis, Em. Dom. § 251; 20 C.J. 551; Mangan v. Transp. Co., 18 Tex. Civ. App. 478, 44 S.W. 998.
The question of whether or not in a given case the use is a public one depends upon the character, and not the extent, of such use. It depends upon the extent of the right the public has to such use, and not upon the extent to which the public may exercise that right. It is immaterial if the use is limited to the citizens of a local neighborhood, or that the number of citizens likely to avail themselves of it is inconsiderable, so long as it is open to all who choose to avail themselves of it. The mere fact that the advantage of the use inures to a particular individual or enterprise, or group thereof, will not deprive it of its public character. Nor does the public use, if a railroad, depend upon its length, nor whether it is only a branch road, nor that its equipment is to be furnished by another corporation, nor that its stockholders are also stockholders in a corporation which will be primarily benefited by its construction. If a railroad invoking the power of eminent domain is to be a highway, or a common carrier, and open to the promiscuous and uniform use of the public, such facts conclusively make it a public use, and the extent of the public need and probable use thereof is not a question for the courts, and may not be inquired into; and the right to take property "will not be denied a railroad corporation having proper authority from the Legislature, merely because it is to run through a sparsely settled country, or because it will be chiefly of service in bringing out the products of a particular mine, even if the stockholders of the railroad are also interested in the business which its construction will especially benefit." These principles are well settled, and have often been declared by the text-writers and in the decisions of the principal states, including this state. Elliott, R. R. §§ 961, 962; 20 C.J. pp. 558, 565; 10 R.C.L. p. 43; Lewis, Em. Dom. §§ 254, 263, 264, 313; Madera v. Granite Co., 3 Cal.App. 668, 87 P. 27; Kansas T. Coal Ry. v. Coal Co., 161 Mo. 288, 61 S.W. 684, 51 L.R.A. 936, 84 Am.St.Rep. 717; Butte, A. P. Ry. Co. v. Montana U. Ry. Co., 16 Mont. 504, 41 P. 232, 31 L.R.A. 298, 50 Am.St.Rep. 508; Phillips v. Watson, 63 Iowa 28, 18 N.W. 659; Caretta v. Pocahontas Co., 62 W. Va. 185, 57 S.E. 401; State v. Court, 42 Wn. 675, 85 P. 669; Coal Co. v. Railway, 97 Ark. 495, 134 S.W. 634, Ann.Cas. 1912d 1000; Railway v. Ferris, 26 Tex. 588; Borden v. Irrigation Co., 98 Tex. 494, 86 S.W. 11, 107 Am.St.Rep. 640; Chapman v. Railway (Tex. Civ. App.) 138 S.W. 440; Mangan v. Transp. Co., 18 Tex. Civ. App. 478, 44 S.W. 998.
The policy evidenced by these rules has been evolved out of long years of development and progress in this country. The results of its application have proven its soundness and reasonableness, and particularly so with reference to railroads. When these rules are applied to the case presented here, appellees must be denied the relief sought. The Legislature, in its discretion, has conclusively determined that a public necessity exists for the exercise of the power of eminent domain to accomplish the purposes of the act in question, and has lawfully delegated that power to a railroad corporation, which is under the law a public highway and common carrier, and which, shorn of the power to discriminate, is open to the use of the public at large. These facts exist as a matter of law, and conclusively constitute the use of the property to be taken as a public use.
But we do not think it necessary to invoke these rules in this cause. We think the facts set out in appellees' sworn pleadings themselves affirmatively show such public use of the land sought to be condemned as to come within the purview of the Constitution and statute. As we have said, the status of a railroad, as such, is not determined by its length; whether it is a mile long, or a thousand miles long, it is a railroad nevertheless. Railway v. Grain Co., 52 Tex. Civ. App. 156, 114 S.W. 436; Railway v. Grocery Co., 55 Kan. 525, 40 P. 899; U.S. v. Stock Yards Co. (D.C.) 161 F. 919; U.S. v. Stock Yards (C. C.) 162 F. 556. Nor does the fact that the railroad traverses only an undeveloped country affect the question under consideration. This has been true of nearly all pioneer railroads. Development of the country has invariably followed the construction of such roads, industry is encouraged, natural resources are uncovered and rendered available, fields of employment and activity enlarged, and the products of this development are transported, by the very agency which made them available, to other parts of the country to add to the welfare, comfort, and convenience of the general public, and thus are created the public benefits and uses which warrant the exercise of the power of eminent domain. In this particular case the primary objective of the road is to supply a means of transportation of the products of an asphalt mine, which has become an important, if not essential, industry in this state. If its purposes or usefulness were retricted to that one particular use, or if the uses to which it is to be put were optional with the corporation, a different question might be presented. But its uses are not, and cannot lawfully be, so restricted. If the product of this particular mine is so certain and of such magnitude as to warrant the construction over difficult ground of a line of railroad for the purpose of transporting it, as seems to be the case, then the general public may, and probably will, explore and develop that entire section, for this or any other mineral, and the product of such development, or any present or future development, industry, or activity, will be afforded an outlet, and this outlet becomes a public use to which individual property rights must yield when compensated for under the law.
We conclude that subdivision 54 of article 1121 is valid as against the objections raised by appellees, and that the purposes of the Kinney Uvalde Railway Company, as a matter of law, and particularly under the facts alleged by appellees, constitute such public use as to entitle it to exercise the power of eminent domain given it under the terms of the act in question.
We recur, then, to the question of whether or not the statutes afford any method of procedure by which the corporation here involved may lawfully condemn lands for the use of its right of way. Article 1121, under which the corporation obtained its charter, provides no method of condemnation, either directly or by adoption of a method provided by any other statute, and appellees contend that these facts render the corporation without any such means. It is conceded by the company that unless the methods of proceeding provided in the general railroad condemnation statutes (chapter 8, tit. 115, art. 6481 et seq.) are available to it for the purpose of condemning lands for its use, it is without any method for that purpose, but contends that those statutes do in fact apply to it, thus giving it a full remedy. The decision of the question has not been without its difficulties, but we have reached the conclusion that the provisions of the general statute were intended to apply to corporations organized under section 54, art. 1121, and were available to appellant railway company. The provisions of the general statute are by express terms made to apply to "any railroad corporation," and while appellant company was not organized under the general railroad statutes (title 115) it is nevertheless a "railroad corporation," and nothing else, and we perceive no reason for excluding it from the operation of a statute which precisely describes it in designating the corporations subject to the provisions thereof. The articles providing a method of condemnation in title 115 are not made to apply only to "any railroad corporation incorporated under the provisions of this title," but to "any railroad corporation." As the Legislature did not see fit to expressly restrict the operation of the provisions of the general statute to railroad corporations created thereunder, we are without authority to interpolate that restriction into it.
The judgment heretofore entered herein will be set aside and the opinion thereon withdrawn, and it is now ordered that the judgment of the court below be reversed, and judgment here rendered that the injunction be dissolved.