Alabama & V. Ry. Co. v. Jackson & E. Ry. Co.

95 So. 733, 131 Miss. 857
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1923
DocketNo. 22820
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 95 So. 733 (Alabama & V. Ry. Co. v. Jackson & E. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alabama & V. Ry. Co. v. Jackson & E. Ry. Co., 95 So. 733, 131 Miss. 857 (Mich. 1923).

Opinion

Ethridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 2oth day of February, 1922, the Jackson & Eastern Railway Company, a railroad corporation incorporated under the laws of the state of Mississippi, subsequent to the enactment of the Code of 1906, filed its application with the circuit clerk of Rankin county to condemn a connection with the Alabama & Vicksburg Railway Company, also a Mississippi corporation, setting out in detail the description of the property of the defendant which it desired to condemn in making the connection. The petition, after describing the property sought to be condemned, stated:

“The connection which the applicant herein seeks to acquire by condemnation proceedings with the main line of the defendant, the Alabama & Vicksburg Railway Company, is to be a nine turnout and the use of seventy-five pound rail, of the same character and design which is now used on the main line of the Alabama & Vicksburg Railway Company at the point of connection,” etc.

The appellant thereupon filed the bill for injunction, seeking to restrain the Jackson & Eastern Railway Company from exercising the right of eminent domain, and alleged in its bill that the Alabama & Vicksburg Railway Company is a corporation under the laws of the state of Mississippi, its railway line extending from Vicksburg, Miss., to Meridian, Miss., and passes through the counties of Warren, Hinds, Rankin, Scott, and Newton and that part of Lauderdale county between the Newton county line and the city of Meridian; that complainant had been in the adverse possession of its railway from 1889 until the present time and is now in such possession and control. It further set up that the Canal Commercial Trust & Savings Bank and Felix E. Gunter are the trustees in a mortgage executed March 23, 1921, and are interested in the suit because of their trusteeship; that the Jackson & Eastern Railway Company is a Mississippi corporation, domiciled at Meridian, Lauderdale county, Miss., and is given only the powers and privileges specified and enumerated in the chapter on railroads, sections 4080 to 4099, in-[866]*866elusive, Code of 1906; that the said defendant had instituted eminent domain proceedings under the Code of 1906, sections 1854 to 1877, inclusive, to condemn and take from the complainant a part of said complainant’s right of way and roadbed, including a part of its main line of railway, its cross-ties and iron rails, and to divest complainant company of a part, and a necessary part, of its roadbed, right of way, cross-ties, and iron rails.

It further alleged: That complainant is advised that the statutes of the state of A^Iississippi providing for the exercise of the right of eminent domain, do not authorize or empower any person or corporation of any kind to condemn any land or property, unless such property spught to be condemned be private property. The statutes under the chapter on eminent domain enact an instruction to be given the jury in assessing damages and in another section prescribe the form of verdict and that the only judgment the eminent domain court can render is one divesting the defendant of all title to the property condemned, and investing the same in the plaintiff or party exercising the right of eminent domain. That other sections of said cha] iter show that the statutes of Mississippi on the subject have no application to such a proceeding as the defendant has begun against the complainant, and that it is incomprehensible that the law designs or permits one railroad company to acquire the exclusive ownership of another railway company’s tracks, or any part thereof.

That, if the Code of 1906, sections 1854 to 1877, inclusive, should be construed to justify or warrant eminent domain proceedings by the defendant against the complainant they will be null and void because violative of the state Constitution as well as the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, and that said statutes so construed will be unconstitutional and will deny the complainant equal protection of the law and take property without due process of law. That the complaint is aware that, under section 4096, Code of 1906, a defendant is given the right to cross, intersect, join or unite its rail[867]*867road with any other railroad at any points on their roads, and upon the grounds of such other railroad company, with the necessary and proper turnouts, sidings, switches, and other conveniences, and to exercise the right of'eminent domain for that purpose. That complainant does not object to the defendant being given all the right it may have under its charter as granted by section 4096, Code of 1906, at a proper and reasonably safe place for the junction or uniting of the two railroads; but that the point of junction sought by the defendant in its said proceedings is entirely improper and eminently dangerous, and that the said section does not confer authority to condemn complainant’s right of way longitudinally, or give the defendant the benefit or use of complainant’s track or station facilities. That the defendant cannot exercise powers of eminent domain under the provisions of the chapter entitled eminent domain, because such chapter was limited to the condemning of private property, and the complainant’s railroad is not private property but property devoted to the public use.

- It further hlleged, under the law of this state, the complainant cannot contest in the eminent domain court any other question than the amount of damages to be awarded, and that such court has no jurisdiction to determine the propriety or rightfulness and legality of the junction at the point where it is sought by the defendant.

It is further averred: That under section 184, Constitution of 1890, the complainant’s road is a public highway, and that said complainant has since 1889 carried persons and property for hire, and hence its road and other property is not private property, but is and has been for many years devoted to the public use. That it will not object to intersection or connection of its railroad with that of the defendant at a proper and suitable and not a dangerous place, and will be willing when the connection is made to receive and transport defendant’s passengers, tonnage, and cars, loaded or empty, without unnecessary de[868]*868lay ob discrimination upon payment by the defendant, of just and reasonable compensation.

It is further charged that, upon information and belief, the objects and purposes of the defendant in beginning the said eminent domain proceedings were not only to effect a junction of its road with the complainant’s road, but designs and purposes to run its trains, locomotives, and cars over the main line of the complainant, built upon a high and costly fill or embankment, and over its costly bridge across Pearl river from the junction point to the city of Jackson, and to use its station facilities, side tracks, switches and other like things in said city for its own purposes, although complainant’s facilities have no greater capacity than is required for its own use and business, and is insufficient to justify or accommodate the business of the defendant, and that the defendant has no right to’condemn its said property for such purposes.'

It further alleged that defendant has not been authorized by the Interstate Commerce Commission to make connection or use the tracks .or property of the complainant, although the complainant is informed and charges that defendant has made application to the Interstate Commerce Commission for- leave to do so.

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Related

Erwin v. Miss. State Highway Commission
58 So. 2d 52 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1952)
Alabama & v. Ry. Co. v. Jackson & E. Ry. Co.
110 So. 865 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 So. 733, 131 Miss. 857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alabama-v-ry-co-v-jackson-e-ry-co-miss-1923.