Atlanta, Knoxville & Northern Railway Co. v. Barker

31 S.E. 452, 105 Ga. 534, 1898 Ga. LEXIS 667
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 3, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 31 S.E. 452 (Atlanta, Knoxville & Northern Railway Co. v. Barker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlanta, Knoxville & Northern Railway Co. v. Barker, 31 S.E. 452, 105 Ga. 534, 1898 Ga. LEXIS 667 (Ga. 1898).

Opinion

Little, J.

As will be seen, the question which arises in this case is, whether a landowner who has expressly contracted with a railroad company to sell a right of way for the maintenance and operation of a railroad over his land, and who has consented to the placing on such land of a line of railway-track, etc., at great expense upon the part of the vendee, and who, reserving title in himself, made to the railroad company his bond conditioned to convey such right of way upon the payment thereafter of a stipulated sum, is entitled to maintain an action of ejectment against a railroad company which, being the successor of the original vendee, is in the possession of such right of way, on which it is maintaining a line of railroad and operating its cars in the transportation of passengers and freight. As will be seen by the petition, the plaintiff alleges that in Eebruary, 1889, he contracted with the Marietta & North Georgia Railroad Company, which was the predecessor of the defendant in error, to sell it a right of way across certain lots of land owned by him in Eannin county; that the purchase of said right of way contemplated the payment of a certain sum of money, of which he [535]*535■ received two hundred dollars in cash and promissory notes of a third person, dire thereafter, for the balance; and delivered to the railroad company his bond obligating himself to make title' to it whenever the balance of the purchase-money should be paid, with other stipulations unnecessary to be mentioned. The plaintiff further alleges in his petition that he has been paid fifty dollars on the notes, but that the balance is unpaid; and that in pursuance of said contract the company entered upon the lots of land and appropriated the rights of way by its road-beds and tracks, and remained in possession of the same until the railroad was sold to the present defendant in error.

It can not be understood from this state of facts that any question arises as to the right of the railroad company to take the land of another for its use without the payment of just compensation. The land, under the circumstances set out in the petition, was not taken in the exercise of the right of eminent domain, but under contract of purchase, and possession surren- • dered for the particular purpose of constructing a railroad upon it. Had it been the pleasure of the landowner so to do, he could have forbidden the entry of the company on his land and the appropriation of any part of it to1 its use, except on payment of its value; and ample power was afforded him by law to enforce this right. While he had undoubtedly the right to do so, he was not .compelled to exercise it, and he had the equal right by contract with the company to permit it to occupy his land. The question as to what would be the remedy of a landowner against a railroad company which entered on his land and appropriated .a portion of it to its use without his consent, is not involved in the present case; but the sole question is, having agreed to the sale of the land to a railroad company for the express purpose of .allowing the company to place its tracks thereon, and to use a .right of way over it for the transportation of its cars, and having under the contract agreed that the company could do so, can he thereafter maintain an action of ejectment to oust the company from the possession of the right of way so occupied, because a portion of the purchase-money has not been paid, and because title to such land still remains in him ?

The plaintiff in error contends that an action of ejectment [536]*536does lie, and cites us to the case of Remshart v. Savannah & Charleston R. Co., 54 Ga. 579. It was ruled in that case (3d headnote) that the complainant, who asked for an injunction against the continued operation of the road, was not entitled to it, but if the title to the land was still in him, he could recover-the land by ejectment. It is important to note that in that case there was originally no contract made between the railroad company and the landowner for the sale and purchase of the-right of way. Nor does.it appear in the brief statement of the-facts in that case that the landowner consented to the occupancy of the land by the railroad company. We are also cited to the ■ case of Gammage v. G. S. Railroad Co., 65 Ga. 614. It will be seen from the facts in that case that proceedings to condemn the - land of the plaintiff were had by the railroad company and damages assessed in the legal manner provided. Pending this litigation the land on which the right of way was located was sold as the property of Gammage and bought by Sheibley. A bill was filed by the purchaser alleging an agreement between himself and the former owner as to the recovery for the right of ’ way, and praying for an injunction to restrain the defendant railroad company from passing over the land. The court arguendo, in passing on the question whether the plaintiff was entitled to a writ of injunction, also said, in effect, that if the title was in the plaintiff, he had a remedy by ejectment; but it must also be noted that in that case the original occupation of the land was against the consent of the owner, who, by the legal means he possessed, resisted the right of the company to take it. We are referred to the case of Alston v. Wingfield, 53 Ga. 18, which, after examination, we think is not applicable to the question involved in the present case, the suit there being between private individuals. The same is true in the case of McDaniel v. Gray, 69 Ga. 433, to which we were also referred. A similar state of facts also exists in the case of Field v. Carlton, 75 Ga. 554, which we were asked also to examine. It must be understood that we are not denying the right of the vendor to maintain an action of ejectment to recover land sold by him when by the contract he reserved title in himself until the payment of' the purchase-money, and where the purchase-money is due and? [537]*537lias not been paid. As a general proposition that is too well settled to require at our hands any consideration. But the question is whether under the circumstances of this case the plaintiff in this action had this remedy.

In the argument here counsel for defendant in error insisted that if this remedy did not exist in this case, it was because the defendant was a railroad company, and-hq questioned whether a railroad company had any rights superior to those of an individual! Counsel was right. If this action can not be maintained in the present case, it is because the defendant is a railroad company. Not that a railroad company has or ought to have any more rights than an individual; not because the claims of a railroad company should be entitled to any more consideration than those which any natural person possesses; but it is because a company which has constructed and is operating a rail■road between two distant termini, running through several counties, and possibly States, must, for the sake of the public interest involved, be treated as an entirety, and that “one can not stand by and suffer another to expend money to large amounts on his land, as part of a great system of improvement, and then stop by injunction the entire system until he is paid. He must move in limine. He must defend at the threshold. . . Laches is a lock to the door of equity, which few keys, if any, are strong enough to open.” Griffin v. Augusta & Knoxville Railroad, 70 Ga. 167.

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.E. 452, 105 Ga. 534, 1898 Ga. LEXIS 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlanta-knoxville-northern-railway-co-v-barker-ga-1898.