Bridal Veil Lumbering Co. v. Johnson
This text of 34 P. 1026 (Bridal Veil Lumbering Co. v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
[106]*106Opinion by
The material allegations of the complaint involved in this appeal, in substance, are: That the plaintiff is a corporation organized for the purpose, among other things, of constructing and operating a railroad in this state between given terminal points; that it is necessary and convenient that a tract thirty feet in width on each side of the center line of said railroad as surveyed across defendant’s land be appropriated. The answer having denied these allegations, the portion thereof containing such denials was, upon motion of the plaintiff, stricken -out by the court, and a jury trial being had upon the remaining issues, a verdict was returned fixing the compensation at two hundred dollars. This amount having been paid into court,.a judgment for the appropriation of said land was rendered, from which the defendant appeals, and assigns in his notice thereof the following grounds of error: (1) “That the court erred in that it sustained in part the motion of the plaintiff to strike out portions of the answer”; and (2) “The court erred in that it made its order striking out a portion of the answer of the defendant.”
Section 45, title III., of chapter VII., p. 534 of the general laws of Oregon, as compiled by Matthew P. Deady and Lafayette Lane, provided, as originally enacted, that in [108]*108actions for the appropriation of land the owner might set forth in his answer any legal defense to the appropriation of such land, or any portion thereof; or, omitting such defense, might aver the true value of the land in question, or the damage resulting from the appropriation thereof, or both. Under this section it was held that a defendant in such case could not unite these defenses: Oregon Cent. R. R. Co. v. Wait, 3 Or. 91. This section, however, was, on October twenty-sixth, eighteen hundred and eighty-two, amended by the legislative assembly, and it now provides that the defendant, in his answer, may set forth any legal defense he may have to the appropriation of such lands, or any portion thereof, and may also allege the true value of the lands and the damage resulting from the appropriation: Hill’s Code, § 3263. Under this section, as thus amended, a landowner has a right to interpose any legal defense, coupled with a claim for the damages that he might sustain by reason of the appropriation. Without this statute upon the subject the court might properly hold that an answer in the nature of a plea in abatement could not be joined with an answer to the merits: Hopwood v. Patterson, 2 Or. 49; Oregon Cent. R. R. Co. v. Scoggin, 3 Or. 161; Derkeny v. Belfils, 4 Or. 258. Section 18 of article I. of the constitution provides that private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation having first been assessed and tendered. “This is equivalent to saying it shall not be taken for private use, even though just compensation be made”: Dalles Lumbering Co. v. Urquhart, 16 Or. 69, 19 Pac. Rep. 78. The state, by virtue of its sovereignty, possesses the right to take the property of the citizen for the good of the public; and, while it may not delegate the power to exercise this sovereign right, it may, by its legislature, select agents to take private property subject only to the limitations contained [109]*109in the constitution: ' Lewis, Eminent Domain, § 242. Section 3240 of Hill’s Code, provides that a corporation organized for the construction of any railway may appropriate so much of any land lying between its termini as may be necessary for cuttings, embankments, and for the proper construction, security, and convenient operation of its line of road. This appoints any corporation organized for the construction of a railway the agent of the state, and authorizes it to appropriate the necessary land for the successful operation of its line of road. The plaintiff alleges that it was incorporated for this purpose, and thus became the agent of the state, which the defendant denies. Under the amended statute the defendant had the right to interpose this legal defense, and it was error in the court to strike it from the answer, for which reason the judgment is reversed and a new trial ordered. Reversed.
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34 P. 1026, 25 Or. 105, 1893 Ore. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bridal-veil-lumbering-co-v-johnson-or-1893.