Chesapeake & Ohio Canal Co. v. Great Falls Power Co.

129 S.E. 731, 143 Va. 697, 1925 Va. LEXIS 299
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 1, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 129 S.E. 731 (Chesapeake & Ohio Canal Co. v. Great Falls Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chesapeake & Ohio Canal Co. v. Great Falls Power Co., 129 S.E. 731, 143 Va. 697, 1925 Va. LEXIS 299 (Va. 1925).

Opinion

Holt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[701]*701For convenience the parties, plaintiff and defendants, will be designated here as they were in the court below.

The Great Falls Power Company is a corporation chartered by an act of the General Assembly of Virginia, approved March 3, 1894. (Acts 1893-94, c. 605.)

The purposes for which it was chartered were:

“For the purpose of acquiring, holding, improving and using water power at and near the Great Falls, in the Potomac river, and for constructing dams therein, •canals and other hydraulic and auxiliary steam works, which acts are hereby authorized, and for the selling and leasing of water power, and for using the same for manufacturing and other purposes, and for generating, transmitting, selling and leasing electricity, electric power and light for railway and canal as well as other purposes, including also power to acquire by right of •eminent domain, in case the use is public, or by purchase or otherwise, and to hold and improve real and personal property for the foregoing purposes in Virginia, or ■elsewhere, and to sell, lease and mortgage the same, subject to all laws of the State of Virginia now in force in relation to other like corporations.
“In case private property shall be taken for any of the public uses provided for in this act, and the parties cannot agree as to the taking and the damages to be paid therefor, proceedings may be had under section twelve hundred and eighty-eight and twelve hundred and eighty-nine of the Code of Virginia of •eighteen hundred and eighty-seven.” Sections 1, 2.

This plaintiff claims to be the owner in fee simple of three certain tracts of land, known in this record as:

1. The Great Falls tract.

2. The John T. Jackson tract.

3. The R. R. Jackson tract.

[702]*702Their location is made plain by a sketch in outline-hereto attached:

The defendants do not question plaintiff’s title to these properties except to the extent they affect what, is known in this record as the canal strip. This land in [703]*703■controversy is a strip commencing on the western bank of the Potomac river seventy-three poles below the stone marked W. F. X., a monument readily located, and ends at the bank of said river about 103 poles above the mouth of Spring branch. Said strip of land is about 5,500 feet in length and is supposed to be 140 feet in width. It is slightly tortuous, but its general course from its upper to its lower end is south about 25 E., also an additional acre adjoining said strip on its western side about eighteen hundred feet from its lower end, all of which was acquired by the Potomac Company under an act of the General Assembly of Virginia, passed October, 1784 (11 Hening’s St. at Large, p. 510). This holding, except one-half acre, was acquired by condemnation proceedings had in the years 1792 and 1797. The one-half acre came by deed from Tobias Lear of date June 21, 1803.

Title to this strip of land is the subject matter of this suit. All of it lies within the Great Falls tract. Plaintiff claims under deed from Great Falls Manufacturing Company dated April 2, 1895, and recorded on July 15, 1895, in Fairfax county clerk’s office, in D. B. T. 5, page 516, and by mesne conveyance back to a grant from King James II to Thomas, Lord Culpeper, dated the 27th day of September, 1688. This title is regular upon its face and we do not deem it necessary to note the deeds which are the links therein.

The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company also •claims to own this canal strip in fee and, except as to the Tobias Lear half-acre, claims under condemnation proceedings noted in which the interest of Bryan Fair-fax was taken over, and particularly under a deed from the Potomac Company of Virginia of date August 15, 1828. It thus appears that these titles go back [704]*704to a common source, since Bryan Fairfax is one of plaintiff’s predecessors in title. These condemnation proceedings were had in Loudoun county, but the-property condemned is now in Fairfax.

The inducing cause immediately leading to the institution of this suit was an action to condemn and take over this canal strip, brought by the Potomac River Power Company, a Virginia corporation chartered by act of the General Assembly of date January 21, 1896 (Acts 1895-96, c. 95), although in the background was the shadow of the. claim of the canal company.

The prayer of the bill is that the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company and all who. claim under it and the Potomac River Power Company and all who claim under it be enjoined from all dealings relative to this canal strip and that the plaintiff’s title therein be quieted.

Final decree was entered in the circuit court of Fair-fax county at its September term, 1923. That decree provided in part as follows:

“Upon consideration whereof the court, overruling all of said demurrer and exceptions' and being of opinion that the plaintiff, the Great Falls Power Company, as duly incorporated (and) holds a good and valid title to the parcel of land in the bill and proceedings mentioned and described therein as the ‘Canal Strip’ and to the riparian and other rights appertaining thereto, the court doth so adjudge, order and decree, and doth further adjudge, order and decree that the plaintiff be quieted in its title and possession of all said property against the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company, and all others claiming under, through or by it; that the injunction heretofore awarded in this cause be perpetuated, and that the plaintiff recover 'of the defendants its costs in this behalf expended.”

[705]*705From this decree an appeal has been taken by the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company and its trustees.

There are eight assignments of error.

The first deals with the action of the court in overruling demurrers to the original and amended bills. This has not been insisted upon as an independent assignment for the reason that the matters relied upon to sustain it are set up in detail in other assignments.

The second assignment of error is that the trial court erred in holding the Great Falls Power Company to be duly incorporated and in refusing to hold its charter unconstitutional, null and void.

A detailed statement of its objection is:

(a) . The act of the General Assembly upon which the appellee relies for its incorporation, undertakes to confer upon it power to take private property for public uses by exercise of the right of eminent domain, without defining the public uses for which private property ^ may be taken.

(b) . The act undertakes to confer power to conduct an enterprise for either private or public purposes, or both, at its option, and leaves it to the corporation to determine which uses are private, and which are public.

(c) . It is impossible to determine from the act for what public uses the appellee may condemn private property. Its powers to conduct business for both private and public uses are so intermingled that it is impossible to determine from the act which uses are private and which are public.

That a statute may be valid in some respects and void in others is too well established to need further elaboration.

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.E. 731, 143 Va. 697, 1925 Va. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-ohio-canal-co-v-great-falls-power-co-va-1925.