Chesapeake & Ohio Canal Co. v. Key

3 D.C. 599

This text of 3 D.C. 599 (Chesapeake & Ohio Canal Co. v. Key) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia 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. Key, 3 D.C. 599 (circtddc 1829).

Opinion

Cranch, C. J.

This cause comes before the Court by a motion to set aside the inquisition which condemns Mr. Key’s land in Georgetown, for the purposes of the canal, under the 15th section of the charter granted by Virginia, and confirmed [600]*600by Maryland, Pennsylvania, and the United States. By that section it is enacted that the inquisition taken and returned in the manner therein set forth, shall be affirmed, unless good cause be shown against it.

Mr. Key, in showing cause, has taken the following objections to the inquisition, and to the proceedings upon which it was founded.

1st. That the provisions of the charter for condemning land, are unconstitutional, because no provision is made for just compensation.

2d. That the act of Virginia, granting the charter, is not in force in this district, because that act is only confirmed, not reenacted by Congress.

3d. That the Company has no right to condemn land in Georgetown.

4th. That the warrant is insufficient in form and substance.

5th. That some of the jurors were interested.

6th. That the Marshal has only certified that the fourteen jurors who were sworn were not interested; and not that the whole eighteen who were summoned, were not interested.

7th. That the oath was not properly administered; and was not administered upon the land. •

8th. That the inquisition does not cure the defect of the marshal’s return, nor the faults of the warrant.

1. That the company has no right to condemn land, because that clause of the charter, so far as it attempts to authorize such condemnation is unconstitutional, inasmuch as it does not provide a just compensation to the party whose land is sought to be condemned.

The words of the 5th Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, upon which this objection is founded, are these, “ Nor shall private property be taken for pubfic use without just compensation.”

This amendment admits the principle that private property may be taken for public use, if just compensation be made. It is not denied that to take land for the use of the' canal, is to take it for public use.

The question, then, is, whether the charter provides for making a just compensation.

It is said that it does not, because it directs that, “ in every such valuation and assessment of damages, the jury shall be, and they are hereby instructed to consider, in determining and fixing the amount thereof, the actual benefit which will accrue to the owner from conducting the canal through, or erecting any of the said works upon his land, and to regulate their verdict [601]*601thereby; except that no assessment shall require any such owner to pay or contribute any thing to the said company, where such benefit shall exceed, in the estimate of the jury, the value and damages ascertained as “ aforesaid.”

It is contended,, that the Constitution provides a positive, not a conjectural compensation; that under the provisions of this charter, it may happen that no compensation at all may be made; that the expected benefits which the jury shall have estimated, may never arrive; and that, therefore, the jury should not have been required, by the charter, to consider them in their estimate of value and damages.

But the Constitution only provides for the general principle. The means of ascertaining the just compensation were left to be decided by the public authority, which should give the power to take the private property for public use. All the States, prior to the adoption of the Constitution, exercised this right, and still continue to exercise it where it is necessary to condemn land for roads, and other public uses ; and they have generally provided for compensation through the intervention of a j ury.

It is impossible for the legislature to fix the compensation in every individual case. It can only provide a tribunal to examine the circumstances of each case, and to estimate the just compensation. If the jury had not been required by the charter to consider the benefit as well as the damage, they would still have been at liberty to do so, for the Constitution does not require that the value should be paid, but that just compensation should be given. Just compensation means a compensation which would be just in regard to the public, as well as in regard to the individual; and if the jury should be satisfied that the individual would, by the proposed public work, receive a benefit to the full value of the property taken, it could not be said to be a just compensation, to give him the full value. If the jury would have a right to consider the benefit as well as the damage, without the provision of the charter which requires them to do so, the same objection would still exist, namely, that under the provisions of the charter, it might happen that no compensation at all, or, at most, a nominal compensation, would be made. The insertion, therefore, of that provision in the charter which requires the jury to do what they would be competent to do without such a provision, and which, in order to ascertain a compensation which should be just towards the public, as well as just towards the individual, they ought to do, cannot be considered as repugnant to the Constitution.

2. But it is objected, 2dly, That the Canal Company has no right to condemn land within the District of Columbia; because [602]*602Virginia had no right to legislate for that district, or in regard to lands therein. It is said that the Act of Congress only ratifies and confirms, but does not reenact the act of the State of Virginia, and that even that ratification is limited; that the act of Virginia is only ratified and confirmed so far as it may be necessary to enable the company to carry into effect the provisions thereof in the District of Columbia; and that “ the provisions thereof,” are not applicable to the state of things in that district, where there is no sheriff, no county clerk, and no prothonotary. This is understood to be the substance of the objection.

For the purpose of considering this objection, I shall take it for granted that, by the charter, it is contemplated that some part, at least, of the canal, or its works, will be in the District of Columbia.

It is evident, from a perusal of the charter granted by Virginia, that the legislature intended that it should be coextensive with the whole object in view, and should confer all the powers necessary to accomplish it. It professes to legislate as well over the District of Columbia and the State of Maryland, as over Virginia; but it restrains itself until the consent of Congress and Maryland should be obtained. That consent only was wanting to give validity to its legislation; and it is expressly provided that the charter shall be so construed as to fit it for use in Maryland and in the District of Columbia. This charter, therefore, having been ratified and confirmed by Maryland and by Congress, in the manner required by the legislature of Virginia, has become as much an act of Congress, so far as respects this district, as if it had been expressly reenacted with such modifications as might be necessary to fit it for use in the district.

In order to show that it was the intention of the legislature of Virginia, to legislate in regard to such part of the canal as should be within the District of Columbia, it is only necessary to read the provisions of the charter.

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Bluebook (online)
3 D.C. 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-ohio-canal-co-v-key-circtddc-1829.