Chicago & Milwaukee Electric Railroad v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.

211 Ill. 352
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 211 Ill. 352 (Chicago & Milwaukee Electric Railroad v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago & Milwaukee Electric Railroad v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co., 211 Ill. 352 (Ill. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the court:

• Appellant moves to strike the cross-errors from the files, on the ground that they relate to a judgment entirely separate and distinct from the judgment brought here by appeal. Petitioner sought condemnation of two separate tracts of real estate. Respondents interposed a motion to dismiss the petition as to both. This motion was sustained as to one parcel, and as to that parcel the judgment dismissing is the final judgment from which petitioner appealed. The motion was overruled as to the other tract, and the cause proceeded to a judgment fixing the amount of damages, and" appellees, by their assignment of error, attack this latter judgment. We think it in effect a judgment separate and distinct from that appealed from. Had the two pieces of property been owned by different persons, it is manifest that those owning the one in reference to which judgment of condemnation was entered could not assign cross-errors questioning that judgment in an appeal by which petitioner brings before this court for review the judgment dismissing the petition as to the real estate of other owners. The fact that both tracts in the present instance belong to the same owner does not render the judgments any the less separate and distinct.

The case of Oliver v. Wilhite, 201 Ill. 552, was a chancery proceeding, but we regard the doctrine there announced as applicable here. It was there said (p. 564) : “When, however, a decree in chancery is severable,—that is, composed of distinct parts having no bearing upon each other,— each part may be treated as a distinct decree and an appeal taken from one part without affecting the others. (Walker v. Pritchard, 121 Ill. 221; Union Trust Co. v. Trumbull, 137 id: 146; Moore v. Williams, 132 id. 591.) And when an appeal from one part of a severable decree is taken, cross-errors cannot be assigned as to parts not appealed from.— Walker v. Pritchard, supra.”

The cross-errors will accordingly be stricken from the record.

It is urged that appellant was without power to condemn the strip in North Chicago, as to w'hich the petition was dismissed. This contention is based on the fact that the strip of land which it seeks to take is parallel to the line of road purchased by it from the Chicago and Milwaukee Electric Railway Company. 'The line so purchased it now owns and operates, and it is said that its attempt to condemn the strip parallel thereto is an indirect violation of section 11 of article 11 of the constitution of 1870, which forbids any railroad corporation consolidating its stock, property or franchises with any other railroad corporation owning a parallel or competing line; and it is said that the petition and the resolution of location and the plats showing the route located, offered by petitioner, contemplate on their face the location and building of an independent line of railroad, and this being true, petitioner cannot exercise the power of eminent domain for the purpose of acquiring a parallel line of railroad to one which it already owns and is operating. So far as the language of the petition is concerned we think a sufficient answer is, that the route of the railroad which petitioner is authorized to construct and operate is defined in its charter and described in the petition, and the petition specifically avers that petitioner has located and proposes to construct that railroad upon the land which it now seeks to condemn. We do not think the laying of another line of road upon the same right of way, where the company building the new line already has one line, is to be deemed the construction of a parallel or competing line, within the language of the constitution. The right of way now owned by appellant is 25 feet in width. It has the right under the statute to condemn a right of way 100 feet in width. The acquirement of a 2 5-foot right of way does not exhaust its power, but it possesses the right to condemn additional right of way up to the statutory limit, (Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Co. v. Wilson, 17 Ill. 123; Fisher v. Chicago and Springfield Railroad Co. 104 Ill. 323;) and the fact that it appears that upon this additional 25-foot strip of right of way it proposes to construct a line of railroad in accordance with the terms of its charter, it seems to us, simply means that the additional track is to be operated in conjunction with the existing track as a double track railroad, and not as a parallel or competing line within the meaning of the constitution. - The statute contemplates that a railroad company shall have the right to lay as many tracks as it sees fit upon its strip of right of way 100 feet or less in width. As long as its tracks are all laid upon that one right of way, the question of parallel or competing lines does not arise.

It is also urged that the appellant exercised its power to locate the line of its road when it purchased from the railway company a line already located, and that the power of location having been thus exercised, it is exhausted and it is without power to locate a line on the additional 25 feet which it now seeks to condemn, and being without power to locate a line there, it is without power to condemn land for a line which it cannot locate. In support of this position we are referred to the following cases: People v. Louisville and Nashville Railroad Co. 120 Ill. 48; Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. People, 143 id. 434; Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Co. v. Baltimore and Ohio and Chicago Railroad Co. 149 id. 272; Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Co. v. City of Chicago, 149 id. 457. In each of these cases, it will be found that the court had in contemplation such a change or re-location as would require the use of an entirely different and distinct right of way. Changing the tracks of a railway from one side to another of a right of way strip 100 feet or less in width is not to be regarded as a relocation. To constitute a re-location, it is necessary that the new line should be projected, in whole or in part, over and upon ground not included within the original right of way or its additions the whole of that right of way and additions not exceeding 100 feet in width.

It is conceded that a railroad company cannot appropriate or condemn a strip off of the right of way of another railroad company longitudinally, and appellees urge that this 50-foot strip owned by the Northwestern company west of its tracks and south of its station at North Chicago, the west 25 feet of which appellant seeks to condemn, is part of its right of way; and it is said that right of wray means the land upon which the railroad company has constructed and is operating or is about to construct and operate its tracks, whether they be main tracks or side-tracks, and is in nowise limited to main tracks, and we are referred to the case of Chicago and Alton Railroad Co. v. People, 98 Ill. 350, where it is said (p. 357) : “We are, therefore, of the opinion that the land held and in actual use by a railroad company for side tracks, switches and turn-outs, must be regarded, within the meaning of the Revenue law, as a part of the right of way of the company.” We are disposed to the view that the authorities announcing the doctrine that one railroad'company can not condemn, longitudinally, the right of way of another, had reference only to the right of way of the width which the railroad company is authorized by statute to condemn. The two cases particularly relied upon by the appellees, Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Chicago, Burlington and Northern Railroad Co. 122 Ill. 473, and Suburban Railroad Co. v.

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211 Ill. 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-milwaukee-electric-railroad-v-chicago-northwestern-railway-co-ill-1904.