Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co. v. Morehouse

56 L.R.A. 240, 87 N.W. 849, 112 Wis. 1, 1901 Wisc. LEXIS 91
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 56 L.R.A. 240 (Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co. v. Morehouse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co. v. Morehouse, 56 L.R.A. 240, 87 N.W. 849, 112 Wis. 1, 1901 Wisc. LEXIS 91 (Wis. 1901).

Opinion

Marshall, J.

Sec. 1831a, Stats. 1898, provides that, every railway company existing in whole or in part under any law of this state and operating a railway therein may build, maintain and operate branches and spur tracks from its road or any branch thereof to and upon the grounds of any mill, elevator, storehouse, warehouse, dock, wharf, pier, manufacturing establishment, lumber yard, coal dock or other industry or enterprise .... ; and may acquire by purchase or condemnation, in the manner provided in this chapter for the acquisition of real estate for railway [6]*6purposes, other than for its main track, all necessary roadways and rights of way for such branches, spur tracks,” etc. Respondent, claiming the benefit of such statute, instituted the proceeding here involved. There is no question but that it was and is entitled to such benefit if the establishment and operation of a spur track to an ice industry, for the transportation of ice from such industry to consumers thereof, are within the statute, and that is a public use within the meaning of the constitutional limitation upon the power of the state to take private property therefor. There is no controversy but that respondent satisfies all the requirements of a grantee of the right to exercise the power of eminent domain under the statute, and that the gathering, storing, and shipping of ice satisfies the calls of the statute for an industry to be reached by a spur track, and that the law contemplates only branch tracks leading off from main railway tracks, such branch tracks to be constructed and operated as a part of an entire railway system for the transportation of freight to and from particular points reached thereby.

Appellants’ counsel contend, in effect, that if the statute, by its terms, authorizes the taking of private property for right of way for a spur track to a particular industry, for the sole use of the proprietors thereof and of the railway corporation, it is unconstitutional, and that such was the end sought by respondent. On the case made by the findings of fact upon which the decision appealed from rests, we do not need to discuss that proposition. We apprehend that if the facts underlying it were understood to be as stated in the hypothesis, circumstances would not have arisen rendering this appeal necessary or possible. In any event, if the judgment under such circumstances were against ajv pellants, they would have, in support of a reversal, abundance of authority. ■ The trial court concluded from the evidence that the end respondent had in view in seeking to [7]*7acquire the real estate in controversy was to construct a spur track to the seat of an important ice industry for the purpose of facilitating the transportation of ice therefrom, and from any other such industry that might be established within reach of the proposed track, to various points in various states; that in the operation of the existing ice industry great quantities of ice would be handled from the source of supply to consumers reached by petitioner’s railway system; that railway facilities, such as the proposed .spur track was designed to furnish, were necessary to the successful operation of such an industry, and to the convenience of the petitioner in the public business of furnishing shipping facilities for the handling of ice; and that the petitioner invoked the statutory power given to railroads to acquire rights of way for spur tracks in good faith intending to devote the property, when acquired, to the public use declared by the statute. In this we state the effect of the findings of fact upon which the conclusion of the circuit court rests. We are unable to come to the conclusion that the evidence upon which they were found clearly preponderates against them. True, the evidence shows that the proprietors of a single ice industry, by promising to furnish a large amount of ice for transportation over the petitioner’s road, and to bear a large part of the expense of establishing the spur track, influenced respondent to undertake such establishment; but it also shows, or tends to show, that respondent intended to make the track a part of its railway system, to control it exclusively, and operate it the same as it operates any other part of such system, acknowledging the right of all persons to be served by the facility for handling ice thus afforded, without discrimr ination.

In the case upon which counsel for appellants seem to rely, in the main, to demonstrate that the order appealed from is wrong (Railroad Co. v. Iron Works, 31 W. Va. 710), the decision was based on a far different situation, in the [8]*8judgment of the court, than that with which we have now to deal. The court there said:

“ Through the disguises thrown around the case of the petitioner the only purpose discoverable, other than the private gain of the petitioner, is the private gain of the owners of the particular industry whose place of business the petitioner intended to reach by the spur track.”

¥e are not entirely satisfied that such conclusion was justified by the record, as disclosed by the opinion, or the cases cited in support of it, but we will not take time or space here to go into that question. The case is of little or no weight in solving the proposition now presented, it appearing here that the purpose of respondent was to construct and operate a spur track reaching from a main railway track to a large industry, such spur track to form an integral part of its railway system and to be operated so as to facilitate the transportation of ice for all persons desiring such service, without discrimination.

A still broader claim is made by appellants’ counsel than the one above discussed, — one that may be said to face as verities the conclusions of fact upon which the trial court rested its decision,— namely, that the taking of land for right of way for a spur track reaching to a particular industry, regardless of the nature of the business and the number of persons indirectly interested in its maintenance, is not a taking for public use within the meaning of the constitution, and that the legislative authorization of such a taking is void. In support of that, the question of what constitutes public use justifying the exercise of sovereign authority to lay hold of private property to promote it, is discussed by counsel for appellants at considerable length. As has often been said, the constitution itself furnishes no guide for determining what is and what is not a public use. The dividing line between the two has not been easy to discover. That is evident from the fact that courts have been slow to [9]*9define it with sufiicient distinctness to prevent a conflict of authority. However, some general principles have been established by a long line of decisions, which, in principle and weight, do not reasonably permit of being questioned by reference to the expressions of courts here aDd there not in perfect harmony therewith; which principles enable courts, where they are recognized,to measure, with reasonable accuracy, most of the situations where it is sought to take private property by the exercise of the sovereign authority, for an alleged public use, and to determine whether, in the real purpose to be effected, such property will have the impress of public use and will be actually devoted thereto.

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Bluebook (online)
56 L.R.A. 240, 87 N.W. 849, 112 Wis. 1, 1901 Wisc. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-northwestern-railway-co-v-morehouse-wis-1901.