City of Decatur v. Southern Railway Co.

62 So. 855, 183 Ala. 531, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 541
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 12, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 62 So. 855 (City of Decatur v. Southern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Decatur v. Southern Railway Co., 62 So. 855, 183 Ala. 531, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 541 (Ala. 1913).

Opinion

MAYFIELD, J.

— Appellee railroad company, filed this bill against the City of Decatur, and some of its officers, to enjoin the enforcement of a certain municipal ordinance, by which the city proposed to sell, and was proceeding to sell, a portion of the railroad’s right of way, for the purpose of enforcing the payment of an assessment against the right of way for the opening and improvement of a street of the city which is adjacent to or abutting the railroad right of way. The city demurred to the bill, and the trial court overruled the demurrer. The court, in a short opinion accompanying the decree, states that the demurrer was overruled on the ground that it was against public policy to sell or expose for public sale the right of way of a railroad, whilst it was the property of a public service corporation, engaged in the business of a common carrier; that its right of way for this reason and purpose was a public highway. Whether such quasi public property can be sold at judicial sale, to pay debts or demands due from the corporation, or whether such claims or demands constitute a charge or lien upon the right of way sought to be sold, is the sole question presented for decision on this appeal.

There were other grounds of demurrer, but the trial court did not decree as to them, but intimated that [533]*533some of the grounds were well taken. For this reason we will review the chancellor’s rulings only on the ground mentioned.

There is a plain and clear-cut conflict among the authorities as to whether or not the right of way of a railroad company is subject to local assessments, or betterment and improvement taxes. Mr. Elliott, in a recent edition of his work on Bailroads, speaks thus on the subject (volume 2 [2d Ed.] §786, pp. 197-200) : “There is a conflict in the adjudicated cases as to whether or not the right of way of a railroad company is subject to local assessments. The question has been discussed in a great number of instances, and different conclusions reached in apparently similar cases. The latest authorities on the subject, however, recognize what we believe to be the true rule, and that is that, where the right of way receives a benefit from the improvement for which the assessment is levied, and there is no statute exempting the railroad company from local assessments in clear and unequivocal terms, it is subject to assessment. Some of the authorities hold that the making of a local improvement, such as a street, along or near a railway right of way cannot possibly be a benefit to the company; that it can run its trains as well without the improvement as with it, and therefore no assessment can be levied. One court, addressing itself to this subject, has said: ‘Where we can declare as a matter of law no such benefit can arise, the Legislature is powerless to impose such a burden. It would not be a tax in any proper sense of the term ; it would be in the nature of a forced loan, and would practically amount to confiscation.’ Thus, where a street crosses a railway right of way at right angles, it has been held that no benefit accrues to the railway company from the improvement of the street, and that [534]*534no assessment can be levied. As where a railway company has a mere right of way across a lot to which it does not hold title, it cannot be assessed for the construction of an improvement adjoining the lot. In many of the cases in which it was held that the right of way could not be assessed, the improvement, to pay for which the assessment was sought to be levied, was a street, and it clearly appeared that no benefit resulted to the right of way, but where it dearly appears that a benefit results from the improvement, such as the benefit derived from the construction of a street drain, sewer, or the like, the levy of the assessment may be proper and valid. So it had been held that the fact that the only use made of a lot abutting on a street improvement is for a railroad right of way does not make an assessment thereon invalid on the alleged ground that there can be no benefit” If we concede the “true rule” to be as Mr. Elliott states it (which we do not, at present), still the crucial point in this case is not yet met, which is this: Can the assessment against a small portion of a railroad right of way be enforced in the ordinary mode, by a sale of that small portion so benefited by the assessment?

On this particular question Mr. Elliott says (idem, sec. 790) “While it is probably true that there may be a lien on the right of way of a railroad for local assessment, where such assessment is authorized - by statute, the manner of enforcing such assessment is not clearly settled. The right of way of a railroad company is a part of the company’s property, without which it could not perform the duties it owes to the public. To subject a portion of the right of way to a sale to enforce a local improvement would greatly embarrass, if not entirely destroy, the ability of the company to perform its public functions. The rights of the public are regarded [535]*535as superior to the rights of any individual, or group of individuals. Local assessments are usually levied on a small portion of a railway right of way, varying from a few feet in length to miles in length. To permit such portion to be sold would prevent the operation of the road, and, on grounds of public policy, it is held that the ordinary remedy of enforcing the collection of a local assessment by a sale of the property benefited does not apply to the enforcement of an assessment against the right of way of a railway company. While there is a conflict of authority on this subject, the decided weight is that the right of way, if sold to pay the assessment, must be sold as a whole, and not in broken fragments. ‘The public have a right to have a railway remain an entirety, and it would be destructive to public interest to permit it to be broken up into disjointed and practically useless fragments.’ Even if it be conceded that a personal judgment for the amount of the assessment can be rendered, still it does not follow that a railroad can be sold in fragments.’

While we have no case from this court exactly in point, what has been said on the subject of sales of a part of a railroad right of way clearly indicates that it has always been the opinion, if not the decision, of this court that such sales were unwarranted and against public policy. ,

In the case of Eufaula Water Co. v. Addyston Pipe & Steel Co., 89 Ala. 552, 560, 8 South. 25, 27, which was a proceeding to enforce a materialman’s lien for water pipes used by the water company, a public utility corporation engaged in supplying water to the city and inhabitants of Eufaula, this court, speaking through McClellan, J., said: “It may be that water companies, and the like, cannot have their public functions thus interfered with, by the enforcement of the lien of a ma[536]*536terialman by a sale of any part of their property which is essential to the service of the public. Ordinarily the coercive process of the law should run against' their property and franchises as an entirety, so that the public interests in them will be conserved. It may readily be conceived that the sale under judicial process of the buildings and machinery which constitute the pumping station of a water company, whose duty it is to supply water to a populous city for its people, for the suppression of fires, and for public sanitation and comfort, might result not only in individual inconvenience, but also in serious public danger and disaster. We expressly refrain, however, from more than a citation of some of the authorities on this point. —East Ala. Railway Co.

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Bluebook (online)
62 So. 855, 183 Ala. 531, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-decatur-v-southern-railway-co-ala-1913.