Downing v. State

107 So. 80, 214 Ala. 199, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 580
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 17, 1925
Docket1 Div. 394.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 107 So. 80 (Downing v. State) 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
Downing v. State, 107 So. 80, 214 Ala. 199, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 580 (Ala. 1925).

Opinion

SAYRE, J.

By its bill in this cause the state seeks to quiet its title to certain lands acquired by condemnation for the use of the state docks commission at the port of Mobile. The bill states the entire case, so .that ■the question at issue may be appropriately determined by a ruling on demurrer. Por the state the contention is that its condemnation proceedings in the probate court of Mobile were had under authority and in agreement with the provisions of the act of September 18, 1923 (Acts 1923, p. 330 et seq.), putting into effect the amendment to section 93 of the Constitution (adopted November, 1922),. authorizing the state “to eng'age in the work of internal improvement of promoting, developing, constructing, maintaining and operating all harbors or seaports within the state or its jurisdiction, including all kinds of terminal facilities at seaports,” etc. Section 1. The contention for the state is that the proceeding conferred upon it an indefeasible title in fee; the insistence on the other ■ hand being that the state acquired only an easement for the uses indicated, the ultimate title remaining in the parties defendant who owned the property at the time of the proceeding in question and. to whom the property will revert in case tbe state, for any reason or in any manner, should abandon its docks project at Mobile.

What occasion there may be for the apprehension evidenced by the state’s bill is not made to appear. In the briefs reference is made to a question that might arise in the event the docks commission should determine to exercise the power, vested in it by section 5 of the act, “to exchange any property or properties acquired under the authority of this act for other property or properties usable in carrying out the powers hereby conferred,” and it is suggested that to use the power of condemnation to acquire property with a view to its later exchange to private persons, corporate or natural, would involve a violation of section 23 of the Constitution, providing, inter alia, that private property shall not be taken for private use, or for the use of corporations, other than municipal, without the consent of the owner. The proposal of such an exchange of properties would bring to the surface the inquiry whether the fee or a mere easement had been acquired by the state through the process of condemnation contemplated by the act. In the last-named alternative, that is, in case the statute be construed as authorizing an easement only, the state, still retaining its ownership and control of the docks improvement, would have •no title upon the faith of which to negotiate an exchange, and this circumstance, along with the fact that the Enabling Act contemplates a permanent improvement and its permanent operation, that “the title,” meaning, in the absence of qualifying terms, the whole title, “to all property acquired under the authority of this act shall vest in the state of Alabama,” and that the commission “may dispose of, sell or lease to others, at reasonable prices and for reasonable compensation, any,” but, evidently, not all “of said property,” — these facts should suffice to sustain the1 state’s contention as to the nature and extent of the title acquired by its proceeding under the act. In this connection perhaps it is well to note also that the owners — so to speak of the parties defendant — have been compensated to the extent of the full value of their lands. Ensign Yellow Pine Co. v. Hohenberg, 200 Ala. 149, 75 So. 897, and cases there cited.

It is true, of course, that the right of eminent domain is in derogation of private right, and that authority for its exercise, whether directly by the state or its authorized grantee, will be strictly construed, and this principle has in many cases been applied to the effect that the expropriation of land does not give a fee-simple estate therein, in the. absence of express statutory language to that effect, but only a right to use and occupy the land for the purpose for which it is taken. Lazarus v. Morris, 212 Pa. 128, 61 A. 815. There are scores of cases on the subject, not all of them in accord. We will not undertake a review of them. We think the following excerpt from Bowden v. York Shore Water Co., 114 Me. 150, 95 A. 779, fairly *201 states the status of opinion on the subject, and expresses the reasonable rule of interpretation to be applied to the statute and the proceeding under review:

“Whether an eminent domain taking vests an absolute fee is a question concerning which the courts are not in entire accord. In some cases the character of the use seems to be the determining factor; in others, the provisions of the statute under which the taking is made. In some statutes it is expressly provided that the fee shall vest in the taker; in others, provision is made merely for taking and holding for specified public uses. * * * The greater weight of authority, we think, sustains the proposition that unless a legislative intent is discoverable [that] an absolute fee shall vest, the taker takes only an easement, or, at most, a qualified, conditional, and determinable fee. And in such case, if the use be abandoned, the entire title is revested in the owner” — citing adjudicated cases and other authorities.

But it is not necessary, we think, that any technical language be used to vest a fee in the public. Washington Cemetery v. Prospect Park, 68 N. Y. 591. Or, adopting the language of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, in Newton v. Perry, 163 Mass. 321, 39 N. E. 1032, we will say:

“There are no sacramental words which must be used in a statutory power to take and hold lands in order to give a right to take the lands in fee. Any language in the statute which makes its meaning clear is sufficient, and a very little more than ‘take and hold’ has been held enough. * * * But [after citing cases] it is plain from these, as from all the cases, that the purpose of the taking must fix the extent of the right. The right, whether it be called easement or by any other name, is statutory, and must be construed to be large enough to accomplish all that it is taken to do.”

It may be that “to doubt in such a case is to deny,” as said by the New Jersey court in New Jersey Zinc & Iron Co. v. Morris Canal & Banking Co., 44 N. J. Eq. 404, 15 A. 227, 1 L. R. A. 133, cited by appellants in this cause; but there are doubts and doubts, and the cases appear to recognize the rule that necessary or, as some of them preferably phrase it, fair implication affords sufficient and proper basis for the conclusion that the vesting of an unqualified fee is intended.

As we have said, in effect, the act contemplates a permanent improvement and its perpetual operation, and the provision of section 6 is that, “for the acquiring of rights of way and property necessary for the construction of terminal railroads and structures * 1 * * the state, acting through said commission, shall have the right and power to acquire the same by purchase, by negotiation, or by condemnation; and should it elect to exercise the right of eminent domain, it may proceed in the manner provided by the general laws of the state of Alabama,” etc., and various prescriptions of the chapter of the Code on the subject of eminent domain are referred to by the parties as going to sustain their respective contentions. But in our opinion the general law does not lend itself to a definition of the extent of the estate or interest possible to be acquired through a proceeding under the Enabling Act.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Weldon v. State
495 So. 2d 1113 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 1985)
State v. Payton
134 So. 2d 198 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1961)
Brooks v. Shepard
157 F. Supp. 379 (S.D. Alabama, 1957)
Nearhos v. City of Mobile
57 So. 2d 819 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1952)
Cumbaa v. Town of Geneva
179 So. 227 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1938)
State Docks Commission v. State Ex Rel. Cummings
150 So. 345 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1933)
Ex Parte McFry
117 So. 464 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 So. 80, 214 Ala. 199, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/downing-v-state-ala-1925.