Duke Power Co. v. Rutland

60 F.2d 194, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2476
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 12, 1932
DocketNo. 3179
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 60 F.2d 194 (Duke Power Co. v. Rutland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duke Power Co. v. Rutland, 60 F.2d 194, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2476 (4th Cir. 1932).

Opinions

SOPER, Circuit Judge.

This action, originally instituted on February 12, 1930, in the court of common pleas for Spartanburg county, S. C., and subsequently removed to the United States District Court for the Western District of South Carolina, was brought by L. H. Rutland against the Duke Power Company to recover damages for the invasion of his property rights in a. tract of land near the city limits of the town of Spartanburg, S. C., by the appropriation and use of the land for the erection and maintenance of a pole line for the transmission of electric current. Both parties claimed title from the same original source; and the case turns on the question whether the Manufacturers’ Power Company, the predecessor in title of the defendant below, acquired good title to the easement under the laws of South Carolina. For the sake of simplicity, both companies will be hereinafter called the power company.

The West Side Cemetery Company formerly owned the land in fee, and on March 12, 1925, executed a mortgage upon it to Caroline Du Rant, executrix of the estate of Alice M. Lee. The mortgage was recorded on March 18, 1925. Thereafter, by reason of a deed from the cemetery company and certain subsequent mesne conveyances, in each of which the grantee assumed the mortgage, the fee-simple title to the land devolved upon John W. Bell and Sarah A. Bell, his wife, as tenants in common. On February 16, 1926, while the Bells were in possession of the land, John W. Bell, for $400, made a deed of aright of way over the property to the power company; but the deed was not recorded until July 2, 1926. Mrs. Bell did not join in the deed; but she knew of the transaction and made no objection. Tne power company entered upon the land and constructed the pole line, finishing it on June 26, 1926. In the meantime, to wit, on June 17,1926, the mortgage being in default, foreclosure proceedings were instituted, to which all of the persons in the chain of title, from the cemetery company to Bell, were made parties. On July 29, 1926, a deeree of foreclosure was entered, and on September 6, 1926, there was a foreclosxire sale at which the property was purchased by J. T. Montgomery. His title, by certain sub[195]*195sequent mesne conveyances, devolved upon L. H. Rutland, the plaintiff below.

At the trial in the District Court, the District Judge instructed the jury that the power company acquired good title to an undivided une-half interest in the easement by the deed from John W. Bell; but that since Sarah A. Bell, liis wife, did not join in the deed, tlie power company did not acquire the remaining one-half and that the title to the land was held by Rutland, subject only to the undivided one-half interest which John W. Bell had conveyed. Both parlies appealed from the judgment.

The contention of Rutland is that his title is superior to the easement claimed by the power company because his interest was derived through mesne conveyances from ilia purchaser at the mortgage sale, under the foreclosure of a mortgage which was executed and recorded prior to the deed from Bell to the power company. Under the terms of section 388 of the South Carolina Code of Civil Procedure, the power company, as the holder of a conveyance recorded subsequently to the mortgage, was bound by the foreclosure proceedings. Therein the land was sold, without reservation, to Montgomery, and Bell’s title was extinguished. The power company does not contend that the deed from Bell to the power company could affect the rights of the mortgagee, or those claiming title through the foreclosure proceedings. It rests its title to the easement upon the contention that its entry upon the land and the erection and maintenance of the line wore authorized by the Bells, who had legal title to the property at the time; that the mortgagee, and those claiming under her, were bound to enforce whatever rights they had to compensation, in the manner prescribed by the statutes of South Carolina, whereby the power company was clothed with the power of eminent domain; and that none of them took appropriate action to secure compensation for the taking within the time prescribed by the statute, and hence the present action is barred.

The statutes of South Carolina, whereby the power of eminent domain is conferred upon railroad companies, are eodiiied in sections 4990 to 5014 of article 10 of chapter 52 of tho South Carolina Code of 1922, and the same powers are conferred upon power companies by sections 5024 and 5016. Sections 4990, 4991, and 4999, upon which the power company specially relies in this ease, are as fallows:

“4990. Whenever any person or corporation shall be authorized by charter to construct a railway, canal or turnpike in this State, such person or corporation, before entering upon any lands for the purpose of construction, shall give the owner thereof (if he be sui juris) notice, in wilting, that the right of way over said lands is required for such purpose, which notice shall be given at least thirty days before entering upon said lands; and such notice shall ho served upon such owner in the samo manner as may be required by law for the service of the summons in civil actions. If tho owner shall not, within the period of thirty days after service of said notice, signify, in writing, liis refusal or consent, it shall be presumed that such consent is given; and such person or corporation may thereupon enter upon said lands; but the owner of said lands may move for an assessment of compensation in the manner hereinafter directed.”

“4991. If the owner of said lands shall signify his refusal of consent to entry thereon without previous compensation, or shall remain silent in reference thereto, the person or corporation requiring such right of way shall apply, by petition, to the Judge of the Circuit wherein such lands are situated, for the empanelling of a jury to ascertain the amount which shall bo paid as just compensation for the right of way required. * * * ”

“4999. Nothing herein contained-sha 11 be construed to prevent entry upon any lands for purposes of survey and location; and if in any case the owner of any lands shall permit the person or corporation requiring the right of way over the same to enter upon the construction of the highway without previous compensation, the said owner shall have the right, after the highway shall have been constructed, to demand compensation, and to petition for an assessment of the same in the manner hereinbefore directed: Provided, Such petition shall be filed within twelve months after the highway shall have been completed through his or her lands.”

These statutes provide only for the acquisition of the interests of owners of land wherein the corporations desire to acquire rights of way. Thus in section 4990 it is provided that the company, before entering upon any land for purposes of condemnation, must give the owner notice in writing that a right of way is required, and the owner is given 30 days, after service of notice, to signify Ms refusal or consent. Provision is made in sections 4990 and 4991 for an assessment of compensation to the owner for the right of way taken. Section 4999 relates to the case of an owner who permits a corporation, re[196]*196quiring a right of way, to enter upon the work of eonstruetion, without previous compensation, and gives the owner the right, after the eonstruetion has been finished, to demand compensation and petition for an assessment in the manner provided by the preceding sections, upon the condition, however, that the petition shall be filed within twelve months after the eonstruetion has been completed through his land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 F.2d 194, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duke-power-co-v-rutland-ca4-1932.