Eldorado, Marion & Southwestern Railroad v. Sims

81 N.E. 782, 228 Ill. 9, 1907 Ill. LEXIS 3164
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 81 N.E. 782 (Eldorado, Marion & Southwestern Railroad v. Sims) 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
Eldorado, Marion & Southwestern Railroad v. Sims, 81 N.E. 782, 228 Ill. 9, 1907 Ill. LEXIS 3164 (Ill. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Hand

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a proceeding commenced by the appellant in the county court of Williamson county against the appellees, under the Eminent Domain act, to acquire title to a strip of land one hundred feet in width across the east end of the appellees’ farm, as a fight of way upon which to construct its railroad. The strip of land sought to be taken contained 10.93 acres. The jury fixed the value of the land taken at $1100 and the damage to the land not taken at $900, and the court, after overruling a motion for a new trial, rendered judgment upon the verdict, and an appeal has been prosecuted to this court by the railroad company.

The farm of appellees contains about five hundred acres, is a mile and-a half in length from east to west and about a half mile wide north and south, and the proposed right of way crosses diagonally the east one hundred and twenty acres thereof. The farm, at the time the petition was filed, was used for pasture and upon which to grow grain. The witnesses differed greatly in their estimate of the value of the land taken and the damage to the land not taken. The estimate of the value of the land taken, when used for agricultural purposes, ranged from $30 to $60 per acre, and the damages to the land not taken, from a nominal sum to $500. It was claimed, however, by a number of the witnesses that the farm had a special value by reason of the fact that coal had recently been discovered in its vicinity, and numerous witnesses testified by reason of that fact the land was enhanced in value at least $50 per acre, and several witnesses testified in view of the fact that the surface was underlaid with a heavy vein of coal the land was worth $100 per acre, and the jury by their verdict appear to have been controlled by that testimony. The appellant objected to the admission of any evidence which tended to show that coal had been found in the vicinity of the land, but the court permitted several witnesses to testify that coal had been discovered in the vicinity of the land sought to be taken and that the farm of appellees was supposed to lie in a valuable coal field. No coal had, however, been found in the land of appellees or within some distance therefrom.

The only testimony that bore, even remotely, upon the subject of appellees’ land being underlaid with coal was that of a witness, Gill, who testified, in substance, as follows: “I live about a mile north of the Sims farm. I have been engaged in the business of boring holes in the locality. About three months ago I made a boring on J. B. Bruce’s land, about three-quarters of a mile north-west of the Sims farm. About three years ago we drilled on Mr. Jeff Sanders’ land, which is about two miles from the Sims land. I was present when the borings were made and made the log myself. We found minerals. It was black coal, I reckon. That is what they pronounced it, I suppose. It was a little over three hundred feet to the coal. The vein was a little better than eight feet thick. It had a tolerably fair roof, composed of stone and slate. About seventy or eighty feet below the first vein there was a second vein, a little better than five feet thick. I didn’t bore any on the Sims land. I don’t know whether there is any coal under the Sims land or not. I don’t know of anyone drilling on the Sims land. We can’t tell whether or not there is any coal under land without drilling. Where we did drill we found something black, which we supposed was coal. I might have been mistaken about it. Before we came to the vein at the depth of three hundred feet we went through several kinds of rock, limestone, sand rock and slate. Some layers of limestone were twelve, feet and some three or four feet thick. The layers of sandstone were from ten to fifteen feet thick. We went about twenty-five feet until we came to the first layer of stone. We then went through two hundred and seventy-five feet of stone and slate until we struck the first vein of whatever it was. The coal I found on the Bruce land was pretty fair coal. It is a fact that you bore at one place and find coal and bore at another and don’t find any. There is no certainty about finding coal until you find it. You might bore at one place and find coal and then bore a quarter of a mile away and not find any. That is the way it runs.” And a witness, J. T. Otey, who stated, in substance: “I live about three miles north and west of the Sims land. There have been borings for coal on my land, which is about two and one-half miles from the Sims land. They found coal at a distance of one hundred and eighty-six feet. The vein was supposed to be eight feet and four inches. The roof was rock and slate. I was interested in a boring half a mile north from the first one I bored. It was on the Sanders land we found coal. I know there is a mine contracted to be sunk on the Sanders land. The mines I have been speaking of are not on the Sims land. The closest one,—this one I spoke of being sunk,—would be possibly three and one-fourth miles from the Sims land. I don’t know anything about what is under the Sims land. There has been no borings there, as far as I know.”

The testimony of these witnesses, when taken as a whole, does not even tend to show that the appellees’ land was underlaid with coal, and for that reason the evidence was clearly incompetent, and the court committed reversible error in permitting the same to go to the jury. Mr. Lewis, in his work on Eminent Domain, (1st ed. sec. 486,) says: “It is not competent to go into the value of coal claimed to be underneath the surface, no mine having been opened and. the existence and extent of coal in the land being wholly a matter of opinion.”

The appellant, after the court had permitted the evidence above referred to to go to the jury, offered to stipulate in writing that it would make no claim to the coal, if any, underlying the land sought to be condemned, and that the appellees should have the right, without let or hindrance on the part of appellant, to mine and remove the coal from said strip in the usual and customary manner of mining coal and without regard to the railroad to be constructed on said right of way, which stipulation the court refused to permit the appellant to file, and thereupon the appellant offered the following instruction, which the court declined to give to the jury:

“The court instructs you, as a matter of law, that where land is taken for railroad tracks without the consent of the owner, that the fee of such land remains in the owner subject to the use for which it is taken; and in this case, if you find, from the evidence, that said strip of land taken for right of way is underlaid with a vein of coal, the court instructs you that, subject to the use for which the land is taken, the title to said coal remains in the defendants, and that, subject to the use for which the land is taken, the defendants would have the right to run entries and tunnels through said coal underlying said right of way in order to connect and mine the coal veins on either side of the said right of way.”

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.E. 782, 228 Ill. 9, 1907 Ill. LEXIS 3164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eldorado-marion-southwestern-railroad-v-sims-ill-1907.