Greenville & Columbia Rail Road v. Nunnamaker

38 S.C.L. 107
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 15, 1850
StatusPublished

This text of 38 S.C.L. 107 (Greenville & Columbia Rail Road v. Nunnamaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenville & Columbia Rail Road v. Nunnamaker, 38 S.C.L. 107 (S.C. Ct. App. 1850).

Opinion

On the motion to reverse the decision of the Circuit Judge, refusing the motion to set aside the return of the commissioners, the opinion of the Court was delivered by

Frost, J.

The third ground of objection to the return of the commissioners is, that it does not state the nature of the damages assessed; and that the return is incomplete and insufficient. [111]*111The Act (11 Stat. 324) does require the commissioners, in making the valuation, to take into consideration “ the loss or damage” and also “the benefit or advantage” which may-result to the owner of the land by the construction of the road, and to “state particularly the nature and amount of each.” The return of the commissioners is incomplete, from the omission to set out the particulars of damage, as required by the Act. But the omission is an informality which may be amended by requiring the commissioners to supply, in the return which they have made, the particulars of the damage which they assessed. The motion was, not to amend, but to set aside the return and vacate the proceedings of the commissioners, in order that the subject should be re-committed to them, or to others to be appointed in their stead. The return cannot be set aside unless the commissioners proceeded illegally or wrongfully in making the valuation. If their proceedings be regular and. conformable to the directions of the Act, but the return be incomplete, the proper course is, to order the return to be amended; not set aside.

The first and second grounds allege error in the opinion of the Circuit Judge, that when the valuation is made after the Company has entered on the land, and progressed with the construction of the road, until the road bed is nearly completed, the owner of the land may require the commissioners to appraise and assign to the Company one hundred feet of land on each side of the road.

The 10th and 11th sections of the charter of the Company are not free from complexity and confusion; and those clauses of the sections which give rise to the dispute in this case, are especially obscure. In construing the charter, the parties to the litigation and the power claimed should not be disregarded. The Company must shew a clear and express grant, by the charter, of the power which it claims. The Company cannot extract a privilege from a doubtful construction. The power which is claimed is no less than the delegation of the eminent domain of the State to take private property, without the con[112]*112sent of the owner, and should be admitted with jealous allowance. The delegated exercise of the power is subject to many temptations to abuse. While the character of a public work is attributed to the road, which the Company has undertaken to construct, yet the enterprise has for its immediate object the profit of the stockholders. Every instance of the exercise of the power presents an active conflict between the interest of the Company and the interest of the citizen, whom the Company disseizes of his freehold. In this conflict, it is the duty of the Court to protect the citizen, by a strict construction of the terms of the grant to the company, and by enforcing, on the part of the Company, compliance with the conditions and limitations of the grant.

By the charter, the Company may purchase land for the purposes of the road; “ or if the same cannot be purchased, it may be taken by the Company, at a valuation to be made by commissioners.” The valuation may be made before or after the “ construction” of the road. If the Company purchase, the quantity of land they may take is determined by their contract. If the land be taken at a valuation, made before the construction of the road,” the Company may take any quantity which it may deem necessary for the purposes of the road. But the 10th section provides that “in all assessments, made by the commissioners or jury, as aforesaid, after the construction of the road, or of the part thereof upon the land to be valued, reference shall be had to the true value of the land at the time of the erection.of the said road, or part thereof; and the use thereof by the said Company, for the purposes of the said road, shall be considered as an actual possession of the said land, covered by the said road, and the space of one hundred feet, on both sides of the said road, as aforesaid.” By the 11th section it is provided that “ in the absence of any written contract between the Company and the owner of the land through which the said road may be constiucted, in relation to the said land, it shall be presumed that the land upon which the said road may be constructed, together with one hundred feet on each side of the centre of the said [113]*113road, has been granted to the said Company by the owner “ and the Company shall have good right and title to the same unless an action be brought by the owner, within two years “next after the construction of the road” on his land.

The questions which arise out of these recited passages are, first, when the valuation is made “ after the construction” of the road, may the owner require the Company to take one hundred feet on each side of the road; and, secondly, what period of time, or what progress in the work of building the road, is meant by after the construction of the road.”

Where the Company, without purchase, or a previous valuation of the land which may be necessary for the road, enter on the land of a citizen, what is the extent of the Company’s right of possession or “ use of the land for the purpose of constructing the road ?” Has the Company license to use, occupy and possess the whole tract through which the road may pass í The charter does not expressly give such license. But it seems to give a license to the Company to enter on land without previously defining, by valuation or otherwise, what quantity of land it intends to use, occupy or take for the purposes of the road. How, then, shall the owner of the land protect his possession against the unlimited use and occupation of his entire tract, by servants and agents of the Company 1 When the right of entry is allowed to the Company, if a limit be not assigned by law, to the possession it may take and hold for the purposes of the road, frequent and violent collisions between the Company’s agents and the owner of the land, would probably ensue. This difficulty is not provided for, unléss it be by the recited clause of the 10th section, that in assessments to be made “ after the construction of the road,” the use “ thereof (that is of the land) by the Company, for the purposes of the said road, shall be considered as an actual possession of the land, covered by the road, and the sjmce of one hundred feet on both sides of the road.”

When it was designed, in preparing the charter, to provide land for the purposes of the road, along its whole extent, one hundred feet, on both sides of the road, was not an inconside-[114]*114Tate ^provision. The making of the necessary embankments and excavations might require so much. The value of the land along the road, except for very short distances, in the approach to villages and towns, was not a consideration which could materially affect the quantity to be allowed or taken by the Company.

The presumption of a grant to the Company from the owner of the land, if suit be not brought within two years after the construction of the road, includes two hundred feet along the road. The actual possession must support the presumption and defines the quantity of land acquired by it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 S.C.L. 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenville-columbia-rail-road-v-nunnamaker-scctapp-1850.