Healy Lumber Co. v. Morris

63 L.R.A. 820, 74 P. 681, 33 Wash. 490, 1903 Wash. LEXIS 545
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1903
DocketNo. 4803
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 63 L.R.A. 820 (Healy Lumber Co. v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Healy Lumber Co. v. Morris, 63 L.R.A. 820, 74 P. 681, 33 Wash. 490, 1903 Wash. LEXIS 545 (Wash. 1903).

Opinion

Dunbar, J.

This is an action brought by appellant to condemn land and waters for a logging road and waterway in King county. A demurrer to the complaint was sustained, and, the plaintiff electing to stand on its complaint, judgment was rendered for the defendants. The complaint made the necessary allegations to bring the case within the statute which provides for the condemnation of logging roads and waterways. The act is found on page 255 of the Laws of 1899, and the first section thereof is as follows:

“§ 1. Any owner or owners of any timbered lands, or timber, desiring to cut or remove the same to a point wherein the same may be manufactured, transported, by either rail or water, driven, rafted, -assorted, boomed or shipped for lumbering purposes, and having no practical route for a road or right-of-way whereon to remove or haul said timber, shall have the right to condemn as hereinafter provided, a right-of-way for a logging road, or chute, stream, or water-course from said lands to any Waters, railroad, logging road or chute or public highway, by the most direct and feasible route, and shall have the right to condemn the use of any stream, water-course, slough, pond or lake together with sufficient land along the bank or banks thereof, to enable the driving, rafting, booming, or handling of such timber for the removal of said timber provided that proceedings to obtain such right-of-way shall conform to the law allowing private corporations to condemn a right-of-way in this state, except as is hereinafter provided.”

Sections 2, 3, 4 and 5 provide the mode of procedure. Sections Y and 9 are as follows:

“§ Y. Judgment shall be entered upon said verdict or finding appropriating an easement upon said land and other property for said right-of-way for the purpose only of logging or removing timber from the land set forth in said complaint: Provided, however, That any one or more persons owning or controlling timber land or timber and [497]*497entitled to condemn such, right-of-way under the provisions of this act may join as plaintiffs in such action. Any person condemning such right-of-way shall have the exclusive use thereof and the right to remove therefrom any improvements or structures placed thereon, subject to the right of any other person or persons to condemn said logging road, chute, stream, water-course or slough, as herein provided: Provided further, That any other party owning or controlling timber tributary to any such stream or water-course condemned as aforesaid, and who has not joined in such condemnation, may have the right to use the same upon paying to the parties owning the right-of-way the proper proportion of the cost of such improvement and the expenses of maintaining the same, to be determined “by the superior court of the proper county, if the parties cannot agree.
“§ 9. When any logging road or chute, stream or water-course, slough, or lake shall cease to have been used for one year, any party interested may file a motion in such action and upon notice to the owner or person in charge of such timber, obtain an order vacating such right-of-way, unless good cause is shown why such logging road or chute, stream, Avater-course, slough, pond, or lake upon such condemned right-of-way should not be vacated. bJothing but an easement can be acquired by this proceeding and no interest in the land shall pass by the decree of appropriation.”

The demurrer was sustained on the ground that the act was in contravention of § 16, art. 1 of the constitution of this state, which provides as follows:

“Private properly shall not be taken for private use, except for private ways of necessity, and for drains, flumes or ditches on or across the lands of others for agricultural, domestic or sanitary purposes. bTo private property shall be taken or damaged for public or private use without just compensation having been first made or paid into court for the owner, and no right-of-way shall be appropriated to the use of any corporation other than municipal, until full compensation therefor be first made in money, or ascer[498]*498tained and paid into the court for the owner, irrespective of any benefit from any improvement proposed by such corporation, which compensation shall be ascertained by a jury, unless a jury be waived as in other civil cases in courts of record, in the manner prescribed by law. Whenever an attempt is made to take private property for a use alleged to be public, the question whether the contemplated use be really public shall be a judicial question, and determined as such without regard to any legislative assertion that the use is public;”

in that the act of condemnation did not provide for a public use of the land condemned.

This case presents important questions, deserving the most serious consideration, involving as it does the ¿representative interests of private rights, and of property of the state sought to be protected and fostered through the exercise of the high prerogative of sovereignty; the former being guaranteed by the fundamental law, and the latter being a subject of universal interest and concern. Eminent domain is the right or power of a sovereign state to appropriate private property. This right is generally exercised through condemnation proceedings, and the rights of the individual must yield to the superior rights of the state as a promoter and conservator of the public welfare. It will be seen that the vital question to be determined is whether the statutory proceedings in question secure the public or private use of the property condemned.

An immense number of authorities have been cited in this case, all of which we have carefully examined, but a particular analysis of which cannot he made within the limits of a reasonable opinion. But, from the research we have made, we conclude that both the weight of authority and the better reasoning sustain the judgment in this case; that, therefore, the statute in question is in contravention [499]*499of the constitution, and that the words “public use” were not used by the framers of the constitution in the liberal and, it seems to us, somewhat indiscriminate sense which is contended for by the appellant.

The learned attorneys for appellant have favored the court with an exhaustive and earnest argument in their brief, and a painstaking showing is made of the magnitude of the lumbering business and interest of this state, and the effect that it presumably has' upon the general prosperity of the commonwealth, and we are urged to announce a broad and statesmanlike principle in determining this question, and one which would further the business prosperity of the state rather than one which would hamper and retard it. But the court cannot invade the province of the law-making powers of government-, and intrude into its decrees its opinion on questions of public policy. Its duty is to strictly recognize its legal limitations and confine itself to the narrower duties of interpretation and construction. The main arguments in the brief, powerful as they are, would have been more appropriately presented to the framers of the constitution.

Many of the cases cited by the appellant have no application to this case, for the reason that they are from states having constitutions with different provisions from ours on the subject of eminent domain.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 L.R.A. 820, 74 P. 681, 33 Wash. 490, 1903 Wash. LEXIS 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/healy-lumber-co-v-morris-wash-1903.