Hopkins v. Florida Central & Peninsular Railroad

97 Ga. 107
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 8, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 97 Ga. 107 (Hopkins v. Florida Central & Peninsular Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hopkins v. Florida Central & Peninsular Railroad, 97 Ga. 107 (Ga. 1895).

Opinion

Atkinson, Justice.

This case is bere upon a writ of error from the judgment of the judge of the superior court, overruling a demurrer. It appears from the record, that under the general act for the incorporation of railroads, approved October 21st, 1891, a charter was granted to the Florida & Northern Railroad Company. Its charter was afterwards amended under the general act approved December 17th, 1892, it thereby obtaining all the rights which might accrue to, and subjecting itself to all the liabilities imposed upon, railroads chartered under that act. Afterwards it was merged into and consolidated with the Florida Central & Peninsular [108]*108Railroad Company, a corporation wbicb appears to have been incorporated under tbe laws of tbe State' of Florida, and thereafter it assumed tbe name of tbe Florida corporation. A proceeding was begun by tbe defendant in error to appropriate to its use certain lands of tbe plaintiffs in error lying contiguous to its right of way, it being alleged that such appropriation was necessary for tbe purpose of securing gravel, sand, ballast and other material necessary for tbe construction, operation and security of its line of railroad situated in this State. Assessors were appointed under tbe provisions of tbe act above referred to, for tbe purpose of assessing tbe sum to be paid as compensation to tbe plaintiffs in error for their damages resulting from tbe appropriation of tlieir property to tbe use of tbe railroad company; and from tbe report of tbe assessors tbe plaintiffs in error appealed. When tbe case was reached in the superior court, tbe plaintiffs in error demurred upon tbe following grounds: (1) Said proceedings are illegal and void, because the statute grants no power to said railroad to condemn land for tbe purpose of procuring ballast. (2) Said proceedings are illegal and should be dismissed, because tbe law under wbicb said railroad seeks to condemn said land is unconstitutional, in so far as it seeks to grant tbe power to condemn said land outside of tbe right of way.

Tbe railroad company bases its claim of tbe power to appropriate tbe property in question to tbe uses .stated, upon paragraph 4 of section 9 of tbe act of 1892 (see Acts 1892, p. 42). By tbe .terms of that section of tbe act referred to, it is provided that railroad companies incorporated under its provisions shall have power “to lay out its road not exceeding in width 200 feet, and to construct tbe same, and for tbe purpose of cuttings and embankments and for obtaining gravel and other material, to take as much land as may be necessary for tbe proper construction, operation and security of its road, . . making compensation therefor as pro[109]*109vicled by this act for property taken for the use of such company.”

■ With respect to the first ground of the demurrer of the plaintiffs in error, the contention seems to be that the maximum .quantity of land which the corporation is authorized to appropriate under the act in question is the 200 feet, and that while it may appropriate as much land within this limit as may be necessary for the purposes mentioned in the act, an attempt to appropriate land other than such as lies within the 200 feet for the accomplishment of the purposes stated in the act, is ultra vires. Upon this point the parties seem to be at issue; for on the other hand, it is the contention of the defendant in error that the statute gives it the power not only to appropriate to its use 200 feet for laying out its road and for the ordinary uses of the company, but that for the purpose of obtaining gravel, sand and other material, such as may be necessary for the proper construction, operation and security of its road, it may appropriate other lands.

In determining exactly what the meaning of a statute is, the prime consideration should be to ascertain the legislative intent; and -in seeking for that intent, we will first address ourselves to the language employed by the legislature in the expression of its purposes. If the language be clear and unambiguous, there is no room for interpretation, but it is the duty of the courts to give expression to the obvious meaning of the General Assembly. It is always helpful, however, in the construction of statutes, to bear in mind the subject-matter concerning which the legislative body is speaking. Statutes of this kind, involving the exercise of the right of eminent domain, and the consequent appropriation of the property of the owner to public uses, must be strictly construed, and will not be extended beyond the express words or the necessary implications qf the statute conferring the power.

Looking to the terms of the act in question, giving the [110]*110words employed by tbe General Assembly tbeir ordinary signification, there is little room to doubt that the General Assembly intended to confer upon the railroad company incorporated under this act the right not only to lay out its right of way 200 feet in width, but likewise the right to appropriate to its own use, upon just compensation, for the purposes for which this condemnation proceeding was instituted, lands other than those embraced within the 200 feet limit. Had the legislative purpose been to limit the right of appropriation to such land only as lay within the 200 feet, it would not have employed the general terms appearing in the statute, but on the contrary would have stated, “and for the purpose of cuttings and embankments and for obtaining gravel and other material,” to take as much land within the said 200 feet as may be necessary, etc. The words actually employed authorize the appropriation of the 200 feet, and in addition thereto, such other land as may be necessary, etc. In the construction of such statutes, the following is laid down as a correct rule by a standard author upon the subject, and is to be found in Lewis on Eminent Domain, section 279: “It is the province of the legislature to determine the quantity as well as the estate which may be taken for public use. If the quantity is specified, or a maximum prescribed, no’ more can be taken. If the authority permits the acquisition of as much as may be necessary, or in still more general terms confers the power to condemn property for the purposes of the undertaking, it will be construed to authorize the taking of so much as may be reasonably necessary under the circumstances.” See also cases cited by the author.

Applying this rule to the present case, it will be observed that the statute gives, first, the power to lay out its road not .to exceed in width 200 feet, and it would seem that this would exhaust the power of the corporation to appropriate land for the purpose of laying out its road, because, by the terms of the act, the amount authorized to be appropriated [111]*111for this purpose is limited to 200 feet in width; but with respect to the matter of making cuttings and building embankments, if, in the course of the construction of its road, it became necessary to build an embankment sufficiently high to require a base greater than 200 feet in width, or ix> make a cut requiring a width greater than 200 feet at the top, there is ample authority for the appropriation of land in addition to that authorized to be appropriated in the first instance. Under ordinary circumstances, '200 feet in width is all that the railroad company would be authorized to appropriate for laying out its road; but if the exigencies of the particular situation required that it appropriate more than this for the special purpose of cuttings and embankments, then other property necessary to this use may be appropriated.

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Bluebook (online)
97 Ga. 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopkins-v-florida-central-peninsular-railroad-ga-1895.