Illinois State Trust Co. v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Ry. Co.

217 Ill. 504
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 217 Ill. 504 (Illinois State Trust Co. v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Ry. Co.) 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
Illinois State Trust Co. v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Ry. Co., 217 Ill. 504 (Ill. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a proceeding in the county court of St. Clair county by the appellee for the condemnation of a strip of land one hundred feet in width belonging to the appellant, lying along and adjoining the original right of way of the St. Louis Valley Railroad Company. The cause was in this court at a former term, (208 Ill. 419,) and we then reversed the judgment of said county court awarding condemnation of the said strip for the reason that the appellee company is a foreign corporation, and therefore without authority to exercise the power of eminent domain in this State unless so empowered by the act of the General Assembly approved April 21, 1899, (Laws of 1899, p. 116,) which enactment authorizes a foreign railroad corporation to purchase the property of a resident corporation of which such foreign corporation shall be in possession, and to exercise the powers, privileges and franchises of the corporation whose property has been so purchased, including the power of eminent domain, if that power is necessary to enable it to acquire real estate necessary for the betterment, maintenance, extension or operation of such railroad so purchased or for the construction and maintenance of spurs, switches, side-tracks, etc., and we held that the appellee company was not then so empowered, for the reason said act further provided that it should not be construed to permit any railroad company to purchase any parallel or competing line of railroad in this State, and that it appeared from the proofs then in the record that the said St. Louis Valley Railroad Company, of which the appellee company claimed to be the owner by purchase in pursuance of the said act of April 21, 1899, and by virtue of which purchase it contended it acquired the right to condemn the property in question, was a parallel or competing line of railroad of the appellee company. The cause was reversed and remanded generally, and has been re-docketed in the said county court and again heard, and judgment entered fixing the compensation for the land to be taken and the damages to land not taken at a total sum of $7000 and awarding condemnation upon payment of said sum. This is an appeal prosecuted to reverse this latter judgment of condemnation.

On the hearing, after the remandment of the case, being the hearing from which this appeal is prosecuted, the trial court, over the objection of the appellant company, permitted the appellee company to introduce testimony for the purpose of proving that said St. Louis Valley railroad and the appellee railroad were not parallel and competing lines of railroad. The contention of the appellant company was that the judgment of reversal and remandment pronounced in this court on the former submission of the case was an adjudication of the question whether the said lines of railroad were parallel or competing lines, and that evidence directed to that question was inadmissible, for the reason the question had become res judicata. It is here urged the court erred in overruling this contention. The judgment entered in this court was, that the judgment entered in the county court on the former hearing should be reversed and that the cause should be remanded. The remanding order was without any specific directions,—that is, was general. The effect of that judgment was to entirely abrogate the former judgment of the county court and to remand the cause to the county court for further proceedings precisely as if no trial had ever occurred, and on a rehearing to authorize either party to introduce testimony in the same manner as if the case had never before been tried, save that no proceedings should be had or taken inconsistent with the legal principles announced in the opinion rendered by this court. Checkering v. Failes, 29 Ill. 294; Dinsmoor v. Rowse, 211 id. 317.

The parties, at the last hearing in the county court, entered into a stipulation of facts, agreeing “that complainant is a railroad corporation organized under the laws of the States of Missouri and Arkansas; that the St. Louis Valley is a railroad corporation under the laws of the State of Illinois; that it is.a partially constructed railroad from Valley Junction through the counties of St. Clair, Monroe, Randolph, Union and Alexander, a distance of one hundred and twenty miles to Gale, and also a branch from Gorham, in Jackson county, in an easterly direction, twenty-six miles to Busch, in Williamson county, Illinois; that petitioner, on the 30th day of April, 1903, was in possession of said railroad lines in this State belonging to the St. Louis Valley railway and owned all of the capital stock of said company; that said petitioner purchased in fee simple all of the said railroad of said company, together with all the rights, etc., used in connection therewith; that said sale and purchase were duly approved by the stockholders of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railway Company and of the St. Louis Valley railway, at meetings held upon notice given as required by law; that said petitioner complied with all the requirements of the State of Illinois with reference to doing business in the State of' Illinois as a railroad company, and especially with the requirements of an act approved April 21, 1899, being section 218 of the Revised Statutes of Illinois of 1901; that the question to be determined in this cause is whether the St. Louis Valley railway in Illinois and the, St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern railway in Missouri are parallel or competing lines, or whether they will be if the Valley line shall be completed to Cairo, Illinois; that the other issue will be as to the amount of compensation to be paid by petitioner to defendant for the land actually taken and damages to the land not taken.”

No complaint is made by either litigant as to the amount fixed by the judgment of condemnation to be paid as compensation for land taken and as damages to land not taken.

The record presents but a single question, and that a question of fact,—whether the line of railroad of the St. Louis Valley Railroad Company and that of the appellee company were parallel or competing lines' of railroad. If so parallel or competing, the appellee company was without power to become the purchaser of the line of the Valley railroad, and the act of April 21, 1899, conferred no power on the appellee company to exercise the right of eminent domain in this State.

On the hearing in the county court when heard there for the first time, the only testimony on the question whether these lines of railroad were parallel or competing was that incidentally, rather than directly, given by two witnesses. No other witnesses then testified on the point. On the hearing in the county court which we are now called upon to review, twenty-two witnesses were produced and gave testimony in behalf of the appellee company. None were produced in behalf of the appellant company. These witnesses expressed it to be their opinon that the St. Louis Valley Railroad Company as constructed to Thebes, when purchased by the appellee company, and the line of the appellee company, were not parallel or competing lines of railroad, and testified to facts on whi¿h they, respectively, based the opinion so expressed, and would not be if the line of the Valley railroad should be completed to Cairo. Among these witnesses were two who had served as members of the Inter-State Commerce Commission of the general government, and another was and had been the secretary of the said commission since its organization.

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Bluebook (online)
217 Ill. 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-state-trust-co-v-st-louis-iron-mountain-southern-ry-co-ill-1905.