Kanawha, Glen Jean & Eastern R. R. v. Jean

30 S.E. 86, 45 W. Va. 119, 1898 W. Va. LEXIS 73
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 30 S.E. 86 (Kanawha, Glen Jean & Eastern R. R. v. Jean) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kanawha, Glen Jean & Eastern R. R. v. Jean, 30 S.E. 86, 45 W. Va. 119, 1898 W. Va. LEXIS 73 (W. Va. 1898).

Opinions

Dent, Judge:

On the 31st day of October, 1895, the Glen Jean, Lower Loup & Deep Water Railroad Company, in accordance with its charter, began to locate the line of its road through the lands of Thomas G. McKell, in the county of Fayette, and continued the same until completed on the 2d day of November. On the 1st day of November, 1895, a certificate of incorporation was issued to the Kanawha, Glen Jean & Eastern Railroad Company, the incorporators being Thomas G. McKell, two hundred and forty-six shares, M. Jackson, one share, R. G. Quarrier, one share, J. F. Brown, one share, and E. W. Knight, one share; making two hundred and fifty shares. The incorporators forthwith held a meeting', and directed subscription books tobe opened under the supervision of E. W. Knight and M. Jackson at the office of Brown, Jackson & Knight, in the city of Charleston, the subscription to be reported to a meeting of the stockholders to be called by them when the subscription should exceed one-twentieth of the capital stock of the company. On the next day the committee reported that T. G. McKell had subscribed ten more shares of stock, and the corporators immediately proceeded to elect themselves a board of directors, without publishing the notices for four successive weeks, as required in section 36, chapter 54, Code. The board of directors passed some by-laws, and proceeded to organize by electing T. G. McKell president, J. W. Bi'own vice president, E. W. Knight secretary, and S. M. Veall, who was neither a director nor stockholder, treasurer. It then being represented that the line of the road would pass through the lands of Thomas G. McKell, Mr. McKell, who was the president and the whole of the corporation except four shares owned by his attorneys, retired from the meeting', [121]*121which at once appointed E. W. Knight to negotiate with Mr. McKell for the right of way through his lands. This was accomplished, and the meeting reassembled, and the right of way was accepted at twelve thousand three hundred dollars, and other land was bargained for at three hundred dollars per acre, according to the necessities of the company. Mr. McKell signed the deed, and it was immediately forwarded to Fayette County for recordation. There was no public notice of any of these meetings, but they were all held, charter obtained, land purchased and conveyance recorded in the space of two days. On theSth of November, 1895, the Glen Jean, Lower Loup & Deep Water Railroad Company served notice on Thomas G. McKell that it was about to institute proceedings in the circuit court of Fayette County for the condemnation of his land for the use of its road as locatedand platted. Thomas G. McKell appeared, and on his petition the proceedings of condemnation were removed into the circuit court of the United States at Charleston. Mr. McKell therein appeared, and filed a disclaimer as to part of the land proposed to betaken, and alleged the title was in the Kana-wha, Glen Jean& Eastern Railroad Company by virtue of his deed made as aforesaid. The proceedings werethere-upon stayed until the notice required by statute should be 'given the said Kanawha, Glen Jean & Eastern Railroad Company. What further action was taken by the court on this disclaimer does not appear, as only excerpts from the reco’rd are presented on eith er side in this case. Arguments of counsel and oral testimony are not proper in 'support of so important a question, as the record itself is the only sufficient proof thereof. It is plain, however, from the final order filed that the court did dispose of such disclaimer in some manner favorable to the defendant, for the land is condemned and given to it. It cannot be presumed that the court disregarded the statute, and declined to summon a party shown to be interested in the land proposed to be taken, but it must have either summoned the plaintiff, or decided the defendant’s right was the prior and better right to the land. It is not a sufficient answer to this to say that only McKell’s title was condemned, but it is the reserved title of the State, which is paramount [122]*122thereto, and used to oust McKell’s title; the proceeding-, so far as taking the land is concerned, being in the nature of a proceeding in rem while the assessment of damages is is a proceeding in personam. The right of the defendant to take the land for public use cannot be controverted. So the only question at issue and only reason why the plaintiff was, in. any event, a necessary party to the condemnation proceedings, was that it might receive its proportionate share of the damages assessed. That the court condemned the land, and not the mere title of Mc-Kell, is shown by the latter part of its order, to wit: “The quantity of land to be taken along said outer line is as follows: From station 340 plus 9 of the Loup Creek Branch of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad, which station is the O station of the Glen Jean, Lower Loup and Deep Water R. R., as the same is loca,ted and marked by a, stake, to station 40 plus 75 on said center line of the said Glen Jean, Lower Loup & Deep Water R. R., which station is on the line between the lands of Thomas G. McKell and the lands of N. M. Jenkin, and 4,075 feet from the beginning, 50 feet on each side of said center line, except so much as lies without the track and right of way of the Loup Creek Branch of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad, and containing in all nine and thirty-seven one hundredths acres (9 37-100) by survey, be, and the same is hereby, vested in fee simple in the applicant, The Glen Jean & Deep Water Railroad Company. * * * And the petitioner is entitled to a writ of possession against the defendant to put it in possession of the land condemned, and such writ is hereby awarded upon the payment of the costs aforesaid.” The plaintiff alleges two grounds for injunction:

1. That the land proposed to be taken is indispensible to it for its purposes, and that it could not be adequately compensated for the loss of the same by the recovery of damages. This appears to be abandoned in the proof and argument, as the statute authorizes the condemnation arid taking of just such property by rival railway companies, and any work or grading by the plaintiff was undertaken and done after it had full actual notice of defendant’s condemnation proceedings, as its officers, directors, and [123]*123stockholders were either attorneys therein or a party thereto, and was, therefore, done in violation of defendant’s rights acquired by survey and location of its road.

2. That it had not been secured or paid a just compensation for the land taken. It is plain from its order that the circuit court assessed full damages for the whole of the land, and made no reservation of plaintiff’s claim in regard thereto. If it did not require plaintiff notified of the proceedings according to section 8, chapter 42, Code, it may have been because it thought it was the duty of the plaintiff to intervene by petition or other appropriate procedure if it desired to share in the damages, for the reason that it obtained its deed, and placed it on record, after the appropriation proceedings were commenced by survey and location of the route. 3 Elliott, R. R. p., 1450, § 1001.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.E. 86, 45 W. Va. 119, 1898 W. Va. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kanawha-glen-jean-eastern-r-r-v-jean-wva-1898.