Kansas City, Shreveport & Gulf Railway Co. v. Vicksburg, Shreveport & Pacific Railroad

21 So. 144, 49 La. Ann. 29, 1896 La. LEXIS 708
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 14, 1896
DocketNo. 12,230
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 21 So. 144 (Kansas City, Shreveport & Gulf Railway Co. v. Vicksburg, Shreveport & Pacific Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas City, Shreveport & Gulf Railway Co. v. Vicksburg, Shreveport & Pacific Railroad, 21 So. 144, 49 La. Ann. 29, 1896 La. LEXIS 708 (La. 1896).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Miller J.,

The defendants appeal from the judgment, decreeing the expropriation of defendants’ land for plaintiffs’ use.

The petition alleges the construction in part by plaintiffs of a railroad from Kansas City to the Gulf, by way of Shreveport; that under agreement with that city, plaintiffs have established their machine shops and have agreed to build a depot within the city limits, for which purpose the company has acquired the necessary site; it is further averred that the land sought to be expropriated is necessary for the construction of the road through and from Shreveport and to connect with the company’s depots, and with this averment of the necessity of the land for plaintiffs’ road, there is the allegation the land is not required for the defendants’ uses. The exception and answer of the defendants deny the necessity alleged for the expropriation, avers the land is part of defendants’ right of way for their railroad, is necessary for the transaction of its business; and that held already under the expropriation by defendant, no second expropriation is authorized. The jury found the issues of fact in plaintiffs’ favor and assessed the land, damages and betterments at three thousand three hundred and eighty-five dollars, and the judgment following the verdict decreed the payment of that amount to defendants. The plaintiff paid the amount into court, proceeded with the construction of their road over the land and defendants prosecuted this appeal. R. S. S. 1479, 1488.

The plaintiffs’ road under the franchises given by the ordinance of the council of Shreveport is to be constructed from the point of access on a line connecting with the site of its depot, and continuing to the front street of the city, Commerce street, on which the company’s tracks already are laid. The defendants’ tracks have been laid for years on a part of the line prescribed for plaintiffs’ road by the city ordinances; that is to say, between Murphy and Common streets, aré laid on land acquired by defendants many years ago, and by the ordinance conferring on plaintiffs their franchise for connecting lines in Shreveport, the tracks of plaintiffs’ road are required to be laid alongside of defendants’ tracks, to block nine, i. e., the [31]*31depot ground of plaintiffs. This space between Murphy and Common streets awarded to the plaintiffs, is about three thousand feet, or as the verdict gives it two and sixty-one one-hundredths acres, and is a part of the larger space from seventy-five to one hundred and fifty feet wide owned by defendants. On this space defendants had but one track on which it had conducted its business for the years since it acquired the property and laid its tracks. In advance of any expropriation proceedings the plaintiffs had caused to be surveyed the space it deemed requisite, for its uses, about thirty-five feet wide on the southeast side and alongside of defendants’ tracks, leaving still left to defendants considerable space on that side, and while there is some conflict of testimony, we think it is shown, that on the northwest side there is room for another track, and by filling cuts or “fills” still another track might be laid on defendants’land. As soon, however, as plaintiffs had surveyed on the southeast side, defendants commenced the construction on that side of a siding track, and afterward completed it. The plaintiffs, thereupon, proceeded to survey the space they required further east still on defendants’ land and within the line prescribed by the ordinance, i. e., alongside defendants’ tracks. This second line of plaintiffs required all the defendants’ land on that side, and indeed, necessitated the acquisition of other land by plaintiffs. About the time of Che beginning or completion of defendants’ siding on the east side, there were negotiations between the parties of the land plaintiffs required, or for the lease of the siding track. The defendants demanded twenty-five thousand dollars for that the jury assessed at thirty-three hundred dollars. Plaintiffs refused to accede to the demand and resorted to this expropriatipn proceeding.

There is in the record a mass of testimony offered to show the feasibility of procuring land for plaintiffs’ uses without taking that of defendants, and that defendants will need the land. On the other hand, there is an equal mass of testimony controverting that of defendants’.

All property is héld subject to the’right of eminent domain. One of the conditions of that right is the public necessity for which expropriation is demanded. 2 Kent, p. 338 etseq.; Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, pp. 523-530 et seq.; Constitution of Louisiana, Art. 156; Revised Statutes, See. 2376 et seq. No question is made that the need of land for constructing requisite connections of plain[32]*32tiffs’ railroad is a public purpose or necessity in legal contemplation. The defendants’ appreciation of that necessity, seems to make the test whether or not the land of others, equally adapted as they contend for plaintiffs’ uses, can not be obtained. All the testimony seems to concede that the locality in which this land is sought to be taken is within the scope of prudent choice, but it is defendants’ contention that land a short distance away from their property should be expropriated. Both roads running through the city of Shreveport have chosen routes over the locality in controversy. We understand the ground is broken by chasms of hills,” to use the term in the record. While defendants’ testimony is to the effect that plaintiffs can tfind land .as good for their purpose within, say, two hundred feet, or a few hundred feet away from that alongside of defendants’ tracks, the testimony of plaintiffs’ witnesses is that to go further east or south would be to encounter deeper fills or chasms, and greater difficulties and expense of -construction. It is to be observed that defendants in making their selection of a roadbed through the city avoided the fills and other difficulties to which' they insist plaintiffs should submit. We have, too, on this question of the fitness of the land for plaintiff’s purpose, the ordinance of the council prescribing the line alongside of defendants’ tracks, and the verdict of the jury to be deemed an approval of that line. We think, the fair conclusion from all this, is that alongside of defendants’ tracks, as specified in the ordinance, is better suited for plaintiff’s uses than any land in^the radius indicated by defendants’ testimony. While we have examined this phase of the controversy, it must seem difficult to maintain, as the test of expropriation, that land of others than the proprietor should be taken Expropriation, in most instances, is deemed a sacrifice by the proprietor called on to make the surrender. If one proprietor could defeat the expropriation on the ground that the call should be made on another, the supposed compulsion of the law requiring private property for the public good would be of no efficacy.

The necessity in legal contemplation that is to be the guide in selecting land for an unquestioned public purpose is to be understood in a reasonable sense. There is, of course, the prohibition of excessive appropriation or the takiifg of any land not within the scope of the purpose required. Oooley’s Constitutional Limitations, 539 [33]*33et seq.; New Orleans Pacific Railway Company vs. Gay, 32 An. 471.

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Bluebook (online)
21 So. 144, 49 La. Ann. 29, 1896 La. LEXIS 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-city-shreveport-gulf-railway-co-v-vicksburg-shreveport-la-1896.