Lanford v. Virginia Air Line Railway Co.

73 S.E. 566, 113 Va. 68, 1912 Va. LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 18, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 73 S.E. 566 (Lanford v. Virginia Air Line Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lanford v. Virginia Air Line Railway Co., 73 S.E. 566, 113 Va. 68, 1912 Va. LEXIS 10 (Va. 1912).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

J. W. Lanford, with the view of availing himself of the benefits of section 1294-b, clause 2, of the Code of 1904, filed his petition with the Circuit Court of Fluvanna county, demanding of the Virginia Air Line Railway Co. the construction of an under-way crossing for a wagon road from the uplands to the lowlands of his farm, at a designated point on the defendant’s railroad line, where it passes through plaintiff’s farm, and where the railroad bed is constructed with a very high fill.

Pursuant to the statute, the circuit court appointed three commissioners, who returned a report, signed by only two of them (although the three considered the matter together), favorable to the plaintiff, and to the report the defendant company filed exceptions, which were sustained. Whereupon the two commissioners were, over the objection of the defendant, allowed to amend their report. At a later term of the court the cause came on for [70]*70final hearing, upon the amended report of the commissioners, the evidence introduced by the plaintiff, as well as that introduced by the defendant, and the argument of counsel for both parties. Thereupon the court adjudged that good cause had been shown why neither of the reports made by the two commissioners, in favor of the plaintiff, should be confirmed, and that the plaintiff’s application be dismissed, with costs to the defendant. This judgment we are asked to review and reverse.

The statute, supra, so far as relevant to the issue, is as follows:

“It shall be the duty of every railroad * * * corporation, whose road * * * passes through the lands of any person in this State, to provide proper and suitable wagon-ways across said road * * * from one part of said land to the other, and to keep such ways in good repair. Such ways shall be constructed on the request of the land-owner, in writing, made to any section master, agent, or employee of such company, having charge and supervision of the railroad * * * at that point, and shall designate the points at which the wagon-ways are desired. * * * If the company fail or refuse, for ten days after such request, to construct wagon-ways, of a convenient and proper character, at the places designated, then the owner, having given ten days’ notice in writing, as aforesaid, may apply to the circuit court of the county * * * wherein the said land is located for the appointment of three disinterested persons, whose lands do not abut on the said railroad, * * * who shall constitute a board of commissioners, whose duty it shall be to go upon the land and determine whether the wagon-ways asked for should be constructed. Their decision shall be in writing, and, if favorable to the land-owner, it shall set forth the points at which the wagon-ways should be constructed, giving also a description of what should be done by the company to make a suitable and convenient way. The decision of the commissioners shall be returned to and filed in the clerk’s office of such court, and, when called up at the next, or any succeeding term of said court, it shall be affirmed, unless good cause is shown against it by the company, either party to have the right of appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeals from the judgment of the said court.”

The report of the commissioners in this case recommended [71]*71that the defendant railway be required to construct, at the point designated by the plaintiff, an under-way “wagon-way, twelve feet wide, and not less than twelve feet high from sub-grade, and it shall preserve intact the original grade of the said wagon-way or road.” The earth fill through which this under-way crossing was to be constructed is about eighteen feet high and about eighty-two feet wide, and the wagon-way was to be an open trestle, or an arch subway, in the discretion of the railway company.

Plaintiff in error’s farm is situated on the Rivanna river, in Fluvanna county, and contains approximately two hundred acres, of which about thirty acres is fertile and productive bottom land, and upon the residue of the farm—the highland—his dwelling, barn, and other buildings are located. On the upper or western side of the farm a high and precipitous bluff projects from the table-land sheer to the water’s edge of the river at low water, circling back from the water’s edge and southward up-stream, or towards the west, almost perpendicular, and following the winding of the stream, but not receding very far from the banks. Downstream, or eastward, however, the bluff breaks more abruptly southward, and, circling somewhat eastward, leaves the above-mentioned piece of low-grounds, or bottom land, about one-third as wide as it is long, extending from the projection the entire distance of plaintiff in error’s farm to the eastern boundary line between him and one C. E. Jones; and this bluffy formation, extending all the way to his eastern boundary, divides his low-grounds from his highland, the bluff standing most of the way at an angle of about forty-five degrees. There are, however, three depressions in the bluff, the first being not far from where the bluff projects into the river, called depression No. 1; the second about midway plaintiff in error’s low-grounds, called depression No. 2; and the other over on Jones’s land, not far from the division line, called depression No. 3. That plaintiff in error may have defendant in error to construct and maintain a wagon-way through the fill in depression No. 2, so that he can have the use of the road leading from his highland to the low-grounds, which he in the main formerly used, is the subject matter of this controversy.

It appears that when it went about the acquisition of a right of way through plaintiff in error’s farm, defendant in error com[72]*72plied with the statute—sec. 1105-f (4), ch. 46-B, Code—with respect to the filing in the clerk’s office of Fluvanna county of maps and profiles, showing the cuts and fills, etc., in the proposed construction of its road-bed through the farm of the plaintiff in error, and which showed that the right of way desired was along the entire length of the bluff separating the highland from the low-grounds, and that the road-bed was tobe constructed by fills and cuts, and not by trestling. Moreover, when the five commissioners appointed in the condemnation proceedings to assess and report the damages to be paid by defendant in error for the right of way through plaintiff in error’s farm were upon the farm, viewing the route of the proposed road-bed, etc., plaintiff in error had his attention called to the fact, both by the commissioners and defendant in error’s engineer in charge of the construction of its road-bed through plaintiff in error’s farm, that the road-bed was to cross depression No. 2 over a fill, and not over a trestle or arch, which, of necessity, would put an end to the use of this depression for a wagon-way.

Clauses 6-8, sec. 1105-f, of the Code, supra, provide that the commissioners condemning land “shall ascertain what will be a just compensation for said property and land, * * * and assess the damages, if any, to the adjacent or other property of such tenant or owner, * * * beyond the peculiar benefits which will accrue to such propertieg, respectively, from the construction and operation of the company’s works.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 S.E. 566, 113 Va. 68, 1912 Va. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lanford-v-virginia-air-line-railway-co-va-1912.