Lewis v. State Road Department of Florida

95 So. 2d 248, 1957 Fla. LEXIS 3443
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 24, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 95 So. 2d 248 (Lewis v. State Road Department of Florida) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. State Road Department of Florida, 95 So. 2d 248, 1957 Fla. LEXIS 3443 (Fla. 1957).

Opinion

ROWE, Associate Justice.

On November 6, 1953, the plaintiffs filed their bill of complaint in the Circuit Court for Leon County, Florida, against the defendants, alleging that plaintiffs then and since 1928 owned property adjacent to and abutting on U. S. Highway 98 (State Road [249]*24930) for a distance of about 300 feet, and -is used for the operation of a business • known as M. G. Lewis and Sons Garage for the sale and servicing of motor vehicles, •sale of gasoline and lubricants, and cafe; that the business is housed in one building ■by reason of which automobiles displayed in the building may be seen by persons •traveling on said Highway; that the principal surfaced street of Port St. Joe, Florida, enters said Highway at a point ■adjacent to the above property; that said street is used by approximately 95%' of ■the workers going to and from a paper mill operated in Gulf County, Florida, by the St. Joe Paper Company; that said paper mill is west of the Highway, — the •entrance to the premises of the paper company being directly across the Highway from plaintiffs’ property; that the paper mill is served by the said Railroad Com■pany, which is wholly owned by the said Paper Company, — said Railroad Company presently having two tracks crossing the Highway and entering the Paper Com-jpany’s premises on the West side of the Highway; that as presently operated the -railroad does not constitute an obstruction to traffic upon said Highway and does not impose upon said Highway an undue “burden, nor does the railroad create any ■substantial traffic hazard, and no necessity •presently exists for the construction of a viaduct by which the Highway and its traffic would be carried over the railroad tracks; that the presently owned railroad yards of the Paper Company are on the west side of the Highway; that, however, •desiring to extend its railroad car switching and storage yard in an easterly direction across the Highway, the Paper Company has caused the Railroad Company to request permission of the State Road Department to lay 12 additional tracks across the Highway, so as to fan out from -the present two spur tracks; that although the defendants have been warned by plaintiffs that their property would be damaged and that public property would be diverted to private use if the 12 tracks should be laid across the Highway and a viaduct should be constructed to carry traffic over the said tracks, the State Road Department has attempted to authorize the defendant Railroad to construct the said 12 additional tracks across said Highway; that the Railroad is presently engaged in extending additional tracks across the Highway; that the proposed additional tracks (together with the existing two tracks, or a total of 14 tracks) will constitute a complete and total obstruction of traffic along the Highway, thereby obliterating and appropriating said Highway to private use so that it will become necessary to erect a viaduct over said tracks at great expense to -the people of the State of Florida and at practically no expense to the Railroad and none whatever to the Paper Company; that the construction of the proposed viaduct is not a public project, but a project made necessary by the Railroad and Paper Company’s collusion in extending its railroad car switching and storage yard; that the proposed viaduct is not being constructed for any road or highway purpose but for a combined railroad and paper mill purpose; that if the Railroad is permitted to continue with its purpose to obstruct the Highway, and if it thereby becomes necessary for a viaduct to be constructed, said viaduct or overpass will set up a concrete wall approximately 18 feet from the plaintiff’s show windows and would be approximately 22 feet high, and would result in irreparable injury to the business of plaintiffs in that A. “Plaintiffs would no longer have the right of ingress and egress to and from the Highway at all points along their 300 foot frontage upon said Highway. B. The plaintiffs’ building and show room would be completely hidden by said overpass, and its value as a business site completely destroyed. C. All traffic on the Highway adjacent to plaintiffs’ property would be carried to a height above the level of the roof of plaintiffs’ building.”; that the proposed action of defendants in laying the additional tracks will not only amount to unauthorized public [250]*250nuisance, appropriate property held in trust for public purposes to private use and benefit, create an obstruction and hazardous situation necessitating an unlawful expenditure of public funds to promote private ventures, but will amount to a taking of plaintiffs’ property without compensation and without due process of law, contrary to the Constitution and laws of Florida.

The plaintiffs prayed for the issuance of an injunction restraining further proceedings for the laying of additional railroad tracks across said Highway, and from constructing any bridge, trestle, overpass or viaduct over any portion of the Highway at any point where said Highway abuts upon the property of plaintiffs, and from raising or changing the elevation of said Highway at any point where said Highway is adjacent to the said property of plaintiffs. Temporary injunction was issued on November 13, 1955, as prayed for.

The State Road Department answered the bill saying:

1. These defendants deny each and every allegation contained in the said Bill of Complaint and demand strict proof thereof.

2. That any proposed construction by the State Road Department of Florida is necessary and essential to the best interests of the public.

3. That any proposed use of the Highway by the State Road Department of Florida is for Highway purposes.

4. That no property of the plaintiffs is being taken, invaded or injured.

The Railroad and the Paper Company answered the Bill of Complaint, and only so much thereof is set forth as is necessary to show the issues presented, as follows:

3. They admit that the defendant, St. Joe Paper Company, operates a paper mill west of the Highway, and that the entrance to the premises of said paper mill is across the Highway from the Plaintiffs’ property. They admit that the paper mill is served by the defendant, the Apalachicola-Northern Railroad Company.

4. They deny jointly and severally, each and every of the other allegations contained in said complaint.

Motions for Summary Judgment were made by the defendants, and on November 2, 1954, the Circuit Judge made his order on the Motions, saying:

“Ordered, adjudged and decreed that it is undisputed from the record that the proposed project does not take any of the Plaintiffs’ land or premises, and it further appears undisputed from the exhibits on file that the eighteen (18) feet remains between Plaintiffs’ property and the proposed overpass and the present pavement on said eighteen (18) feet will remain undisturbed.
“The Court is of the opinion that from the averments of the Bill of Complaint, the construction of the project will materially damage only the consequential rights of the Plaintiff to ingress, egress, light, air, and view, but under circumstances justifying the payment of appropriate compensation to plaintiff; thus the court is of the opinion that the bill has equity and the various motions for a summary judgment should be denied.”

On the petition of the defendants in said cause for writ of certiorari, the Supreme Court considered the above order of the Circuit Court, 79 So.2d 699, 700, and on January 28, 1955, made the following ruling:

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Bluebook (online)
95 So. 2d 248, 1957 Fla. LEXIS 3443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-state-road-department-of-florida-fla-1957.