New York Mining Co. v. Midland Mining Co.

58 A. 217, 99 Md. 506, 1904 Md. LEXIS 88
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 8, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 58 A. 217 (New York Mining Co. v. Midland Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Mining Co. v. Midland Mining Co., 58 A. 217, 99 Md. 506, 1904 Md. LEXIS 88 (Md. 1904).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court,

The record now before us has been brought into this Court *508 on petition as upon writ of .error to the Circuit Court for Allegany County for the purpose of assailing the validity of' a judgment which finally ratified and confirmed the inquisition of a jury of condemnation. The appellee, a mining company,, duly incorporated under the general corporation laws of the State, owns certain coal lands in Allegany County from which bituminous coal is mined. The Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad is a common carrier whose, road is near to, though not immediately adjoining, the lands of the Midland Mining Company. The appellant, namely, The Ñew York Mining Company, is also a coal mining corporation and . owns land lying between the Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad tracks and the property of the appellee. To enable the Midland Mining Company to get its coal to market it has a tramway constructed on its own land from the mouth of its mines to a tipple near the Cumberland and Pennsylvania tracks. The coal is brought from the mines down the mountain upon this tramway to the tipple. To get the coal which is thus brought to the tipple aboard the cars of the railroad for transshipment, it is necessary that a switch or siding connecting with’ the Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad should be constructed. After the siding is built the empty coal cars will be brought from the main track of the railroad to the tipple on the appellee’s property so that the coal may be loaded and so that when loaded it may be hauled to market. In. order to construct this siding, the Midland Company'must acquire two small portions of land owned by the appellant Mining Company and lying between the railroad right of way and the appellee’s property. Being unable to agree with the appellant in regard to the occupancy of these small parcels for the purpose of constructing this siding, the appellee made application by petition, to the Circuit Court for Allegany County for a warrant directed to the sheriff commanding'him to summon a jury to condemn the land needed for the construction of this siding. It is alleged that the proceeding thus taken is authorized by secs. 145 and 149 of Art. 23 of the Code', and that the method and details to be pursued are marked out in secs. *509 248 to 253 of the same Article of the Code. By section 145 any mining company such as the appellee is conceded to be is invested with full power to locate and construct a railroad, beginning at or near its mines and running to any convenient point or points that may best suit the convenience and interest of the corporation, and to use and control such railroad and the necessary vehicles and appurtenances belonging thereto; provided, as declared by section 153, such railroad does not exceed ten miles in length. Section 149, expressly empowers mining companies to obtain the land required for such railroads by condemnation. By section 248 it is enacted that condemnation proceedings for the acquisition of a right of way for such a railroad as a mining company is empowered to build must be commenced by filing a petition addressed to any Judge of the Circuit Court for the county in which the land wanted may lie; and it is further provided that upon its being made to appear satisfactorily to the Judge that the land needed is necessary and proper to be condemned for the use of such corporation, he shall thereupon issue his warrant directed to the sheriff requiring the latter to summon a jury to meet on the land to be valued and condemned on a day to be named in the warrant. Such a petition was filed and in it the Court was asked to direct the sheriff to summon a jury of twenty inhabitants of Allegany County not related to either of the parties and not stockholders in the petitioning company or in the appellant corporation, and not in any wise interested in the land to be condemned, or in the controversy arising- under the condemnation. A warrant was thereupon issued by Judge WrrxiAars to the sheriff as prayed, but the Judge in the warrant signed By him directed the sheriff to summon a jury of twenty inhabitants of Allegany County “above the age of twenty-one years and qualified to act as jurors under the laws of this State,” who were not related to either of the owners, that is, The New York Mining Company and The Midland Mining Company, the petitioner, and who were not in any wise interested in said lands and who were not stockholders in either of said corporations. The sheriff accordingly sum *510 moned a jury which met on the premises after due notice had been given to the appellant company; and the jury after having been empanelled and sworn, then and there proceeded to value the damages the appellant would sustain by the use and occupation of the land needed by the appellee company for the construction of the siding heretofore mentioned. The appellant attended by counsel on the premises when the jury assembled and from a panel of twenty persons struck off four names and the appellee company having also erased four names, the remaining twelve constituted the jury of inquisition. Upon the return of the inquisition by the sheriff to the Circuit Court, the appellant company filed eight objections to its ratification. Testimony was taken and the objections were heard by the Court below, and were overruled, and the inquisition was finally ratified and confirmed. Thereafter the appellant company filed its petition in the Circuit Court for Allegany County alleging that there were errors in the action of the Court in confirming the inquisition and praying that the record be transmitted to this Court as upon writ of error so that the rulings of the lower Court might be here reviewed. Of the eight objections filed to the ratification of the inquisition five are relied on in the petition for a writ of error, whilst the other three are not alluded to. Of the five which are assigned as grounds of error, the second, third and sixth original objections aver in substance that there was no necessity for the condemnation of the appellant’s property for the construction of the siding, inasmuch as the appellee by adopting another and different route could reach the Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad without crossing the appellant’s property. The first, second and fourth reasons assigned in the petition for a writ of error are substantially the same as the second, third and sixth objections filed against the confirmation of the inquisition. The fourth objection to the confirmation of the inquisition, which is the third reason assigned in the petition for a writ .of error is in effect, that thé siding to be constructed is not such a railroad as is authorized under the sections of the Code heretofore alluded to, because in point of fact, it will be *511 when completed, a mere switch to be operated by the Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad for the Midland Mining Company, and will be of no public use or 'benefit whatever; consequently that the condemnation proceedings are an attempt to take the property of one corporation for the private use and benefit of another corporation without warrant of law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 A. 217, 99 Md. 506, 1904 Md. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-mining-co-v-midland-mining-co-md-1904.