Newcastle & Richmond Railroad v. Peru & Indianapolis Railroad

3 Ind. 464
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 3 Ind. 464 (Newcastle & Richmond Railroad v. Peru & Indianapolis Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newcastle & Richmond Railroad v. Peru & Indianapolis Railroad, 3 Ind. 464 (Ind. 1852).

Opinion

Perkins, J.

The Peru and Indianapolis Railroad Com[465]*465pany filed a bill in the Howard Circuit Court against the Newcastle and Richmond Railroad Company, praying an injunction restraining the latter company from constructing their road, &c.

The bill states that the former company was chartered in 1846; that the 19th section of the charter enacted: “That'when said corporation shall have procured the right of way as hereinbefore provided, they shall be seized in fee-simple of the right of such land, and they shall have the sole occupancy and use of the same, but not to interfere with the right of way of any other railroad company heretofore incorporated; and no person, body politic or corporate, shall in any way interfere with, molest, disturb, or injure any of the rights or privileges hereby granted, or that would be calculated to detract from or affect the profits of said corporation.”

The bill further states that said company have procured the right of way from Indianapolis to Peru, have completed twenty-two miles of their road, and are actively engaged in constructing the remainder. It further states that, in 1848, the Newcastle and Richmond Railroad Company were incorporated, and that, in 1851, the legislature, by an amendment to the charter, authorized said company to extend their road “ from Newcastle, in Henry county, to intersect the Peru and Indianapolis Railroad, or the Lafayette and Indianapolis Railroad, at such point on said roads as said Newcastle and Richmond Railroad Company may determine upon.” The charter of this latter company contains the usual provisions in regard to the mode of assessing damages in procuring the right of way, &c.

The bill further alleges that said Newcastle and Richmond Railroad Company have elected to intersect the Lafayette and Indianapolis Railroad at Lafayette, and are surveying and locating their road to that point; that their route passes the Peru and Indianapolis railroad at Kokomo, proceeds thence to Logansport, a point forty miles north of a direct line from Newcastle to Lafayette, and thence to the latter place.

[466]*466An injunction is prayed and was awarded by the Court below.

It is sought to sustain, in this Court, the injunction granted, mainly on three grounds:

1. That the western terminus of the extension of the Newcastle and Richmond railroad not being fixed by law, the grant of the right to make said extension is void. The argument is, that, to construct a railroad, it is necessary to take private property; that private property can be taken forcibly only for public use; that it is in that view only that corporations are ever authorized to take it; and that before a corporation can so take it, in any particular case, it is necessary that the legislature should declare that the public use demands it in that case.. In other words, that it is necessary, when the legislature attempts to transfer to a corporation the power to take private property for the construction of a railroad, that the legislature should expressly fix the termini of the road, thereby saying that the public interest requires a road connecting said termini, and that, hence, private property between them may be taken to make it.

We shall not now express an opinion upon the legal proposition assumed in the above argument, but shall limit ourselves to a denial of some of the material facts asserted as the basis of the legal proposition, viz., that the terminus to which the Newcastle and Richmond railroad may be extended is not fixed, and, hence, that the public use of the extension has not been declared. We think both these things have been done. A company had been chartered for the construction of a railroad from Richmond, on the eastern border of the state, north-westerly to Newcastle. Railroads were also in process of construction from Peru and from Lafayette, on the Wabash river, to Indianapolis. By extending the Richmond and Newcastle railroad to an intersection with either the Peru or Lafayette railroad, the first above-named road would be connected with an important point on the Wabash river and the Wabash and Erie canal. Such connection we understand the legislature to have regarded as of public utility and to [467]*467have authorized. It was not material to this public utility that the connection mentioned should be made at any particular point on either the Peru or Lafayette railroad. The public interest would be well subserved by a connection at any point on either, and the choice between the roads, and the particular point for the connection with the one selected, were left to the discretion of the corporation. The only limitation imposed was, that the connection should be by an intersection, that is, by cutting into the road selected. The connection, therefore, must be made at some point south of the northern and north of the southern terminus of the Lafayette railroad, that being the one chosen for intersection.

2. It is contended that if the Richmond and Newcastle company were authorized to extend their road to some point on the Lafayette and Indianapolis railroad, then they were bound to make the extension in a direct line to that point, and could not deviate from such a line 40 miles north to Logansport. When the legislature authorizes the construction of a railroad between two designated points, no intermediate point being named, undoubtedly, where the routes between said fixed points are equally feasible, the most direct would be contemplated. But where there is a difference in the feasibility of routes some reasonable discretion must be allowed in the selection of that to be followed. To how great an extent a deviation from a direct line would be permitted, we are not called upon now to decide, as there is no allegation in the bill in the present case that there is any feasible route between Newcastle and the point selected for an intersection of the Lafayette and Indianapolis railroad, except that chosen by the way of Logansport. If there be any such it must be alleged in an amendment to the bill.

3. The third ground insisted on is, that the Richmond and Newcastle railroad cannot be extended to the Lafayette and Indianapolis railroad without crossing the Peru and Indianapolis railroad, and that it cannot cross that road without violating exclusive rights vested in the company constructing said road.

[468]*4681. It is claimed that the Peru and Indianapolis railroad company have the exclusive right to the use of the ground over which the track of their road passes; and,

2. That they have the exclusive right of furnishing the facilities for transportation for an indefinite region of country round about their road.

We cannot admit that either of these claims is well grounded.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Ind. 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newcastle-richmond-railroad-v-peru-indianapolis-railroad-ind-1852.