Page v. Commonwealth

160 S.E. 33, 157 Va. 325, 1931 Va. LEXIS 323
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 17, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 160 S.E. 33 (Page v. Commonwealth) 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
Page v. Commonwealth, 160 S.E. 33, 157 Va. 325, 1931 Va. LEXIS 323 (Va. 1931).

Opinion

Hudgins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The council of the city of Norfolk passed an ordinance on January 14, 1930, directing the city manager to purchase a tract of 14,841 acres of land, situated on Chesapeake bay at Little creek, for the purpose of providing a bathing beach and recreation park for the colored inhabitants of the city, and appropriating $14,841.00 for that purpose, and further providing that in the event the city manager was unable to purchase the property, which was owned by the New York, Philadelphia and Norfolk Railroad Company and under lease to the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, it should be condemned.

The city of Norfolk was unable to purchase the property from the owners. Inasmuch, therefore, as both the city and the two railway companies possessed the power of eminent domain, it became necessary for the city to obtain permission from the State Corporation Commission to institute .condemnation proceedings.

[329]*329The city filed its petition with the Commission, to which petition the New York, Philadelphia and Norfolk Railroad Company and the Pennsylvania Railroad Company filed answers admitting that the property in question was owned by the one and leased by the other; that the property was no longer essential to the purposes of either, and that they did not object to its condemnation.

Thereupon E. A. Page, Joseph Morris, W. Fay Garrett, J. W. Reed, and J. W. Watkins, for themselves and others over the objection of the petitioner, were granted leave to intervene. After a full hearing, the Commission granted the city of Norfolk the right to institute condemnation proceedings.

From this order the intervenors appealed. The city of Norfolk moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the appellants, E. A. Page and others, had -no such interest in the controversy as entitled them to become parties to the proceedings, or to appeal from the order of the State Corporation Commission. This requires the construction of section 3832 of the Code of 1919, which reads as follows:

“No corporation shall take by condemnation proceedings any property belonging to any other corporation possessing the power of eminent domain, unless after hearing all parties in interest, the State Corporation Commission shall certify that a public necessity or that an essential public convenience shall so require, and shall give its permission thereto; and in no event shall one corporation take by condemnation proceedings any property owned by and essential to the purposes of another corporation possessing the power of eminent domain.”

Prior to the adoption of section 1105e Pollard’s Code, Acts 1902-03-04, chapter 270, the law in this State was that land having been set apart for a specific public use could not be condemned by another corporation possessing the power of eminent domain, unless expressly, or by necessary impli[330]*330cation, so authorized by legislative enactment. See Alexandria, etc., Ry. Co. v. Alexandria, etc., R. Co., 75 Va. 780, 40 Am. Rep. 743; Richmond, F. & P. R. Co. v. Johnston, 103 Va. 456, 49 S. E. 496.

By the provision of the above section, the legislature has delegated to the Corporation Commission the authority, if certain conditions exist, to permit one corporation clothed with the power of eminent domain to take the property of another corporation clothed with the same power, thus designating a tribunal before which such corporations may, without unreasonable delay, settle contentions of this nature.

Primarily, then, “parties in interest,” as used in the section, means the party desiring to condemn, on the one hand, and the owner of the land, on the other. The intervenors here, however, belong to neither class. They contend that they are persons in interest because (1) they were allowed to intervene by order of the Corporation Commission; (2) that they are citizens, property owners and taxpayers of the city of Norfolk; that they own property in the immediate vicinity of and adjacent to the property sought to be condemned, and that the value of their property will be diminished if the city of Norfolk puts the property to the proposed use.

The Corporation Commission is expressly authorized by the Constitution to exercise functions which are much broader in their general scope than those ordinarily coming under the judicial department, and in the proper performance of these duties admits, and hears parties who, in the strict legal sense, are not interested in the subject matter. Permitting the appellants to intervene does not affect their status as interested parties, nor does it necessarily follow that the Commission was of opinion that they were interested parties, in the legal sense.

The city of Norfolk in undertaking to establish a [331]*331bathing beach and recreation park for the benefit of its colored citizens is not attempting to do an illegal thing. The purpose for which the city proposes to spend public monéy is within the power expressly delegated to it both by general law and its charter. Section 3032b of the Code of 1930 (Michie), reads as follows:

“Any city, town or county may establish and conduct a system of public recreation and play grounds; may set apart for such use any land, or buildings owned or leased by it; may acquire land, buildings and other recreational facilities by gift, purchase, lease, condemnation or otherwise and equip and conduct the same; * * * ”

Section 2, subsections 5 and 25, of the city charter, reads in part as follows:

“To acquire by purchase, gift, devise, condemnation or otherwise, property, real and personal, or any estate or interest therein, within or without the city or State, for any of the purposes of the city.

“To provide and maintain, either within or without the city, charitable, recreative, curative, corrective, detention or penal institutions.”

The appellants contend that they are interested parties in the sense in which that term is used in the case of Jones v. Rhea, 130 Va. 345, 107 S. E. 814, 821. That case involved the right of the minority members of the Westmoreland club in the city of Richmond to appeal from an order of the Corporation Commission authorizing a merger between the Westmoreland and the Commonwealth clubs. The court held that the interest of the minority members was immediate and direct, and that membership entitled one to certain social opportunities and enjoyments, and affords him an interest, though not a transmissible interest, in the club property, and an effort to oppose such a merger was an effort on the part of such members to assert a material right.

[332]*332In the case at bar, the interest of the citizens and taxpayers is indirect and remote and is nearer in line with the decision of this court in the case of Board of Supervisors v. Gorrell, 20 Gratt. (61 Va.) 484, in which case the board of supervisors of Culpeper county proceeded to condemn certain land for the purpose of locating thereon a court house, clerk’s office and jail. Gorrell and others sought to intervene and appeal on the ground that they were “citizens of the county, owners of real estate, and taxpayers therein,” but they did not have an interest in the land sought to be condemned. The court held that “any indirect interest they may have had in the subject as citizens, taxpayers and landowners of the county was not sufficient to make them proper parties.”

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Bluebook (online)
160 S.E. 33, 157 Va. 325, 1931 Va. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/page-v-commonwealth-va-1931.