R. R. v. . Manufacturing Co.

51 S.E.2d 301, 229 N.C. 695, 1949 N.C. LEXIS 657
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 7, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 51 S.E.2d 301 (R. R. v. . Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R. R. v. . Manufacturing Co., 51 S.E.2d 301, 229 N.C. 695, 1949 N.C. LEXIS 657 (N.C. 1949).

Opinion

ERVIN, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of this case. Civil action for mandatory injunction to require defendant to remove fence and other obstructions from plaintiff's right of way in the City of Hickory.

On the hearing, plaintiff sought to show the following facts:

1. That by Act of Assembly, Chap. 190, Private Laws 1895, the plaintiff was duly incorporated in this State and granted the right to construct, maintain and operate a railroad from a point on the South Carolina line in Gaston County to a point on the Tennessee line in Watauga County, with authority to acquire any railroad along any part of the route by purchase or consolidation, and with authority to acquire by condemnation or otherwise, rights of way "as is given to any other railway company in this State." (Sec. 10.)

2. By deed hearing date 30 January, 1897, the plaintiff acquired from the Chester Lenoir Narrow Gauge Railroad Company the line of railroad extending from Chester, S.C., to Lenoir, N.C. including all rights of way, property rights, powers and interest of every kind and nature thereto belonging or in any wise appertaining.

3. The Chester Lenoir Narrow Gauge Railroad Company, chartered by Act of Assembly, Chap. 25, Public Acts, 1872-73, was a consolidation of the Carolina Narrow Gauge Railroad Company and the Chester Lenoir Narrow Gauge Railroad Company of South Carolina, the consolidated company being given "all the rights, powers, privileges, immunities and franchises conferred upon the Carolina Narrow Gauge Railroad Company."

The first of these consolidated companies constructed that part of the railroad south of Hickory, and the consolidated corporation completed the line from Hickory to Lenoir in 1884. The charter of the Carolina Narrow Gauge Railroad Company, Chap. 130, Public Acts, 1871-72, provided that "whenever lands shall be required for the construction of the road . . . and for any cause the same cannot be purchased from the owner, the same may be taken at a valuation" to be fixed by five disinterested freeholders of the county, etc., after deducting the enhanced value *Page 697 and adding any particular loss, "and upon the payment or tender . . . of the amount so assessed, the title to the property so seized and appraised shall thereby vest in the said corporation . . .; And provided further, that not more than one hundred feet from the center of the road shall be allowable to be so condemned." (Sec. 7.)

4. In 1947, the plaintiff found need for additional facilities or sidetracks on the west side of its main line between the right of way of the Southern Railway Company and Twelfth Avenue in the City of Hickory. To construct these will require laying the facilities over a parcel of land within 50 feet of the center line of plaintiff's track, but presently occupied by the defendant and to which the defendant holds the underlying title in fee, deed thereto having been acquired by defendant or its predecessor in title in 1882.

Due notice was given to the defendant of plaintiff's intention, which met with objection and physical resistance. Whereupon this action was instituted for injunctive relief.

On the hearing, it was conceded that plaintiff's predecessor in title entered upon the right of way at the point in question and constructed its railroad without any condemnation of the right of way or agreement with the owner of the land as to its value, or payment or tender of its appraised worth.

It was also conceded that the actual use of the land at the point in question, by the plaintiff and its predecessors, extended no farther than the ditch banks beside the main line track. The defendant admits in its answer and says in its brief that it "has never denied the plaintiff's right of way over the land occupied and used by the road," i.e., the roadbed, main line track, drains and side ditches.

Plaintiff further conceded that, for the purposes of this suit, the authority of its predecessor was to acquire a right of way of not more than 100 feet in width.

It was admitted that the defendant or its predecessors in title had occupied and used continuously and without interference the tract of land west of the western edge of the western ditch bank to a point 50 feet from the center of defendant's line of track. This is the locus in quo.

From judgment denying the plaintiff's prayer for injunctive relief, and removing plaintiff's claim as a cloud on defendant's title, in accordance with the latter's prayer, the plaintiff appeals, assigning errors. after stating the facts as above: The case turns on the width or extent of plaintiff's right of way at the location in question. *Page 698

The plaintiff says its easement extends a distance of 50 feet on either side of the center line of its roadbed or main line track. The defendant says the right of way extends no farther than the outer banks of the side ditches along the main line track, i.e., only to the extent of the land actually "required for the construction of the road."

It is conceded that plaintiff's predecessor, Chester Lenoir Narrow Gauge Railroad Company, constructed the railroad at the point in question, without obtaining deed for the right of way or paying the assessed or appraised value of the land taken for the purpose, and that no application has ever been made by the owner or owners for the assessment of its value or to recover compensation therefor.

The question then arises: What did the railroad company acquire under these circumstances?

Manifestly the entry and taking of the right of way at the point in question by the Chester Lenoir Narrow Gauge Railroad Company in 1884 was under and by virtue of its charter. Hence, the action of the company was not that of a trespasser, but rather the act of one clothed with authority. The company was not obliged to know that compensation would be demanded but could assume from the owner's silence that he regarded the enhanced value of his land, caused by the construction of the railroad, fully the equivalent of any loss he might have sustained. McIntyre v. R. R.,67 N.C. 278.

The thesis is stated in 23 A. E. Enc. of Law (2d Ed.), at page 700, as follows: "The accepted doctrine, in most jurisdictions, now is that where a railroad company proceeds to build its road upon land to which it has not acquired title by condemnation or conveyance, the owner may have his action for damages or for the value of the land, or may maintain ejectment or other possessory action, or may enjoin the company from appropriating or using such land, provided he proceeds with reasonable promptitude; but that if the owner stands by and acquiesces, until the company has expended its money and constructed its road across his land, and until the road at that point has become a part of its railroad line, whereby the public, as well as the company, has acquired an interest in the maintenance of the enterprise, he forfeits every remedy except that of an action for compensation or damages. In such a case the railroad company is said to acquire its right of way by implied grant."

The principle announced in the above quotation finds support in our own decisions and is generally referred to as the doctrine of statutory presumption. It is usually, but not always, set out in the charter inextenso. So. Ry. Co. v. Lissenbee, 219 N.C. 318, 13 S.E.2d 561; Dowlingv. R. R., 194 N.C. 488, 140 S.E. 213; Griffith v. R. R., 191 N.C.

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Bluebook (online)
51 S.E.2d 301, 229 N.C. 695, 1949 N.C. LEXIS 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-r-v-manufacturing-co-nc-1949.