Railroad Co. v. Tyree

7 W. Va. 693, 1874 W. Va. LEXIS 44
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 7 W. Va. 693 (Railroad Co. v. Tyree) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Railroad Co. v. Tyree, 7 W. Va. 693, 1874 W. Va. LEXIS 44 (W. Va. 1874).

Opinion

HaYMOND, PRESIDENT :

This is a proceeding of the -plaintiff against the defendant to condemn a part of the defendant Tyree^s land for the purposes and uses of plaintiff in constructing, maintaining and using its Railroad. The proceedings were had under the forty-second chapter of the Code of this State. It is agreed by the parties that the application by the plaintiff was duly and properly made according to the statute; that the notice was duly served on the defendant; that the commissioners were regularly appointed according to the provisions of section eleven of chapter forty-two of the Code; that the commissioners were duly sworn, and a certificate of their oath returned with their report, and that said Tyree was duly notified of the time and place of the meeting of the commissioners on the land proposed to be taken, and that he was present with them at the time of the valuation. The report of the commissioners is, on its face, in substance, as well as form, in accordance with the provisions of the fourteenth section of chapter forty-two of the Code and is signed by the five commissioners. The [695]*695defendant, on the report being returned to the circuit court of Fayette county, in which county the land is' situate, filed three several exceptions thereto, of which it is only necessary to consider the third, which is as follows, viz:

“Because the commissioners, in making their assessment of damages, adopted an erroneous principle which misled them. They assessed the then value of the land without reference to any enhanced value which the prospect of the road had imparted to that land, in common with all the other lands adjoining and contiguous to the line of the Road.” The case was on the 3rd day of September, 1873, heard by the court on the report, and the exceptions filed thereto, and the facts as agreed by the parties. Among the facts agreed are those numbered seventh, eighth and ninth, and they are as follows:

“Seventh. That the commissioners, in ascertaining a just compensation to the defendant, for the land and damages mentioned in their report, valued said land without reference to any enhancement of its exchangeable value existing, on the day of the valuation, by the commissioners, and given to it by the contemplated building of said Railroad, butestimated it at its actual value at the time without reference to any enhanced value given to said land by reason of the prospective construction of the applicant’s Railroad through said land.”

“Eighth. That if said commissioners had estimated said land according to the enhanced value at the time, based on the prospective building of plaintiff’s Railroad, through said land, which enhanced value was common to other lands along the said road, the assessment would have been considerably larger.”

“Ninth. That the said Railroad was not built at the time of said assessment along the line, and at that point, but was in process of construction along the line and at that point.”

The court, on the facts agreed, aforesaid, sustained said third exception to the report, and gave no opinion [696]*696as to the other two exceptions, and adjudged and or“dered, that the report be set aside and recommitted to the same commissioners for a further report to be made according to law. To which opinion and decision of the court the plaintiff excepted. To this opinion and decision, on the application of plaintiff, a supersedeas has been allowed, and the question to be determined is whether the circuit court erred in its said decision.

The fourteenth section of the forty-second chapter of the Code provides' that as to each tract, the commissioners after viewing the same and hearing any proper evidence which is offered shall ascertain what will be a just compensation to the person entitled thereto, for so much thereof as is proposed to be taken, and for damage to the residue of the tract, beyond the peculiar benefits to be derived in respect to such residue from the work to be constructed, for the purpose to which the land to be taken is to be appropriated and make report, &c. This section of the Code so far as I have quoted from it is taken from the tenth section of the fifty-sixth chapter of the code of Virginia of 1860, which was in force in this State so far as relates to this subject, as now recollected, up to the time the Code o± this State took effect, and it is intended to be in accordance with the principles decided by the Court of Appeals of Virginia in 1838, in the case of the James River and Kanawha Company v. Turner, 9 Leigh. 313, so far as the principles there decided apply thereto. Although that decision was made by less than a full court, and by a majority of those present, its correctness has since been recognized by the same court. See Muire v. Falconer 10 Gratt., 17 and 18. The general legislation in Virginia and this State upon the subject has, so far as I am advised, conformed to the principles held in the case cited in 9 Leigh. The charter of the J. K.. and K. Company provided, that the assessors for ascertaining damages to proprietors of lands required for the Company’s canal and improvement, should take into consideration the quantity and quality of the land to be [697]*697condemned, the additional fencing that will be required thereby, and all other inconveniences that will result to" the proprietor from the condemnation thereof, “and shall combine therewith a just regard to the advantages which the owner of the land will derive from the improvement, for the use of which his land is condemned.” Held that the advantages to be derived to the ownér of the land condemned for the Company’s use, from the improvement to which the charter requires the assessors to have regard, are such advantages as particularly and exclusively affect the particular tract or parcel of land whereof a portion is condemned — not advantages of a general character which may be derived to the owner in common with the country at large from the improvement. And it seems that, if the charter had provided that advantages'of a general character, which the owner of the land condemned may derive from the improvement in common with the country at large should'be set-off against the actual value of the land condemned and the actual damages sustained by the owner, such a provision would have been unconstitutional.” 9 Leigh., 313.

The facts agreed in the case under consideration fairly construed certainly mean that the commissioners did assess or ascertain the actual value oi the defendant’s land at .the time when taken, without reference to any enhanced value given to the land in common with other land owners along the line of the road by reason of the prospective construction of the plaintiff’s Nailroad through the land. Said fourteenth section of the Code evidently means that the commissioners shall ascertain what will be a just compensation to the owner for so much thereof as is taken, at the time it is taken. The question here arises, what is a just compensation for the land taken in the sense and meaning of the law and constitution ? If the owner of the land proposed to be taken gets its actual value at the time when taken by the railroad compa[698]

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Bluebook (online)
7 W. Va. 693, 1874 W. Va. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/railroad-co-v-tyree-wva-1874.