St. Louis, Hannibal & Kansas City Railway Co. v. Hannibal Union Depot Co.

28 S.W. 483, 125 Mo. 82, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 369
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 26, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 28 S.W. 483 (St. Louis, Hannibal & Kansas City Railway Co. v. Hannibal Union Depot Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Louis, Hannibal & Kansas City Railway Co. v. Hannibal Union Depot Co., 28 S.W. 483, 125 Mo. 82, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 369 (Mo. 1894).

Opinion

Macfarlane, J.

The proceedings were to condemn for a railway track of defendant’s railroad a part of the land acquired and held by the defendant for union depot purposes in the city of Hannibal.

It appears from the evidence that the defendant was incorporated under the general laws of the state, (R. S. 1879, see. 826; R. S. 1889, sec, 2667) for the purpose of constructing, establishing and maintaining a union station for passengers in the city of Hannibal; that for the purposes of its incorporation it acquired a tract of land in the eastern portion of the city. The [88]*88greater portion of this land lay on the north side of. Bear creek, a stream flowing easterly, and from fifty to seventy feet in width. A portion of the land was described as out lot 41, which was acquired by purchase. This lot was triangular in shape, the north side being substantially coincident with the north bank of the creek. The other two sides crossed the creek and came near uniting at Monroe street about one hundred feet south of the creek. The point of the triangle was cut off by Monroe street thus making the south part of the lot front sixty-three feet on Monroe street. This lot then covered a small portion of land north of Bear creek, the whole width of that stream and that south of it as above described. The bulk of defendant’s station grounds lay north of the creek, the track of the M. K. & T. R’y Co. lying between these grounds and the creek.

On the grounds north of the creek the defendant had constructed and maintained a large, convenient and expensive depot building with extensive sheds, with a number of railroad tracks running into them, from the northeast, also one or more tracks on the north side of the building. The cost of the entire property was estimated at $160,000. No part of the improvements were on the land south of the creek.

It was shown that Hannibal was a city of about fifteen thousand inhabitants; that six or seven railroads centered there, all of which used this depot for receiving and unloading passengers, and that from forty-eight to fifty passenger trains come into the depot daily.

The evidence of the defendant was to the effect that Bear creek was a small stream generally dry, and could easily be bridged and the ground south of it easily utilized for building tracks into the depot; that this land was intended for depot purposes when the neces[89]*89sities of business required that it should be so applied; that every available space of the ground north of the creek was already occupied and the company was crowded for room, and that the passenger traffic was constantly increasing.

Plaintiff is a railroad corporation authorized under the general laws of the state with power to construct and operate a road from Perry, in Ralls county, to the city of Hannibal, a distance of about thirty-two miles. By this proceeding plaintiff sought to appropriate a strip of land fifty feet wide and ninety-four feet long through the south end of the depot land lying south of the creek. This would leave an irregular piece of the land south of the road of the dimensions of twenty feet on the west, sixty-two feet on the south, seventy-six feet on the east, and ninety-four feet on the north side. Defendant filed written objections to the proceedings, the grounds of which in substance were afterwards renewed in exceptions filed to the report of the commissioners. The evidence was heard by the court before the appointment of commissioners. The court found, and so declared in its judgment, that “plaintiff has the power to condemn over defendant’s unused and unapplied vacant land south of Bear creek a right of way for through main track passage and travel.”

Commissioners were thereupon appointed. The court in substance instructed the commissioners that in estimating the damages, in addition to the value of the land appropriated they should estimate “the depreciation, if any, in the reasonable market value of the defendant’s remaining real estate and plant, caused by the taking of said right of way strip from said property, and by injurious affection of defendant’s said property and plant, directly caused by the presence of plaintiff’s railway on said strip and the operation of plaintiff’s [90]*90railroad in transportation thereon, and the sum of said reasonable, actual market value of said strip so taken, and all said damages, if any, will be the measure of defendant’s damages.”.

The jury afterwards reported: “We hereby assess the damage, sustained for said strip and said corner cut off, at the sum of four hundred dollars, and for damages, as sustained to that part of said depot tract lying between said strip and Bear creek, we assess at the sum of $200, as will more fully appear by the map or plat hereto annexed marked ‘Exhibit A,’ and that the damages assessed by us in full is the sum of $600.”

Defendants filed exceptions to the report of the commissioners on the grounds: That, under the petition and evidence, plaintiff had no legal right to appropriate the land of defendant for the purposes named; that no necessity for the appropriation was shown; and that the commissioners were improperly instructed. The exceptions were overruled and judgment of condemnation was entered in favor of plaintiffs, and for the amount of damages awarded in favor of defendants. Defendants appealed.

It may be stated further that the evidence offered by plaintiff tended to prove that defendant’s property and business would not be materially affected by the appropriation sought.

I. It is insisted in the first place that the power to.construct a railroad from the city of Hannibal to another designated point in the state does not sufficiently designate the terminal point in said city and consequently no power existed, under the charter of plaintiff, to extend its road through a part of the city to the wiion depot. The charter contains no restrictions, express or implied, as to the point or terminus in the city of Hannibal. To or from a city, without other restrictions, we think fairly means to or from any point [91]*91within such city. So far as the state is concerned the grant to plaintiff confers power to locate one of the termini of its road at any point in the city of Hannibal. Railroad v. Railroad, 112 Ill. 599.

II. It is insisted, and this is the substantial question in the case, that, inasmuch as defendant’s property has been devoted to one public, use, it can not lawfully be taken and applied to another inconsistent public úse, under the right of eminent domain, though a general power is given plaintiff: by charter to condemn land for its railroad.

The power of the state to appropriate private property to a public use is an inherent element of sovereignty. It applies to all property and is impliedly reserved in every grant. The property and franchises of a corporation are subject to it. The power to determine when the public interest demands its exercise rests exclusively with the legislature, subject to judicial determination “whether the contemplated use be really public.” Sec. 20, art. 2, const, of Mo. “The necessity may be left the adjudication of designated officers or tribunals; but when not so delegated, it may be declared by the legislature itself.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 S.W. 483, 125 Mo. 82, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-hannibal-kansas-city-railway-co-v-hannibal-union-depot-co-mo-1894.