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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
CHICAGO, B. & Q. R. CO. v. CITY OF CHICAGO, 166 U.S. 226 (1897)
166 U.S. 226
CHICAGO, B. & Q. R. CO.
v.
CITY OF CHICAGO.
No. 129.
March 1, 1897
[166 U.S. 226, 228]
John J. Herrick, for plaintiff in error.
John S. Miller, for defendant in error.
Mr. Justice HARLAN delivered the opinion of the court.
The questions presented on this writ of error relate to the
jurisdiction of this court to re-examine the final judgment of the
supreme court of Illinois, and to certain rulings of the state court,
which, it is alleged, were in disregard of that part of the fourteenth
amendment declaring that no state shall deprive any person of his
property without due process of law, or deny the equal protection of
the laws to any person within its jurisdiction.
The constitution of Illinois provides that 'no person shall be
deprived of life, liberty or property, without due process of law.'
Article 2, 2. It also provides: 'Private property shall not be taken
or damaged for public use without just compensation. Such
compensation, when not made by the state, shall be ascertained by a
jury, as shall be prescribed by law. The fee of land taken for
railroad tracks, without consent of the owners thereof, shall remain
in such owners, subject to the use for which it is taken.' Article 2,
13.
By the fifth article of the general statute of Illinois, approved
April 10, 1872, and relating to the incorporation of cities and
villages, it was provided that 'the city council shall have power, by
condemnation or otherwise, to extend any street, alley or highway over
or across, or to construct any sewer under or through any railroad
track, right of way or land of any railroad company (within the
corporate limits); but where no compensation is made to such railroad
company, the city shall restore such railroad track, right of way or
land [166 U.S. 226, 229]
to its former state, or in a sufficient manner not to
have impaired its usefulness.' 1 Starr & C. Ann. St. pp. 452, 472,
art. 5, 89.
The ninth article of the same statute declared that when the
corporate authorities of a city or village provided by ordinance for
the making of any local improvement authorized to be made, the making
of which would require that private property be taken or damaged for
public use, the city or village should file in its name a petition in
some court of record of the county praying 'that the just compensation
to be made for private property to be taken or damaged' for the
improvement or purpose specified in the ordinance be ascertained by a
jury.
That statute further provided: 'Sec. 14. Any final judgment or
judgments, rendered by said court, upon any finding or findings of any
jury or juries, shall be a lawful and sufficient condemnation of the
land or property to be taken upon the payment of the amount of such
finding as hereinafter provided. It shall be final and conclusive as
to the damages caused by such improvement, unless such judgment or
judgments shall be appealed from; but no appeal or writ of error upon
the same shall delay proceedings under said ordinance, if such city or
village shall deposit, as directed by the court, the amount of the
judgment and costs, and shall file a bond in the court in which such
judgment was rendered, in a sum to be fixed, and with security to be
approved by the judge of said court, which shall secure the payment of
any future compensation which may at any time be finally awarded to
such party so appealing or suing out such writ of error, and his or
her costs. Sec. 15. The court, upon proof that said just compensation
so found by the jury has been paid to the person entitled thereto, or
has been deposited as directed by the court, (and bond given, in case
of any appeal or writ of error,) shall enter an order that the city or
village shall have the right, at any time thereafter, to take
possession of or damage the property, in respect to which such
compensation shall have been so paid or deposited, as aforesaid.' 1
Starr & C. Ann. St. p. 487 et seq.
[166 U.S. 226, 230] All of these provisions
became a part of the charter of the city of Chicago in 1875.
By an ordinance of the city council of Chicago approved October 9,
1880, it was ordained that Rockwell street, in that city, be opened
and widened from West Eighteenth street to West Nineteenth street by
condemning therefor, in accordance with the avove act of April 10,
1872, certain parcels of land owned by individuals, and also certain
parts of the right of way in that city of the Chicago, Burlington &
Quincy Railroad Company, a corporation of Illinois.
In execution of that ordinance a petition was filed by the city,
November 12, 1890, in the circuit court of Cook county, Ill., for the
condemnation of the lots, pieces, or parcels of land and property
proposed to be taken or damaged for the proposed improvement, and
praying that the just compensation required for private property taken
or damaged be ascertained by a jury.
The parties interested in the property described in the petition,
including the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company, were
admitted as defendants in the proceeding. $In their verdict the jury
fixed the just compensation to be paid to the respective individual
owners of the lots, pieces, and parcels of land and property sought to
be taken or damaged by the proposed improvements, and fixed one dollar
as just compensation to the railroad company in respect of those parts
of its right of way described in the city'd petition as necessary to
be used for the purposes of the proposed street.
Thereupon the railroad company moved for a new trial. The motion
was overruled, and a final judgment was rendered in execution of the
award by the juty. That judgment was affirmed by the supreme court of
the state. affirmed by the supreme court of the state.
The motion by the city to dismiss the writ of error for want of
jurisdiction will be first considered. It the right now asserted under
the constitution of the United States was specifically set up or
claimed by the defendant in the state court, the motion to dismiss
must be overruled. Rev. St. U. S. 709.
[166 U.S. 226, 231] An examination of the
statues under which this proceeding was instituted will show that no
provision is made for an answer by the defendants. In Smith v.
Railroad Co., 105 Ill. 511, 516, the supreme court of Illinois said
that there was no rule of law or of practice authorizing the filing of
an answer to a petition for the condemnation of land under the eminent
domain act of that state; that the proceeding was purely statutory;
and that, although the statute was very minute in all its details,
specifically setting forth every step to be taken in the progress of a
cause from its inception to its final determination, it did not
contain any allusion to an answer by the defendants.
It is not, therefore, important that the defendant neither filed
nor offered to file an answer specially setting up or claiming a right
under the constitution of the United States. It is sufficient if it
appears from the record that such right was specially set up or
claimed in the state court in such manner as to being it to the
attention of that court.
Now, the right in question was distinctly asserted by the defendant
in its written motion to set aside the verdict, and grant a new trial.
Among the grounds for a new trial were the following: That the several
rulings of the court in excluding proper evidence for the defendant,
the statute under which the proceedings for condemnation were
instituted, and the verdict of the jury and the judgment based upon
it, were all contrary to the fourteenth amendment, declaring that no
state shall deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without
due process of law, nor deny to any person within its limits the equal
protection of the laws.
When the trial court overruled the motion for a new trial, and
entered judgment, it necessarily held adversely to these claims of
federal right.
But this is not all. In the assignment of errors filed by the
defendant in the supreme court of Illinois, these claims of rights
under the constitution of the United States were distinctly
reasserted.
It is true that the supreme court of Illinois did not, in its
opinion, expressly refer to the constitution of the United
[166 U.S. 226, 232]
States. But that circumstance is not conclusive against the
jurisdiction of this court to re-examine the final judgment of the
state court. The judgment of affirmance necessarily denied the federal
rights thus specially set up be the defendant, for that judgment could
not have been rendered without deciding adversely to such claims of
right. Those claims went to the very foundation of the whole
proceeding so far as it related to the railroad company, and the legal
effect of the judgment of the supreme court of the state was to deny
them. 'The true and rational rule,' this court said in Bridge
Proprietors v. Hoboken Co., 1 Wall. 116, 143, 'is that the court must
be able to see clearly, from the whole record, that a certain
provision of the constitution or act of congress was relied on by the
party who brings the writ of error, and that the right thus claimed by
him was denied.' In Roby v. Colehour,
146 U.S. 153, 159 , 13 S. Sup. Ct. 47, it was said that: 'Our
jurisdiction being invoked upon the ground that a right or immunity,
specially set up and claimed under the constitution or authority of
the United States, has been denied by the judgment sought to be
reviewed, it must appear from the record of the case either that the
right so set up and claimed was expressly denied, or that such was the
necessary effect in law of the judgment.' De Saussure v. Gaillard,
127 U.S. 216, 234 , 8 S. Sup. Ct. 1053; Brown v. Atwell,
92 U.S. 327 ; Insurance Co. v. Needles,
113 U.S. 574, 577 , 5 S. Sup. Ct. 681; Sayward v. Denny,
158 U.S. 180, 183 , 15 S. Sup. Ct. 777. There is we conceive, no
room to doubt that the legal effect of the judgment below was to
declare that the rights asserted by the defendant under the national
constitution were not infringed by the proceedings in the case.
Consequently, the motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction must be
overruled, and we proceed to examine the case upon its merits.
The general contentions of the railroad company are:
That the judgment of the state court whereby a public street is
opented across its land used for railroad purposes, and whereby
compensation to the extent of one dollar only is awarded, deprives it
of its property without due process of law, contrary to the
prohibitions of the fourteenth amendment; and
[166 U.S. 226, 233]
That the railroad company was entitled, by reason of the
opening of the street, to recover as compensation a sum equal to the
difference between the value of the fee of the land sought to be
crossed, without any restrictions on its right to use the land for any
lawful purpose, and the value of the land burdened with a perpetual
right in the public to use it for the purpose of a street subject to
the right of the company or those acquiring title under it to use it
only for railroad tracks, or any purpose for which the same could be
used without interfering with its use by the public.
The city contends that the question as to the amount of
compensation to be awarded to the railroad company was one of local
law merely, and, as that question was determined in the mode
prescribed by the constitution and laws of Illinois, the company
appearing and having full opportunity to be heard, the requirement of
due process of law was observed. If this position be sound, it is an
end of the case, and we need not determine whether the state court
erred in not recognizing the principles of law embodied in the
instructions asked by the railroad company.
It is therefore necessary to inquire at the outset whether 'due
process of law' requires compensation to be made or secured to the
owner of private property taken for publc use, and also as to the
circumstances under which the final judgment of the highest court of a
state in a proceeding instituted to condemn such property for public
use may be reviewed by this court.
It is not contended-as it could not be-that the constitution of
Illionis deprives the railroad company of any right secured by the
fourteenth amendment. For the state constitution not only declares
that no person shall be deprived of his property without due process
of law, but that private property shall not be taken or damaged for
public use without just compensation. But it must be observed that the
prohibitions of the amendment refer to all the instrumentalities of
the state,-to its legislative, executive, and judicial
authorities,-and therefore whoever, by virtue of public position under
a state government, deprives another of any right protected by that
[166 U.S. 226, 234]
amendment against deprivation by the state, 'violates the
constitutional inhibition; and as he acts in the name and for the
state, and is clothed with the state's power, his act is that of the
state.' This must be so, or, as we have often said, the constitutional
prohibition has no meaning, and 'the state has clothed one of its
agents with power to annul or evade it.' Ex parte Virginia,
100 U.S. 339, 346 , 347 S.; Neal v. Delaware,
103 U.S. 370 ; Yick Wo v. Hopkins,
118 U.S. 356 , 6 Sup. Ct. 1064; Gibson v. Mississippi,
162 U.S. 579 , 16 Sup. Ct. 904. These principles were enforced in
the recent case of Scott v. McNeal,
154 U.S. 34 , 14 Sup. Ct. 1108, in which it was held that the
prohibitions of the fourteenth amendment extended to 'all acts of the
state, whether through its legislative, its executive, or its judicial
authorities'; and consequently it was held that a judgment of the
highest court of a state, by which a purchaser at an administration
sale, under an order of a probate court, of land belonging to a living
person who had not been notified of the proceedings, deprived him of
his property without due process of law, contrary to the fourteenth
amendment.
Nor is the contention that the railroad company has been deprived
of its property without due process of law entirely met by the
suggestion that it had due notice of the proceedings for condemnation,
appeared in court, and was permitted to make defense. It is true that
this court has said that a trial in a court of justice according to
the modes of proceeding applicable to such a case, secured by laws
operating on all alike, and not subjecting the individual to the
arbitrary exercise of the powers of government unrestrained by the
established principles of private right and distributive justice,-the
court having jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties,
and the defendant having full opportunity to be heard,-met the
requirement of due process of law. U. S. v. Cruikshank,
92 U.S. 542 , 554; Leeper v. Texas,
139 U.S. 462, 468 , 11 S. Sup. Ct. 577. But a state may not, by
any of its agencies, disregard the prohibitions of the fourteenth
amendment. Its judicial authorities may keep within the letter of the
statute prescribing forms of procedure in the courts, and give the
parties interested the fullest opportunity to be heard, and yet
[166 U.S. 226, 235]
it might be that its final action would be inconsistent with
that amendment. In determining what is due process of law, regard must
be had to substance, not to form. This court, referring to the
fourteenth amendment, has said: 'Can a state make anything due process
of law which, by its own legislation, it chooses to declare such? To
affirm this is to hold that the prohibition to the states is of no
avail, or has no application, where the invasion of private rights is
effected under the forms of state legislation.' Davidson v. New
Orleans,
96 U.S. 97 , 102. The same question could be propounded, and the
same answer should be made, in reference to judicial proceedings
inconsistent with the requirement of due process of law. If
compensation for private property taken for public use is an essential
element of due process of law as ordained by the fourteenth amendment,
then the final judgment of a state court, under the authority of which
the property is in fact taken, is to be deemed the act of the state,
within the meaning of that amendment.
It is proper now to inquire whether the due process of law enjoined
by the fourteenth amendment requires compensation to be made or
adequately secured to the owner of private property taken for public
use under the authority of a state.
In Davidson v. New Orleans, above cited, it was said that a statute
declaring in terms, without more, that the full and exclusive title to
a described piece of land belonding to one person should be and is
hereby vested in another person, would, if effectual, deprive the
former of his property without due process of law, within the meaning
of the fourteenth amendment. See, also, Missouri Pac. Ry. Co. v.
State,
164 U.S. 403, 417 , 17 S. Sup. Ct. 130. Such an enactment would
not receive judicial sanction in any country having a written
constitution distributing the powers of government among three
co-ordinate departments, and committing to the judiciary, expressly or
by implication, authority to enforce the provisions of such
constitution. It would be treated, not as an exertion of legislative
power, but as a sentence,-an act of spoliation. Due protection of the
rights of property has been regarded as a vital principle of
[166 U.S. 226, 236]
republican institutions. 'Next in degree to the right of
personal liberty,' Mr. Broom, in his work on Constitutional Law, says,
'is that of enjoying private property without undue interference or
molestation.' Page 228. The requirement that the property shall not be
taken for public use without just compensation is but 'an affirmance
of a great doctrine established by the common law for the protection
of private property. It is founded in natural equity, and is laid down
as a principle of universal law. Indeed, in a free government, almost
all other rights would become worthless if the government possessed an
uncontrollable power over the private fortune of every citzen.' 2
Story, Const. 1790; 1 Bl. Comm. 138, 139; Cooley, Const. Lim. *559;
People v. Platt, 17 Johns. 195, 215; Bradshaw v. Rogers, 20 Johns.
103, 106; Petition of Mt. Washington Road Co., 4 N. H. 134, 142;
Parham v. Justices of Inferior Court, 9 Ga. 341, 348; Ex parte Martin,
8 Eng. (Ark.) 199, 206, et seq.; Johnston v. Rankin, 70 N. C. 550,
555.
But if, as this court has adjudged, a legislative enactment,
assuming arbitrarily to take the property of one individual and give
it to another individual, would not be due process of law, as enjoined
by the fourteenth amendment, it must be that the requirement of due
process of law in that amendment is applicable to the direct
appropriation by the state to public use, and without compensation, of
the private property of the citizen. The legislature may prescribe a
form of procedure to be observed in the taking of private property for
public use, but it is not due process of law if provision be not made
for compensation. Notice to the owner to appear in some judicial
tribunal and show cause why his property shall not be taken for public
use without compensation would be a mockery of justice. Due process of
law, as applied to judicial proceedings instituted for the taking of
private property for public use means. therefore, such process as
recognizes the right of the owner to be compensated if his property be
wrested from him and transferred to the public. The mere form of the
proceeding instituted against the owner, even if he be admitted to
defend, cannot convert the process used
[166 U.S. 226, 237]
into due proces of law, if the necessary result be to deprive
him of his property without compensation.
In Fletcher v. Peck, 6 Cranch, 87, 135, 136, this court, speaking
by Chief Justice Marshall, said: 'It may well be doubted whether the
nature of society and of government does not prescribe some limits to
the legislative power; and, if any be prescribed, where are they to be
found, if the property of an individual, fairly and honestly acquired,
may be seized without compensation? To the legislature all legislative
power is granted, but the question whether the act of transferring the
property of an individual to the public be in the nature of
legislative power is well worthy of serious reflection.'
In Loan Ass'n v. Topeka, 20 Wall. 655, 663, Mr. Justice Miller,
delivering the judgment of this court, after observing that there were
private rights in every free government beyond the control of the
state, and that a government, by whatever name it was called, under
which the property of citizens was at the absolute disposition and
unlimited control of any depository of power, was, after all, but a
despotism, said: 'The theory of our governments, state and national,
is opposed to the deposit of unlimited power anywhere. The executive,
the legislative, and the judicial branches of these governments are
all of limited and defined powers. There are limitations on such
power, which grow out of the essential nature of all free governments,
implied reservations of individual rights, without which the social
compact could not exist, and which are respected by all governments
entitled to the name.' No court, he said, would hesitate to adjudge
void any statute declaring that 'the homestead now owned by A. should
no longer be his, but should henceforth be the property of B.' In
accordance with these principles it was held in that case that the
property of the citizen could not be taken under the power of taxation
to promote private objects, and, therefore, that a statute authorizing
a town to issue its bonds in aid of a manufacturing enterprise of
individuals was void because the object was a private, not a public,
one. See, also, Cole v. La Grange,
113 U.S. 1 , 5 Sup. Ct. 416.
In the early case of Gardner v. Newburgh, 2 Johns. Ch
[166 U.S. 226, 238]
162, there being no provision in the constitution of the
state of New York on the subject, Chancellor Kent said that it was a
principle of natural equity, recognized by all temperate and civilized
governments, from a deep and universal sense of its justice, that fair
compensation be made to the owner of private property taken for public
use. In Sinnickson v. Johnson, 17 N. J. Law, 129, 145, it was held to
be a settled principle of universal law, reaching back of all
constitutional provisions, that the right to compensation was an
incident to the exercise of the power of eminent domain; that the one
was so inseparably connected with the other that they may be said to
exist, not as separate and distinct principles, but as parts of one
and the same principle; and that the legislature 'can no more take
private property for public use without just compensation than if this
restraining principle were incorporated into, and made part of, its
state constitution.' These cases are referred to with approval in
Pumpelly v. Green Bay Co., 13 Wall. 166, 178, and in Monongahela Nav.
Co. v. U. S.,
148 U.S. 312, 325 , 13 S. Sup. Ct. 622, 626, this court saying in
the latter case: 'And in this there is a natural equity which commends
it to every one. It in no wise detracts from the power of the public
to take whatever may be necessary for it uses; while, on the other
hand, it prevents the public from loading upon one individual more
than his just share of the burdens of government, and says that, when
he surrenders to the public something more and different from that
which is exacted from other members of the public, a full and just
equivalent shall be returned to him.'
In Searl v. School Dist.,
133 U.S. 553, 562 , 10 S. Sup. Ct. 374, and in Sweet v. Rechel,
159 U.S. 380, 398 , 16 S. Sup. Ct. 43, the court said that it was
a condition precedent to the exercise of the power of eminent domain
that the statute make provision for reasonable compensation to the
owner.
In Scott v. Toledo, 36 Fed. 385, 395, 396, the late Mr. Justice
Jackson, while circuit judge, and occasion to consider this question.
After full consideration that able judge said: 'Whatever may have been
the power of the states on this subject prior to the adoption of the
fourteenth amendment
[166 U.S. 226, 239] to the constitution, it seems clear
that, since that amendment went into effect, such limitations and
restraints have been placed upon their power in dealing with
individual rights that the states cannot now lawfully appropriate
private property for the public benefit or to public uses without
compensation to the owner, and that any attempt so to do, whether done
in pursuance of a constitutional provision or legislative enactment,
whether done by the legislature itself or under delegated authority by
one of the subordinate agencies of the state, and whether done
directly, by taking the property of one person and vesting it in
another or the public, or indirectly, through the forms of law, by
appropriating the property and requiring the owner thereof to
compensate himself, or to refund to another the compensation to which
he is entitled, would be wanting in that 'due process of law' required
by said amendment. The conclusion of the court on this question is
that, since the adoption of the fourteenth amendment, compensation for
private property taken for public uses constitutes an essential
element in 'due process of law,' and that without such compensation
the appropriation of private property to public uses, no matter under
what form of procedure it is taken, would violate the provisions of
the federal constitution.' To the same effect are Henderson v. Railway
Co., 21 Fed. 359, and Baker v. Village of Norwood, 74 Fed. 997.
In Mt. Hope Cemetery v. City of Boston, 158 Mass. 509, 519, 33 N.
E. 695, 698, in which the fourteenth amendment was invoked against a
statute requiring the city of Boston to transfer certain cemetery
property owned by it to a particular company, the court said: 'The
conclusion to which we have come is that the cemetery falls within the
class of property which the city owns in its private or proprietary
character, as a private corporation might own it, and that its
ownership is protected under the constitutions of Massachusetts and of
the United States, so that the legislature has no power to require its
transfer without compensation,'- citing the constitution of
Massachusetts, declaration of rights (article 10), and the fourteenth
amendment of the constitution of the United States.
[166 U.S. 226, 240]
In his work on Constitutional Limitations, Mr. Cooley says:
'The principles, then upon which the process is based, are to
determine whether it is 'due process' or not, and not any
considerations of mere form. ... When the government, through its
established agencies, interferes with the title to one's property, or
with his independent enjoyment of it, and its action is called in
question as not in accordance with the law of the land, we are to test
its validity by those principles of civil liberty and constitutional
protection which have become established in our system of laws, and
not generally by the rules that pertain to forms of procedure merely.
In judicial proceedings the law of the land requires a hearing before
condemnation, and judgment before dispossession; but when property is
appropriated by the government to public uses, or the legislature
interferes to give direction to its title through remedial statutes,
different considerations from those which regard the controversies
between man and man must prevail, different proceedings are required,
and we have only to see whether the interference can be justified by
the established rules applicable to the special case. Due process of
law in each particular case means such an exertion of the powers of
government as the settled maxims of law permit and sanction and under
such safeguards for the protection of individual rights as those
maxims prescribe for the class of cases to which the one in question
belongs. ... In every government there is inherent authority to
appropriate the property of the citizen for the necessities of the
state, and constitutional provisions do not confer the power, though
they generally surround it with safeguards to prevent abuse. The
restraints are that, when specific property is taken, a pecumary
compensation, agreed upon or determined by judicial inquiry, must be
paid.' Pages *356, *357. In his discussion as to the meaning and scope
of the fourteenth amendment, the same writer, in his edition of Story
on the Constitution, after observing that every species of individual
property was subject to be appropriated for the special needs of
either the state or national government, but that the power to
appropriate was subject to the restriction, among others, that it must
[166 U.S. 226, 241]
not be exercised without making due compensation for whatever
is taken, says: 'Due process of law requirest-First, the legislative
act authorizing the appropriation, pointing out how it may be made and
how the compensation shall be assessed; and, second, that the parties
or officers proceeding to make the appropriation shall keep within the
authority conferred, and observe every regulation which the act makes
for the protection or in the interest of the property owner, except as
he may see fit voluntarily to waive them.' 2 Story, Const. 1956.
In our opinion, a judgment of a state court, even if it be
authorized by statute, whereby private property is taken for the state
or under its direction for public use, without compensation made or
secured to the owner, is, upon principle and authority, wanting in the
due process of law required by the fourteenth amendment of the
constitution of the United States, and the affirmance of such judgment
by the highest court of the state is a denial by that state of a right
secured to the owner by that instrument.
It remains to inquire whether the necessary effect of the
proceedings in the court below was to appropriate to the public use
any property right of the railroad company without compensation being
made or secured to the owner.
The contention of the railroad company is that the verdict and
judgment for one dollar as the amount to be paid to it was, in effect,
an appropriation of its property rights without any compensation
whatever; that the judgment should be read as if, in form as well as
in fact, it made no provision whatever for compensation for the
property so appropriated.
Undoubtedly the verdict may not unreasonably be taken as meaning
that in the judgment of the jury the company's property, proposed to
be taken, was not materially damaged; that is, looking at the nature
of the property, and the purposes for which it was obtained and was
being used, that which was taken from the company was not, in the
judgment of the jury, of any substantial value in money. The owner of
private property taken under the right of eminent domain obtains just
compensation if he is awarded such sum as, under all the
[166 U.S. 226, 242]
circumstances, is a fair and full equivalent for the thing
taken from him by the public.
If the opening of the street across the railroad tracks did not
unduly interfere with the company's use of the right of way for
legitimate railroad purposes, then its compensation would be nominal.
But whether there was such an interference, what was its extent, and
what was the value of that lost by the company as the direct result of
such interference, were questions of fact, which the state committed
to the jury under such instructions touching the law as were proper
and necessary. It was for the jury to determine the facts, but it
belonged to the court to detemine the legal principles by which they
were to be governed in fixing the amount of compensation to the owner.
Whatever may have been the power of the trial court to set aside
the verdict as not awarding just compensation, or the authority of the
supreme court of Illinois, under the constitution and laws of the
state, to review the facts, can this court go behind the final
judgment of the state court for the purpose of re-examining and
weighing the evidence, and of determining whether, upon the facts, the
jury erred in not returning a verdict in favor of the railroad company
for a larger sum than one dollar? This question may be considered in
two aspects: First, with reference to the seventh amendment of the
constitution, providing that 'in suits at common law, where the value
in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury
shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury shall be otherwise
re-examined in any court of the United States, than according to the
rules of the common law'; second, with reference to the statute (Rev.
St. 709) which provides that the final judgment of the highest court
of a state in certain named cases may be re-examined in this court
upon writ of error.
It is clear that the last clause of the seventh amendment is not
restricted in its application to suits at common law tried before
juries in the courts of the United States. It applies equally to a
case tried before a jury in a state court, and brought here by writ of
error from the highest court of the
[166 U.S. 226, 243] state. One of the
objections made to the acceptance of the constitution as it came from
the hands of the convention of 1787 was that it did not, in express
words, preserve the right of trial by jury, and that, under it, facts
tried by a jury could be re-examined by the courts of the United
States otherwise than according to the rules of the common law. The
seventh amendment was intended to meet these objections, and to
deprive the courts of the United States of any such authority. It
could not have been intended thus to restrict the power of the courts
of the United States to re-examine facts tried by juries in the courts
of the Union, and leave it open for those courts to re-examine, in
disregard of the rules of the common law, facts tried by juries
impaneled in the state courts in cases which, by reason of the
questions involved in them, could be brought under the cognizance of
the courts of the United States.
In Justices v. Murray, 9 Wall. 274, 278,-a case removed from a
state court to a circuit court of the United States after verdict in
the state court, and brought from the latter court to this court by
writ of error,- the question was presented as to the constitutionality
of so much of the fifth section of the act of March 3, 1863, c. 81 (12
Stat. 755), as authorized the removal of a judgment in a state court,
in which the case was tried by a jury, to the circuit court of the
United States for a retrial on the facts and the law. The argument was
made that as by the construction uniformly given to the first clause
of the amendment the suits there mentioned were only those in the
federal courts, the words 'and no fact tried by a jury,' mentioned in
the second clause, relate to trial by jury only in such courts. But
this court said: 'It is admitted that the clause applies to the
appellate powers of the supreme court of the United States in all
common-law cases coming up from an inferior federal court, and also to
the circuit court in like cases, in the exercise of its appellate
powers. And why not as it respects the exercise of these powers in
cases of federal cognizance coming up from a state court? The terms of
the amendment are general, and contain no qualification in respect of
the restriction [166
U.S. 226, 244] upon the appellate jurisdiction of the
courts, except as to the class of cases (namely, suits at common law)
where the trial had been by jury. The natural inference is that no
other was intended. Its language, upon any reasonable, if not
necessary, interpretation, we think, applies to this entire class, no
matter from what court the case comes, of which cognizance can be
taken by the appellate court. It seems to us also that cases of
federal cognizance, coming up from state courts are not only within
the words, but are also within the reason and policy, of the
amendment. They are cases involving questions arising under the
constitution, the laws of the United States, and treaties, or under
some other federal authority, and therefore are as completely within
the exercise of the judicial power the United States-as much so-as if
the cases had been originally brought in some inferior federal court.
No other cases tried in the state courts can be brought under the
appellate jurisdiction of this court, or any inferior federal court on
which appellate jurisdiction may have been conferred. The case must be
one involving some federal question, and it is difficult to perceive
any sensible reason for the distinction that is attempted to be made
between the re-examination by the appellate court of a cause coming
from an inferior federal court, and one of the class above mentioned
coming up form a state court. In both instances the cases are to be
disposed of by the same system of laws, and by the same judicial
tribunal.' It was therefore held that congress could not authorize a
circuit court of the United States, upon the removal of a case tried
by a jury in a state court, to retry 'the facts and law.'
Upon the reasoning in the case just referred to, it would seem to
be clear that the last clause of the seventh amendment forbids the
retrial by this court of the facts tried by the jury in the present
case. This conclusion is not affected by the circumstance that this
proceeding is to be referred to the state's power of eminent domain,
in which class of cases it had been held that, in the absence of
express constitutional provisions on the subject, the owner of private
property taken for public use cannot claim, as of right, that his
compensation [166 U.S.
226, 245] shall be ascertained by a common-law jury. The
reason for this rule is that before the establishment of the
government of the United States it had been the practice in this
country and in England to ascertain by commissioners, special
tribunals, and other like agencies the compensation to be made to
owners of private property taken for public use, and it was not to be
supposed that the general provisions in American constitutions,
national and state, preserving the right of trial by jury, superseded
that practice. Lewis, Em. Dom. pp. 311, 312, and authorities cited.
But, in Illinois, such practice is not permitted in cases of the
condemnation of private property for public use. The state
constitution of 1848 provided that 'the right of trial by jury shall
remain inviolate and shall extend to all cases at law without regard
to the amount in controversay.' Article 13, 6. The constitution of
1870 provides that 'the right of trial by jury, as heretofore enjoyed,
shall remain inviolate, but the trial of civil cases before the
justices of the peace by a jury of less than twelve men may be
authorized by law.' Article 2, 5. And by the latter instrument, as we
have sen, it is expressly provided that the just compensation required
to be made to the owner of private property taken or damaged for
public use 'shall be ascertained by a jury as shall be prescribed by
law.' Id. 13. That the lastnamed provision prohibited the
ascertainment of such compensation in any other mode than by a jury is
made clear by the decision of the supreme court of Illinois in Kine v.
Defenbaugh, 64 Ill. 291, in which it was adjudged that a provision in
a statute of Illinois authorizing commissioners of highways, or three
supervisors of the county on appeal from the commissioners, to
ascertain the damages sustained by reason of the construction of a
highway across the owner's premises, was superseded by the thirteenth
section of article 2 of the state constitution; the court observing
that a trial by jury was 'a constitutional right of which the party
may not be debarred either by the action or nonaction of the
legislatute. People v. McRoberts, 62 Ill. 38.' The persons impaneled
in this case to ascertain the just compensation due to the railroad
[166 U.S. 226, 246]
company constituted a jury as ordained by the constitution of
Illinois in cases of the condemnation of private property for public
use, and, being a jury within the meaning of the seventh amendment of
the constitution of the United States, the facts tried by it cannot be
retried 'in any court of the United States otherwise than according to
the rules of the common law.' The only modes known to the common law
'to re-examine such facts are the granting of a new trial by the court
where the issue was tried, or to which the record was properly
returnable, or the award of a venire facias de novo by an appellate
court, for some error of law which intervened in the proceedings.'
Parsons v. Bedford, 3 Pet. 433, 447, 448; Railroad Co. v. Fraloff,
100 U.S. 24 , 31.
To this it may be added that congress has provided that the final
judgment of the highest court of a state in cases of which this court
may take cognizance shall be re-examined upon writ of error, a process
of common-law origin, which removes nothing for re-examination but
questions of law arising upon the record. Egan v. Hart,
165 U.S. 188 , 17 Sup. Ct. 300. Even if we were of opinion, in
view of the evidence, that the jury erred in finding that no property
right, of substantial value in money, had been taken from the railroad
company, by reason of the opening of a street across its right of way,
we cannot, on that ground, re-examine the final judgment of the state
court. We are permitted only to inquire whether the trial court
prescribed any rule of law for the guidance of the jury that was in
absolute disregard of the company's right to just compensation.
We say, 'in absolute disregard of the company's right to just
compensation,' because we do not wish to be understood as holding that
every order or ruling of the state court in a case like this may be
reviewed here, notwithstanding our jurisdiction, for some purposes, is
beyond question. Many matters may occur in the progress of such cases
that do not necessarily involve, in any substantial sense, the federal
right alleged to have been denied; and, in respect of such matters,
that which is done or omitted to be done by the state court may
constitute only error in the administration of the law under which the
proceedings were instituted.
[166 U.S. 226, 247] In Lent v. Tillson,
140 U.S. 316, 331 , 11 S. Sup. Ct. 825, 831, which was a case of
the widening of a public street, for the cost of which bonds were
issued, to be paid by taxation on the lands benefited, in proportion
to the benefits, and in which it was alleged by a property owner that
the local statute had been so administered as to deprive him of his
property without due process of law, this court said: 'Errors in the
mere administration of the statute, not involving jurisdiction of the
subject- matter and of the parties, could not justify this court, in
its re- examination of the judgment of the state court, upon writ of
error, to hold that the state had deprived, or was about to deprive,
the plaintiffs of their property without due process of law. Whether
it was expedient to widen Dupont street, or whether the board of
supervisors should have so declared, or whether the board of
commissioners properly apportioned the cost of the work, or correctly
estimated the benefits accruing to the different owners of property
affected by the widening of the street, or whether the board's
incidental expenses in executing the statute were too great, or
whether a larger amount of bonds were issued than should have been,
the excess, if any, not being so great as to indicate upon the face of
the transaction a palpable and gross departure from the requirements
of the statute, or whether upon the facts disclosed the report of the
commissioners should have been confirmed, are none of them issues
presenting federal questions, and the judgment of the state court upon
them cannot be reviewed here.'
In harmony with those views, we may say in the present case that
the state court having jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the
parties, and being under a duty to guard and protect the
constitutional right here asserted, the final judgment ought not to be
held to be in violation of the due process of law enjoined by the
fourteenth amendment, unless by its rulings upon questions of law the
company was prevented from obtaining substantially any compensation.
See, also, Marchant v. Railroad Co.,
153 U.S. 380 , 14 Sup. Ct. 894.
The principal point of dispute between the parties was whether the
railroad company, by reason of the opening of the street, was entitled
to recover a sum equal to the difference
[166 U.S. 226, 248]
between the value of the land in question, as land, without
any restriction on its right to use it for any lawful purpose, and the
value of the land when burdened with the right of the public to use it
for the purposes of a street crossing.
In its opinion in this case the supreme court of Illinois says that
when a city council, under the authority of the act of April 10, 1872,
extends a street across railroad tracks or right of way, 'it does not
condemn the land of the railroad company nor prevent the use of the
tracks and right of way.' 149 Ill. 457, 37 N. E. 78. We take this to
be a correct interpretation of the local statute, and as indicating,
not only the interest acquired by the public through proceedings
instituted for the extension of a street across the tracks and right
of way of the railroad company, but also the extent to which the
company was deprived, by the proceedings for condemnation, of any
right in respect of the land. Such being the law of the state, it
would necessarily follow that the jury, in ascertaining the amount of
compensation, could not properly take as a basis of calculation the
market value of the land as land. The land as such was not taken, the
railroad company was not prevented from using it, and its use for all
the purposes for which it was held by the railroad company was
interfered with only so far as its exclusive enjoyment for purposes of
railroad tracks was diminished in value by subjecting the land within
the crossing to public use as a street. The supreme court of Illinois
well said that 'the measure of compensation is the amount of decrease
in the value of the use for railroad purposes caused by the use for
purposes of a street, such use for the purposes of a street being
exercised jointly with the use of the company for railroad purposes.
In other words, the company is to be compensated for the diminution in
its right to use its tracks caused by the existence and use of the
street.' Id.
But it was contended in the court below, and is here contended,
that the land was subject to sale by the company for any lawful use;
that after being condemned for purposes of a public street it could
not be sold as land held for private use could be sold in the market;
consequently its salable value,
[166 U.S. 226, 249] treating it as land
simply, was practically destroyed by the opening of a public street
across it. Touching this point the state court, observing that a
railroad company can only acquire land, whether by voluntary purchase
or otherwise, for railroad purposes as defined in its charter, and
that in this case the descriptions of the strips of land conveyed to
the appellant, as set forth in the conveyances introduced in evidence,
show that the strips were purchased for railroad right of way, and
they have been ever since so used, said: 'It is manifest that the
appellant is restricted in its use of the right of way over which this
street is to be extended to those purposes for which such right of way
is now used. The future use must be the same as the present use, so
long as the appellant continues to operate its railroad, unless the
legislature shall permit it to change its route.' 149 Ill. 457, 461,
37 N. E. 78, 79. The supreme court of Illinois, therefore, held that
the trial court did not err in excluding evidence to show the general
salable value of the right of way included in the crossing, or its
general value for other uses than that to which it was applied.
According to this view of the powers of the railroad company, it is
clear that the jury could not properly have taken into consideration
the possibility of such legislative permission being granted. That is,
the power of the legislature to permit a change of route, and the
possibility of the exercise of that power, could not be elements in
the inquiry as to the compensation to be now awarded to the railroad
company.
But even if it were true that the company, so long as it operated
its railroad, could without legislative permission take up its tracks
placed across the land in question, and use the land for purposes
other than for a right of way, the jury could not properly have taken
into consideration the possibility that at some future time the
company would adopt that course, and thereby put itself in condition,
if no street were opened across it, to sell its land for what it was
worth as land, freed from any public easement. Such a possibility was
too remote and contingent to have been taken into account. There was
nothing in the evidence, introduced or
[166 U.S. 226, 250] offered and excluded,
suggesting any probability that the company intended to use, or would
in the near future use, the land within the crossing for any other
purpose than as a right of way. While, as held in Boom Co. v.
Patterson,
98 U.S. 403 , 408, the general rule is that compensation 'is to be
estimated by reference to the uses for which the property is suitable,
having regard to the existing business and wants of the community, or
such as may be reasonably expected in the immediate future,' it is
well settled that 'mere possible or imaginary uses, or the speculative
schemes of its proprietor, are to be excluded.' Pierce, R. R. 217, and
authorities cited; Worcester v. Great Falls Manuf'g Co., 41 Me. 159,
164; Dorlan v. Railroad Co., 46 Pa. St. 520, 525.
The company must be deemed to have laid its tracks within the
corporate limits of the city subject to the condition-not, it is true,
expressed, but necessarily implied-that new streets of the city might
be opened and extended from time to time across its tracks, as the
public convenience required, and under such restrictions as might be
prescribed by statute. Suppose the city had many years ago acquired
the land in question by purchase or condemnation for the purpose of
extending, and had extended, a street over it, and that the railroad
company had thereafter acquired by condemnation the right to lay its
tracks across the street upon making just compensation to the city. In
ascertaining, in such a case, the compensation due the city, would it
not be assumed, the street having once been opened, that the
convenience of the public would always require it to be kept open, and
that, therefore, compensation was to be ascertained, not upon the
basis of the value of the city's land, as land, when crossed by the
railroad tracks, but upon the basis that the land would always be a
part of a public street? Both branches of this question must be
answered in the affirmative. But they should not be so answered if the
position of the railroad company be sound; for, according to its
contention, the jury, in the case supposed, must have taken into
account the possibility that the city might at some future
[166 U.S. 226, 251]
time discontinue the street, and sell the land, or devote it
to other purposes. There was and is no more probability that the city,
in the case supposed, would close the street, than, in this case, that
the railroad company will take up its tracks from the land in
question. Such a probability was too remote to be regarded as an
element in the inquiry as to compensation. When these proceedings were
instituted the railroad company had an exclusive right to use the land
in question for tracks upon which to move its cars, and the city did
not propose to interfere in any degree with the enjoyment of that
right, otherwise than by the opening of a street across the tracks for
public use. To what extent was the value of the company's right to use
the land for railroad tracks unduly diminished by opening across it a
public street? Under all the circumstances, in view of the purpose for
which the railraod company obtained the land, for which the land was
in fact used, and for which it was likely to be always used,- which
purpose is the most valuable one for the railroad company,-that was
the only question to be determined by the jury. As the right to open a
street across the railroad tracks was all that the city sought to
obtain by the proceeding for condemnation, it was not bound to obtain
and pay for the fee in the land over which the street was opened. If,
prior to the institution of these proceedings, the railroad company
had constructed upon the land embraced within the crossing buildings
to be used in its business, it would have been necessary for the jury,
in ascertaining the just compensation to be awarded, to take into
consideration the value of such buildings. But no such case is before
us. The case is simply one of the opening of a street across land with
no buildings upon it, and used only for railroad tracks.
It is next contended that error of law was committed by the refusal
of the court to allow the company to prove that in the event of the
opening of the street it would be necessary, in order that the
railroad be properly and safely operated, to construct gates and a
tower for operating them, plank the crossing, fill between the rails,
put in an extra rail, and to incur an annual expense of depreciations,
main- [166 U.S. 226,
252] tenance, employment of gatemen, etc. It was not
claimed that the railroad company could recover specifically on
account of such expenditures, but that the proof of their being made
necessary by the opening of the street was admissible for the purpose
of showing the compensation due to the company. There are some
authorities that seem to support the view taken by the railroad
company, but we are of opinion that no error was committed in
excluding the evidence offered.
The plaintiff in error took its charter subject to the power of the
state to provide for the safety of the public, in so far as the safety
of the lives and persons of the people were involved in the operation
of the railroad. The company laid its tracks subject to the condition,
necessarily implied, that their use could be so regulated by competent
authority as to insure the public safety. And as all property, whether
owned by private persons or by corporations, is held subject to the
authority of the state to regulate its use in such manner as not to
unnecessarily endanger the lives and the personal safety of the
people, it is not a condition of the exercise of that authority that
the state shall indemnify the owners of property for the damage or
injury resulting from its exercise. Property thus damaged or injured
is not, within the meaning of the constitution, taken for public use,
nor is the owner deprived of it without due process of law. The
requirement that compensation be made for private property taken for
public use imposes no restriction upon the inherent power of the state
by reasonable regulations to protect the lives and secure the safety
of the people. In the recent case of New York & N. E. R. Co. v. Town
of Bristol,
151 U.S. 556, 567 , 14 S. Sup. Ct. 437, this court declared it to
be thoroughly established that the inhibitions of the constitution of
the United States upon the impairment of the obligation of contracts,
or the deprivation of property without due process or of the equal
protection of the laws, by the states, are not violated by the
legitimate exercise of legislative power in securing the public
safety, health, and morals. 'The governmental power of
self-protection,' the court said, 'cannot be contracted away, nor can
the exercise of rights granted, nor the use of property, be withdrawn
from the im- [166 U.S.
226, 253] plied liability to governmental regulation in
particulars essential to the preservation of the community from
injury.' See New Orleans Gaslight Co. v. Louisiana Light & Heat
Producing & Manuf'g Co.,
115 U.S. 650, 671 , 6 S. Sup. Ct. 252.
In Railway Co. v. Deacon, 63 Ill. 91, the supreme court of Illinois
said: 'The state has reserved to itself the power to enact all police
laws necessary and proper to secure and protect the life and property
of the citizen. Prominent among the rights reserved, and which must
inhere in the state, is the power to regulate the approaches to and
the crossing of public highways, and the passage through cities and
villages, where life and property are constantly in imminent danger by
the rapid and fearful speed of railway trains. The exercise of their
franchises by corporations must yield to the public exigencies and the
safety of the community.' And in Railroad Co. v. Willenborg, 117 Ill.
203, 7 N. E. 698, where the question was whether a railroad company
could be required to construct a farm crossing over its road years
after the road had been built, the court said: 'The point is made,
however, that these provisions are not obligatory on this corporation
because they were enacted many years since it received its charter
from the state. This is a misapprehension of the law. The regulations
in regard to fencing railroad tracks, and the construction of farm
crossings for the use of adjoining landowners, are 'police
regulations,' in the strict sense of those terms, and apply with equal
force to corporations whose tracks are already built, as well as to
those to be thereafter constructed. They have reference to the public
security both as to persons and to property. ... No reason is
perceived why, upon the same principle on which a railroad corporation
may be required to fence its track and construct cattle guards, it may
not be required also to construct farm crossings.'
In Chicago & N. W. Ry. Co. v. City of Chicago, 140 Ill. 309,
317-319, 29 N. E. 1109, 1111, the question was whether, in a case
where a city institutes a condemnation proceeding to open or extend a
street across a railroad already constructed, the company owning such
railroad was entitled to be allowed, as a
[166 U.S. 226, 254]
part of its just compensation, the amount of its expenses in
constructing and maintaining the street crossing. In that case it
appeared that the railroad was constructed prior to the above act of
1872 for the incorporation of cities and villages, and before the
passage of the act of 1874, which required that thereafter at all
railroad crossings of highways 'and streets' the railroad companies
should construct and maintain such crossings, and the approaches
thereto, within their respective rights of way, so that at all times
they should be safe as to person and property. 2 Starr & C. Ann. St.
p. 1927. The court said: 'Government owes to its citizens the duty of
providing and preserving safe and convenient highways. From this duty
results the right of public control over public highways. Railroads
are public highways, and in their relations as such to the public are
subject to legislative supervision, though the interests of their
shareholders are private property. Every railroad company takes its
right of way subject to the right of the public to extend the public
highways and streets across such right of way. ... If railroads so far
as they are public highways are, like other highways, subject to
legislative supervision, then railroad companies in their relations to
highways and streets which intersect their rights of way are subject
to the control of the police power of the state; that power of which
this court has said that 'it may be assumed that it is a power
coextensive with self-protection, and is not inaptly termed 'the law
of overruling necessity." Lake View v. Rose Hill Cemetery Co., 70 Ill.
191. The requirement embodied in section 8, that railroad companies
shall construct and maintain the highway and street crossings and the
approaches thereto within their respective rights of way, is nothing
more than a police regulation. It is proper that the portion of the
street or highway which is within the limits of the railroad should be
constructed by the railroad company and maintained by it, because of
the dangers attending the operation of its road. It should control the
making and repairing of the crossing for the protection of those
passing along the street and of those riding on the cars. ... The
items of expense for
[166 U.S. 226, 255] which appellant claims compensation
are such only as are involved in its compliance with a police
regulation of the statute. It is well settled that 'neither a natural
person nor a corporation can claim damages on account of being
compelled to render obedience to a police regulation designed to
secure the common welfare.' Chicago & A. R. Co. v. Joliet, L. & A. R.
Co., 105 Ill. 388. It has been held by this court in a number of cases
that railroad corporations may be required to fence their tracks, to
put in cattle guards, to place upon their engines a bell, and to do
other things for the protection of life and property, although their
charters contained no such requirements. Railroad Co. v. Loomis, 13
Ill. 548; Railroad Co. v. Dill, 22 Ill. 264; Railroad Co. v.
McClelland, 25 Ill. 140; Peoria & P. U. Ry. Co. v. Peoria & F. Ry.
Co., 105 Ill. 110. ... Uncompensated obedience to a regulation enacted
for the public safety under the police power of the state is not a
taking or damaging without just compensation of private property, or
of private property affected with a public interest.' See, also,
Mugler v. Kansas,
123 U.S. 623, 668 , 8 S. Sup. Ct. 623; Boston & M. R. Co. v.
County Com'rs, 79 Me. 386, 10 Atl. 113; Thorpe v. Railroad Co., 27 Vt.
150; Lake Shore & M. S. Ry. Co. v. Cincinnati, S. & C. Ry. Co., 30
Ohio St. 604; Railroad Co. v. Deering, 78 Me. 61, 70, 2 Atl. 670;
State v. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. (Neb.) 45 N. W. 469; New York & N. E.
Ry. Co. v. City of Waterbury, 60 Conn. 1, 22 Atl. 439; Railroad Co. v.
Gibbes,
142 U.S. 386, 393 , 12 S. Sup. Ct. 255.
We concur in these views. The expenses that will be incurred by the
railroad company in erecting gates, planking the crossing, and
maintaining flagmen, in order that its road may be safely operated,-if
all that should be required,-necessarily result from the maintenance
of a public highway under legislative sanction, and must be deemed to
have been taken by the company into account when it accepted the
privileges and franchises granted by the state. Such expenses must be
regarded as incidental to the exercise of the police powers of the
state. What was obtained, and all that
[166 U.S. 226, 256] was obtained, by the
condemnation proceedings for the public was the right to open a street
across land within the crossing that was used, and was always likely
to be used, for railroad tracks. While the city was bound to make
compensation for that which was actually taken, it cannot be required
to compensate the defendant for obeying lawful regulations enacted for
the safety of the lives and property of the people. And the value to
the railroad company of that which was taken from it is, as we have
said, the difference between the value of the right to the exclusive
use of the land in question for the purposes for which it was being
used, and for which it was always likely to be used, and that value
after the city acquired the privilege of participating in such use by
the opening of a street across it, leaving the railroad tracks
untouched. Upon that theory the case was considered by the jury, and
the court did not err in placing it before them upon that basis as to
compensation.
One of the instructions asked by the company, and refused by the
court, was to the effect that, if the land to be crossed by the
proposed street was of such width and dimensions that it would be
practicable for the company, or those acquiring title under it, to lay
and operate other railroad tracks in addition to those already placed
thereon, the company was entitled to recover, as part of the
compensation to be awarded, the difference, if any, between the value
of the strip for railroad purposes with the right to lay and operate
thereon such additional tracks and the value of the same for railroad
purposes with the right to use and operate only the railroad tracks
now on the same. This instruction was properly refused, because it
assumed, as matter of law, that the opening of the street across the
existing railroad tracks prevented the company from laying additional
tracks across the land within the crossing, if there was room for such
tracks. The right of the company to use the land or its right of way
for as many tracks as it reasonably required for its business- if such
right it had when the present proceedings were instituted-is not
affected by the opening of the street in question. The opening of the
street across the company's land-the city not acquiring the
[166 U.S. 226, 257]
fee-simple title-was necessarily subject to the right, if
any, of the company to lay down additional tracks, if necessary in the
proper conduct of its business.
Another instruction asked by the company, and to the refusal of
which it excepted, was to the effect that, if the land of the railroad
company to be crossed by the proposed street was used by it for
railroad purposes as part of 'its railroad and terminal facilities,'
and the value of such railroad and terminal facilities would be
depreciated and lessened by the use of the land by the public for the
purposes of a street (such use for the purposes of a street being
subject, however, to the use of the land by the company for railroad
purposes), then the railroad company was entitled to recover from the
city a sum equal to such depreciation in value as damages to part of
its land not taken or crossed by the proposed street. This instruction
was properly refused. It was objectionable, for the reason, if there
were no other, that it was too general. The words 'its railroad and
terminal facilities' included the company's entire line of road and
terminal facilities within, at least, the corporate limits of the
city. The land within the crossing is three miles inside the city
limits, about four miles from the passenger depot of the company, and
a thousand feet from its nearest freight depot. If the instruction
last referred to had been given, the range of inquiry as to the sum
due the company for what was taken from it would have been extended
far beyond what was required or permissible in order to ascertain the
amount of compensation.
It is further contended that the railroad company was denied the
equal protection of the laws, in that by the final judgment individual
property owners were awarded, as compensation for contiguous property
appropriated to the public use by the same proceeding, the value of
their land taken, while only nominal compensation was given to the
company; the value of its land, simply as land, across which the
street was opened, not being taken into account. This contention is
without merit. Compensation was awarded to individual owners upon the
basis of the value of the property actually taken, having regard to
the uses for which it was best adapted,
[166 U.S. 226, 258]
and the purposes for which it was held and used and was
likely always to be used. Compensation was awarded to the railroad
company upon the basis of the value of the thing actually appropriated
by the public,-the use of the company's right of way for a street
crossing,-having regard to the purposes for which the land in question
was acquired and held and was always likely to be held. In the case of
individual owners, they were deprived of the entire use and enjoyment
of their property, while the railroad company was left in the
possession and use of its property for the purposes for which it was
being used, and for which it was best adapted, subject only to the
right of the public to have a street across it. In this there was no
denial of the equal protection of the laws, unless it be that the
public cannot have a street across the tracks of a railroad company,
except upon the condition precedent that it shall condemn and acquire
the absolute ownership of the land, leaving untouched the right of the
company to cross it with its tracks. We do not think the equal
protection of the laws imposes such a burden upon the people of a city
within the limits of which a railroad company has been permitted to
lay its tracks.
We have examined all the questions of law arising on the record of
which this court may take cognizance, and which, in our opinion, are
of sufficient importance to require notice at our hands; and, finding
no error, the judgment is affirmed.
The CHIEF JUSTICE took no part in the consideration or decision of
this case.
No. 130. Argued with No. 129.
Mr. Justice BREWER, dissenting.
[166 U.S. 226, 259] I dissent from the
judgment in this case. I approve that which is said in the first part
of the opinion as to the potency of the fourteenth amendment to
restrain action by a state through either its legislative, executive,
or judicial department, which deprives a party of his property without
due compensation, also the ruling that 'due process' is not always
satisfied by the mere form of the proceeding, the fact of notice, and
a right to be heard. I agree to the proposition that 'a judgment of a
state court, even if it be authorized by statute, whereby private
property is taken for the state, or under its direction, for public
use, without compensation made or secured to the owner, is, upon
principle and authority, wanting in the due process of law required by
the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States, and
the affirmance of such judgment by the highest court of the state is a
denial by that state of a right secured to the owner by that
instrument.'
It is disappointing, after reading so strong a declaration of the
protecting reach of the fourteenth amendment, and the power and duty
of this court in enforcing it as against action by a state by any of
its officers and agencies, to find sustained a judgment, depriving a
party- even though a railroad corporation-of valuable property without
any, or at least only nominal, compensation. It seems as though the
denial which is so strenuously made as to the power of the state
through either its legislative, executive, or judicial department is
subject to one limitation; that is, the verdict of a jury. The
abundant promises of the forepart of the opinion vanish into nothing
when the conclusion is reached. They amount to a mere brutum fulmen.
It is a case frequent in all our experiences in life, where the
promise and the performance are sadly at variance, and suggest those
many sayings, some serious and some jocular, which are used to picture
the grotesque incongruity so often manifested between the beginning
and the end, the proclamation and the act.
For what is the result which is sustained and adjudged rightful by
this decision? The railroad company, which owns a tract of land within
the limits of the city of Chicago, holds
[166 U.S. 226, 260]
it by deed from the original proprietors, having, therefore,
the highest and best of all titles, a fee simple, and by virtue
thereof a right to its exclusive use, with all the benefits and
profits which attend thereon, is deprived of such exclusive use,
forced to admit everybody to an equal use and occupation, to give to
the public, indeed, all the use and occupation it has of any road or
highway, including therein its power to require all owners of steam
cars crossing such highways to plank at their own expense crossings,
construct gates, employ gatemen, and take all other necessary means to
prevent accidents at such crossings, and receives for this only one
dollar,-merely nominal compensation. The property thus condemned is
the private property of the company. Missouri Pac. Ry. Co. v.
Nebraska,
164 U.S. 403 -417, 17 Sup. Ct. 130. The individual owners of
tracts alongside and similarly situated are, for being deprived the
exclusive use ( for in neither case is the fee taken) of their
property, awarded damages at the rate of about $5,000 for an equal
area of ground, and this without being exposed to any further burden
than the loss of the use of the property condemned.
It is no answer to say that the company only uses this piece of
ground for its tracks and the passage of its trains, and may still use
it in the same way. It is not the present use, but the possibilities
of use, which determine the value of property. Can the owner of vacant
land have it taken from him without compensation simply because at the
moment he does not use it? As said by this court in Boom Co. v.
Patterson,
98 U.S. 403 , 408: 'The inquiry in such cases must be, what is the
property worth in the market, viewed not merely with reference to the
uses to which it is at the time applied, but with reference to the
uses to which it is plainly adapted; that is to say, what is it worth
from its availability for valuable uses?' The value of this property
to the railroad company, its owner, does not depend alone on the uses
to which it is now put, but also on the uses to which the company may
rightfully put it; and, as shown by the testimony in this case, that
portion of the ground on either side of the tracks is available and
valuable for station houses, offices, coal chutes,
[166 U.S. 226, 261]
elevator offices, signal towers, switch stands, etc., the
possibility of use for which purposes is taken away when the land is
appropriated for a highway. The claim that the leaving of the present
use of his property to the owner destroys the right of compensation is
a proposition which, to my mind, is simply monstrous. Could another
railroad company or an individual condemn and take from this company
any use of its tracks, with only nominal compensation, simply because
its own use was left to the company? And yet, if the taking of a
crossing without compensation can be defended on this ground, why may
not the taking of the use of the tracks without compensation also be
defended?
Neither, as I submit, can the large matter of damages by liability
to the expense of planking between the tracks, establishing gates,
hiring gatemen, and resorting to all other necessary means of guarding
against accidents at the crossing, be ignored in any just estimate of
compensation. It is no sufficient answer to say that wherever a
crossing has been rightfully established the public may legally compel
the company at its own expense to provide these means of protection.
The company is liable to no such burden until the highway is opened.
As long as the public had no right of crossing, the company was under
no burden. The establishment of the crossing, the taking of the
property for a highway, creates the right on the part of the public to
cast the burden upon the company, and it seems to me monstrous to say
that the public can create the right to cast a large burden of expense
upon the company, and yet be under no obligations to compensate
therefor. It amounts simply to this: that the city says to the
railroad company, 'I will take your property, and use it for a
highway, and pay you nothing for it, or for your liability to bear
such a burden of expense as I may see fit to cast upon you hereafter
in order to protect that crossing against accident; and I can do all
this without compensation, because, if I had owned the property in the
first place, and simply given you permission to cross my highway, I
could compel you to bear such burden.' The right to impose a burden
after a public ownership is created is used as a justification
[166 U.S. 226, 262]
for creating the public ownership without compensation. I
cannot agree to any such proposition.
This question was presented to the supreme court of Kansas in
Kansas Cent. R. Co. v. Jackson Co. Com'rs, 45 Kan. 716, 724, 26 Pac.
394, 397, where a highway was sought to be established across a
railroad track without any compensation, and the court denied the
claim, saying: 'Whether the duty imposed upon the railroad company of
constructing cattle guards, fences, signs, etc., can be or is imposed
upon it under the police power of the state, makes no difference in
this case. If the highway should not be established across the
railroad company's right of way, then it would not be necessary for
any of these things to exist; but, if a highway is so established,
then the duty under the statutes immediately springs into existence,
requiring the railroad to so construct these things. The establishment
of the highway is, therefore, the cause of all these additional
burdens being imposed upon the railroad company. And must the railroad
company bear these burdens and suffer these losses without
compensation? Why should it be treated differently from others who
have interests in real estate? All others having interests in real
estate are entitled to compensation for losses resulting from the
location of a public highway interfering with their free and rightful
use of such interests. Smith Co. Com'rs v. Labore 37 Kan. 480, 484, et
seq., 15 Pac. 577.' See, also, the many cases cited in the opinion.
Among them is Grand Rapids v. Grand Rapids & I. R. Co., 58 Mich. 641,
648, 26 N. W. 159, 162, in which it was said by Campbell, C.J.: 'The
damage done to a railroad by having a highway run across it must
necessarily include all the additional expense entailed by such a
crossing, which in a city may involve a considerable outlay in making
the crossing safe, and providing guards against accidents.' Again, in
Railway Co. v. Hough, 61 Mich. 507, 508, 28 N. W. 532, 533, the court
observed, speaking by the same chief justice: 'If a railroad
interferes with an existing highway, it must bear all the expense of
crossing and restoring the highway, as far as practicable, to safe
condition; and the fencing and cattle guards are necessary for that
purpose. [166 U.S. 226,
263] But, as pointed out in People v. Lake Shore & M. S.
Ry. Co., 52 Mich. 277, 17 N. W. 841, when a new highway is created,
then it belongs to those who create it to bear the expense of making
the crossing in the condition necessary to meet all the expense and
danger which it occasions.'
Indeed, in Illinois, as between two railroads, one seeking to
obtain the right of crossing over the tracks of the other, the court,
in Chicago & A. R. Co. v. Springfield & N. W. R. Co., 67 Ill. 142,
well said: 'Appellants are entitled to such a sum for damages, to be
paid by appellee in money, as well enable appellants to construct and
keep in repair all such works as may be necessary to keep their track
in a safe and secure condition. Nothing short of this can amount to
the 'just compensation' provided by law.'
I do not care to enlarge upon this matter. These propositions seem
to me so absolutely clear that the mere statement of them ought to
carry conviction. And after a declaration by this court that a state
may not, through any of its departments, take private property for
public use without just compensation, I cannot assent to a judgment
which, in effect, permits that to be done.
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