Williams v. Flint & Pere Marquette Railroad
Williams v. Flint & Pere Marquette Railroad
Opinion of the Court
In the year 1890, the Flint & Pere Marquette Eailroad Company filed its petition, under Act No.
“ That all parties having claims against said railroad for contributions given in aid of the construction of said road, as aforesaid, shall file said claims in ivriting in the office of the clerk of the circuit court for the county of St. Clair on or before the 1st day of September, 1892j that the railroad company shall, on or before the 10th day of September, 1892, file in writing in said clerk’s office a notice of contest and of objections to all such claims as the railroad company intends to contest; that the claims be referred to Dennis P. Sullivan, a commissioner of said court, to take proofs thereon, and report said proofs, with his opinion, to the court.
“ It is further ordered that all parties presenting or representing said claims be notified, by publication as hereinafter provided, to appear at the office of said commissioner in the city of Port Huron, in said county, on Monday, the 26th day of September, 1892, at 10 o’clock in the fore*395 noon of said day, for the purpose of proving the amount of their said claims, and that said proofs be heard, taken, and continued from day to day by said commissioner in behalf of each party until all of said proofs are taken on behalf of said claims, and in opposition thereto.
“It is further ordered that a copy of this order be printed once in each week for three weeks in succession, before the time appointed for filing said claims, in the Sunday Herald, a newspaper printed, published, and circulating in said county, the first publication to be on or before the 6th day of August, 1892; and that a copy of this order be served upon William L. Webber and upon Messrs. Atkinson & Wolcott, solicitors for said railroad company, Within 10 days from the date hereof.”
The publication of the order mentioned was followed by the presentation of several claims, some of which were ultimately allowed and others disallowed, by a decree dated May ?, 1894, on which day a decree was also entered granting the prayer of the railroad company as to the abandonment of the road in controversy. In this decree it was adjudged that “all persons who did not so file their claims, and all who failed to appear and make proof of their claims pending the proceedings before said commissioner, pursuant to the order of this court of the 25th day of July, 1892, must be deemed to have waived their right to be reimbursed their contributions.” This proceeding was reviewed by this court upon appeals taken by the railroad company and persons whose claims were not allowed, and the decree was affirmed (In re Flint, etc., R. Co., 105 Mich. 289), except as to the appealing claimants, who had contributed to the portion of the road abandoned, whose claims were allowed by this court. Thereupon the claims allowed were paid by the company. Subsequently this petition was filed in the cause, and by it other persons who claim to have contributed to the building of some portion of the defendant’s road ask to be reimbursed under this statute of 1891, claiming that they were not before the court, and that their rights under the statute have not been divested.
Previous to the act of 1891, those who contributed
It seems to us that all the rights to redress by reimbursement which the petitioners have in this proceeding are derived from the statute, and must be obtained in the proceeding instituted by the railroad company for the purpose of obtaining a decree to take up a nortion of its track. We have seen that its decree cannot become operative until all awards are paid, and a law-abiding railroad com
We are of the opinion that a fair construction of this act is that the legislature intended to provide a procedure through which the railroad might safely abandon and take up portions of its tracks when its interests require it, and those of the State permit, and at the same time, and in the same proceeding, permit the contributors — to such portion of the road, at least — to obtain reimbursement. It is not to be supposed that such persons can be cut off without an opportunity to be heard as to their claims, and we must, therefore, consider the question of the sufficiency of the notice given. As a general rule, personal notice is requisite to a personal judgment. There are many cases, however, where this is impracticable, and substituted service is a common thing, even where judgment is sought to bind the property of another, provided such property is within the jurisdiction of the court. In a large class of cases it is also common practice to resort to a substituted service to compel the assertion and prosecution of claims. This course is especially adapted to and adopted in cases where the proceeding is instituted to ascertain the rights of those upon whose behalf the proceeding is instituted in specific property by proceedings in rem, or in the nature of proceedings in rem. Such, as counsel suggest, are
It is contended that this notice was not given or order made at the instance of the railroad company, being made upon the petition of Eves, a claimant; but we think that is immaterial. The court, by its decree, provided for notice, and that notice was given. Some availed themselves of it. These claimants did not, though counsel asserts — and we do not discover a denial — that it is not shown that they had not knowledge of the notice and pendency of the proceedings in time to have seasonably filed their claims; a fact that is perhaps unimportant, except as it goes to the question of an intentional waiver.
We consider a discussion of other questions unnecessary. The decree dismissing the petition is affirmed, with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- WILLIAMS v. FLINT & PERE MARQUETTE RAILROAD CO.
- Status
- Published