Columbia & Delaware Bridge Co. v. Geise
Columbia & Delaware Bridge Co. v. Geise
Opinion of the Court
The certiorari in this case brings up the appointment, made by a justice of the peace of the county of Warren, of three freeholders, to appraise the damages sustained by the defendants, by reason of injury done to their ferry across the Delaware river, by the erection of the bridge of the plaintiffs over the same river.
The plaintiffs, by an act of the legislature of this state, passed March 3d, 1839, (Laws of 1839, p. 151,) were granted all the privileges and franchises incident to a corporation, as soon as two hundred shares of capital stock were subscribed for. The object of the act was to enable the corporation to erect a bridge over the Delaware at Columbia, in the county of Warren. By the ninth section of the act, it is provided that all damage done by the corporation, by entry upon lands for the purpose of obtaining materials necessary for building the bridge, shall be ascertained by the parties, if they (ran agree, or, if they cannot agree, by the appraisement thereof, to be made on oath, by three disinterested freeholders of the neighborhood, or any two of them, to be mutually chosen; but if either party, on due notice, should neglect or refuse to join in the choice, then the said freeholders to be appointed by a justice of the peace of the county. By the fourteenth section of the act, it is enacted that the company shall have power to agree with any owners of ferries that may be injured by the erection of said bridge, and to compensate them for any damages that they may sustain | and if they cannot agree with such owners, in such case the damages shall be ascertained and paid in such manner as is provided in the ninth section.
On the 28th of August, 1869, the defendants made complaint in writing, duly verified, to a justice of the peace of the county of Warren, that the plaintiffs had erected a bridge over the said river at Columbia, and on the 18th of January
I shall confine myself,' in the consideration of the case, to those reasons for reversal which were urged on the argument.
The first reason is, that the petitioners to the justice for the appointment of freeholders show no joint interest in the ferry, and have no right to an assessment to them jointly. The ferry in question was the property of Henry Geise, who died in 1860, without having made any legal devise of his real estate. The petitioners for the appointment of freeholders are the widow and children of the deceased. The widow, since the $eath of her husband, has been, by consent of her children, in actual possession of the ferry, taking the rents and profits thereof. They were all, therefore, interested in the rights appertaining to the property at the time of the erection of the bridge, and it might have been good ground of objection if all had not joined in the proceedings. How the damages, when recovered, are to be apportioned among them is a matter with which the plaintiffs have no concern. 'The damages, if any there are, belong to the widow and heirs at law of the deceased. The injury, if any, is to them jointly. A satisfaction of the award of the commissioners will be a full discharge to the plaintiffs. This is all that they have a right, under the circumstances, to require.
In the third place, the plaintiffs had no existence as a corporation till long after the passage of the act of 1856, according to the fair inference from, all the facts and circumstances before us. The ferries, the injuries to which by the erection of the
By the third section of the act of 1856, Geise is authorized to receive such tolls for transporting persons and property across the ferry as should be prescribed by the chosen freeholders of the county of Warren. This is, in substance, the same provision contained in the act concerning ferries, passed 6th of February, 1799, (Nix. Dig. 337,
The last objection is, that the offer to arbitrate should have been presented to the board of directors of the bridge company when convened in regular session. It was made
The appointment of the commissioners by the justice was right, and must in all things be affirmed, with costs,
Bedle, Justice, concurred.
Affirmed, 6 Vr. 558.
Cited in Col. Del. Bridge Co. v. Geise, 9 Vr. 40.
Rev., p. 419.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE COLUMBIA AND DELAWARE BRIDGE COMPANY v. CHRISTIANA GEISE
- Status
- Published