Chesapeake & Ohio Canal Co. v. Hoye
Chesapeake & Ohio Canal Co. v. Hoye
Opinion of the Court
This was a proceeding commenced under the 15th section of the act incorporating the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company, passed January 27, 1824, to condemn certain lands of the defendants in error, absolutely, and other lands for the temporary use and occupation of the company, for a period of five years. The law, after reciting that it is necessary for the making of the said canal, locks, dams, ponds, feeders, and other works, that provision should be made for condemning a quantity of land for the purpose, provides, if the company cannot agree with the proprietors for the purchase, use and occupation thereof, that a warrant shall be issued by a justice of the peace, to the sheriff, to summon a jury. The sheriff is to administer an oath to the jury to value the land, and all damages the owner shall sustain by cutting the canal through such land, or the partial or temporary use or occupation of such land. And the inquisition is to be returned to the Court of the county; and unless good cause be shewn to the contrary, is to be affirmed by the Court, and recorded. If set aside, the Court may direct another inquisition. The jury is directed to describe, and ascertain the bounds of the land by them valued, and the quality and duration of the interest and estate in the same required by the company for its use. And their valuation shall be conclusive on all persons; and shall be paid by the company to the owner of the land. And upon such payment, the company shall be seized of such land as of an absolute estate, or with the less quantity and duration of interest, or subject to such partial appropriation, use and occupation as shall be required and de
Under this act, an inquisition taken and returned to the County Court of Hampshire was affirmed, and ordered to be recorded. The company obtained a supersedeas from the Circuit Superior Court; and the judgment being affirmed, the case has been brought by supersedeas into this Court.
It is objected, that the Circuit Court of Hampshire had no jurisdiction to award a supersedeas to the order and judgment of the County Court, when proceeding under this act. No such authority, it is true, is conferred by express terms in the act; but the Legislature seems to have contemplated that controversies would arise, and might be depending in the different Courts of the Commonwealth under the law. The 19th section makes it the duty of every Court in which such controversies are pending, to give them precedence, and determine them in preference to all other causes. In authorizing this proceeding, no new or extraordinary jurisdiction was created ; nor was a new mode of procedure unknown to our laws, introduced. The County Court to which the inquest was to be returned, is the oldest tribunal in the Commonwealth; and the mode by inquest is that prescribed by the general law to condemn lands for roads, mills, and other public improvements. The slight variations from the general law in the provisions of this act were such as the character of the improvement and the extent of the appropriation of private property seemed to require. There perhaps was no necessity to obtain leave to erect a dam, as in the case of a private individual. That permission is conferred by the charter, whenever such a work was deemed necessary; and therefore no enquiry is directed as to the health of
The case of Hill v. Salem and Pepper’s Ferry Turnpike Co., 1 Rob. R. 263, is supposed to have disaffirmed the jurisdiction. The Court did not mean to establish any such proposition in that case. It merely decides, that in the particular case an appeal was not demandable
I think, therefore, the Circuit Superior Court had jurisdiction to award the supersedeas, and revise the judgment of the County Court.
It is further objected, that as the valuation of the jury is to be conclusive on all persons, and when paid the company shall be seized of the property absolutely, or for a less estate, or subject to a partial appropriation, as if conveyed by the owner to them, it is not competent to go into the enquiry whether the jury have erred in their valuation or not. When the valuation is properly made, it is to have that conclusive effect; but until affirmed by the Court, it cannot be said to be properly made. This confirmation is necessary to give it the conclusive effect. The Court cannot substitute itself for the inquest and make the valuation; but until its sanction to the valuation made is given, the whole subject is open for investigation. As much injustice may be done where the jury proceeds upon erroneous principles, as where corruption or partiality is shewn.
On the merits, without going into formal defects, it seems to me the inquest is fatally defective on its face; and that if we look to the evidence offered in opposition to it, it is shewn to be defective in several other respects. The law requires the jury to value the land taken in perpetuity; to value or ascertain the damages the owner shall sustain by cutting the canal through the land; and the damages for the partial and temporary use and occupation of such land. These requisitions are specific, and the inquest should respond to each, according to the principles of Kownslar v. Ward, Gilm. R. 127. The company desired to acquire land in perpetuity, apparently for the abutment of a dam ; though this is not distinctly stated; and also the temporary use and occupation, of a strip of ground on the margin of the river opposite the town of Cumberland in Maryland. The inquest assigned to the company three acres and upwards in perpetuity, but does not fix the value of it; and assigned upwards of seven acres for the temporary use of the company, but does not ascertain the damages the owner will sustain on account thereof; and then proceeds to ascertain the whole compensation to the owners for the value of the three acres and upwards, the use of the seven acres, and for cutting the said canal through the same, at 5769 dollars; without discriminating between the valuation and the damages. The canal, as it appears from the plat, passes on the opposite side of the river; and, therefore, no damage could have
When the evidence is examined, the uncertainty becomes still greater. The inquest should be so specific as to protect the company from any action for damages anticipated and assessed. The evidence proves that a portion of the aggregate sum allowed, and perhaps much the larger portion, was allowed for such anticipated injuries ; but the inquest discloses nothing from which it could bo inferred in any future controversy that such injuries were foreseen and provided for.
Thus it appears, as well from the admission of the parties as the evidence, that the company desired the temporary use of the seven acres along the margin of the river for the purpose of removing the soil to the
I think the judgment of the County Court affirming the inquisition was erroneous. x
The other Judges concurred.
The judgment of the Court was as follows:
It seems to the Court here, that said Circuit Superior Court erred in affirming the sentence and order of the County Court affirming said inquisition, and ordering the same to be recorded. Therefore it is considered that the judgment of said Circuit Superior Court be reversed and annulled, and that the plaintiffs in error recover of the defendants in error their costs, &c. And this Court proceeding to render such judgment in the premises as said Circuit Superior Court should have rendered, it seems to the Court here, that said inquisition is defective in not distinguishing between the valuation of the land condemned for the use of the company in perpetuity, and the damages allowed for the temporary use and appropriation of other lands, and damages allowed for any other inconveniences which might be sustained by the owners. And furthermore, as it appears from the evidence, that the jury took into consideration the injuries which might be sustained by the owners from the erection of the contemplated dam; and also the damages which might be sustained in protecting other lands of the proprietors from abrasions and inundations to which it would be exposed by the removal of the bank and land condemned for temporary purposes; and also the damages which would be sustained by the removal of the soil from the land condemned for temporary purposes, and so converting the same into the bed of the river, the inquest was defective in not particularly
Therefore it is considered that the sentence and order of the County Court affirming said inquest and ordering the same to be recorded, he reversed and annulled; and that the plaintiffs in error recover of the defendants in error their costs in said Circuit Superior Court expended ; that said inquisition of the jury he set aside ; and the cause remanded to the County Court for another inquisition, and for further proceedings.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Co. v. Hoye & als.
- Status
- Published