[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 614
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 615 In April, 1922, appellant, hereinafter called the railway company, filed its bill of complaint against the appellee, hereinafter called the bond trustees, seeking *Page 616 to restrain them from taking possession of and constructing a hard surface road over certain lands in Alachua County, Florida, forming the right of way of the railway company to it by virtue of Chapter 610, Acts of 1855, Laws of Florida.
The bond trustees filed their answer to the bill of complaint and motion of the railway company to strike portions of the answer was denied in May, 1922. By leave of the court first obtained the railway company filed its amended bill of complaint instanter, the bond trustees filed their answer to the amended bill in June, 1922, and a motion on the part of the railway company to strike portions of the answer to the amended bill was promptly denied by the trial court. Appeal was taken from the order denying the motion to strike, both as to the original and amended bills of complaint, but proper disposition of the questions raised here requires a consideration only of the order denying the motion to strike portions of the answer to the amended bill.
The third, seventh, eighth and ninth grounds of the motion to strike will be treated together as they question the authority of the State to make a valid grant of the lands claimed by the railway company as its right of way over which the bond trustees were about to construct a hard surface road. Such assertion of lack of authority on the part of the State to make said grant is grounded on the fact that the Congressional Act granting said lands to the State among other things provided that the proceeds therefrom "Whether from sale or by direct appropriation in kind shall be applied exclusively as far as necessary, to the purpose of reclaiming said lands by means of levees and drains."
The lands embraced in the grant in question came to the State of Florida by virtue of the Swamp Land Grant Act *Page 617 of Congress of September 28th, 1850, and were in turn granted to the railway company by virtue of Chapter 610, Acts of 1855, Laws of Florida. Under the provisions of the first mentioned of these Acts 20,422,303.70 acres of land have been patented to the State, of which 9,070,068.67 acres have been given in aid of railroad construction under the provisions of the second mentioned or similar Acts of the Legislature. The identical question raised here has been repeatedly decided by this court contrary to the contention of the bond trustees. Trustees I. I. Fund v. St. Johns Railway Co., 16 Fla. 531; Yager v. McNeill,60 Fla. 400, 53 South. Rep. 12; Kittel v. Trustees Internal Improvement Fund of Florida, 139 Fed. Rep. 941. Even if this matter had not been thus settled the bond trustees are not in position to raise the question of the proper execution of the trust imposed in the State of Florida by the Act of Congress vesting in it title to the lands in question. The trust so imposed cannot be questioned by a private party, corporation or subordinate governmental agency like appellee. Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund, v. Root, 63 Fla. 666,58 South. Rep. 371; Kings County v. County of Tulare, 119 Cal. 509,51 Pac. Rep. 866; American Immigrant Co. v. County of Adams,100 U.S. 61.
The fifth and sixth grounds of the motion to strike will be treated jointly as they question the scope and effect of Section 28 of the granting Act, same being Chapter 610, Acts of 1855, Laws of Florida. Section 28 of Chapter 610, Laws of Florida, is as follows:
"Be it Further Enacted, That the right of way through the State lands for two hundred feet in width, is hereby granted to the different Railroad Companies on the routes indicated, with the right to cut timber, and procure the necessary earth and stone, from the adjacent land, to construct and repair *Page 618 the same, and whenever it is necessary to construct turn-outs or side tracks, that this privilege may be extended to one hundred feet on each side of the road, and of such side track."
Section 29 of the same Act is also pertinent to the discussion here, and is as follows:
"Be it further Enacted, That the alternative sections of the Swamp and Overflowed Lands, for six miles on each side may be granted by the General Assembly to such Rail Road Companies, to be hereafter chartered, as they may deem proper, on their compliance with the provisions of this Act, as to the manner of constructing the road and drainage, and the sale and transfer of the alternative Sections thus granted shall be in accordance with the provisions of this Act."
It was also contended in brief that a correct determination of the scope and effect of Section 28 as above quoted involves an interpretation of certain portions of paragraphs two and three of Section 4354, Revised General Statutes of Florida, 1920, which are as follows:
*Page 619"2. To take and hold such voluntary grants of real estate and other property as shall be made to it to aid in the construction, maintenance and accommodation of its road or canal, but the real estate received by voluntary grant shall be held and used for purposes of such grants only.
"3. To purchase, hold and use all such real estate and other property as may be necessary for the construction and maintenance of its roads or canal and the stations and other accommodations necessary to accomplish the objects of its incorporation, and to sell, lease or buy any lands or real estate not necessary for its use."
Chapter 610 of the Laws of Florida was an "Act to provide for and encourage a liberal system of Internal Improvements in this State." The preamble to the Act more specifically defines its purpose in the following terms:
"Whereas, The Constitution of this State, declares that a liberal system of Internal Improvements, being essential to the development of the resources of the country, shall be encouraged by the Government of this State, and it shall be the duty of the General Assembly as soon as practicable, to ascertain by law, proper objects of improvements in relation to Roads, Canals, and Navigable Streams, and to provide for a suitable application of such funds as may be appropriated for such improvements."
To foster and promulgate the spirit of the title and preamble, Section 4, of Chapter 610 specified the lines of railroads and canals which the legislature at that time deemed proper improvements to be aided by the Act, said Section 4 is as follows:
"Be it further enacted, That a line of railroad from the St. Johns River, at Jacksonville, and the waters of Pensacola Bay, with an extension from suitable points on said line to St. Marks River, or Crooked River, at White Bluff on Apalachicola Bay, in Middle Florida, and to the waters of St. Andrews Bay, in West Florida, and a line from Amelia Island, on the Atlantic, to the waters of Tampa Bay, in South Florida, with an extension to Cedar Keys, in East Florida; also a canal from the waters of the St. Johns River on Lake Harney to the waters of the Indian River, are proper improvements *Page 620 to be aided from the Internal Improvement Fund, in manner as hereinafter provided."
Section 6 of Chapter 610 in effect provides that before any railroad company shall be entitled to the provisions thereof it must first grade continuously twenty miles of its roadbed according to specifications as follows: (1) The line of road sixty feet from center to be cleared of all standing timber; (2) grading to be for single tracks except at turn-outs, depots and similar places where it shall be as specified by State Engineer. Roadbed to be twenty feet wide in cuts with ditches two to three feet in depth below grade with widths prescribed by State Engineer and eighteen feet wide on embankments at the grade line with slopes of one and one-half foot base to one foot of rise. All excavations and embankments to have perfect drainage. (3) All cross-ties delivered at the road, to be of heart of yellow pine, cypress, white, yellow, post, or live or spanish oak, white or red cedar, not less nine feet long, nine inches face and eight inches thick, to be carefully bedded and laid within one and a half feet from center to center. (4) Sufficient space to be left at all waterways for passage of the water, and all side ditches to carry off surface water to be constructed as required by the State Engineer. (5) All bridges over streams and draws therein where necessary to permit the passage of vessels to be constructed on approval of the State Engineer. (6) The guage of all roads to be uniformly five feet and connected continuously, so that cars or trains can pass over all routes indicated without changing freight. All railroad companies to adopt a uniform tariff for transportation of passengers and hauling freight of another company on usual and equitable terms without discrimination as to frieght and passengers of any company. (7) Rails to weigh not less than sixty *Page 621 pounds per lienal yard, to be of best quality iron and fastened to crossties with best quality of spikes and plates. (8) Entire equipment to be first class and ample at all times to transport the passengers and freight normally offering. (9) No grade on routes indicated to exceed forty five feet per mile and no single curve to exceed three degrees of curvature or be adopted for use unless approved by the State Engineer.
Section Seven of the Act further provides that when the grading has been done and cross ties delivered agreeable to the foregoing provisions of Section 6, the railroad company shall give notice of such facts to the State Engineer who shall examine personally said twenty miles and if after full examination he shall approve the same, he shall so certify to the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund; and on the completion of the grading and furnishing of the crossties of each additional ten miles continuously the State Engineer shall also examine same and if constructed in accordance with the foregoing provisions he shall certify the same to the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund.
Other sections of the Act provide that the railroads aided thereby could be further assisted by any county, city or town through which or near which the same passed by subscribing for and holding stock in the said companies and the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund were authorized to underwrite the bonds of said companies. All the capital stock of said railroad companies so aided was forever exempt from taxation, all their assets used in construction, maintenance and operation were exempt from taxation for the period of thirty-five years from date of completion, and all officers, servants and employees of said railroad companies were exempt from patrol, militia, public road or jury duty, all of which was imposed by the terms *Page 622 of the Act as a prerequisite to acquire the right of way and lands in aid of construction provided by sections 28 and 29 above quoted.
At the time of the enactment of said Chapter 610, Florida was composed of thirty counties and had a population of about one hundred thousand (100,000) people. We had no railroads or other means of communication except by stage and steamboat. Land was cheap and population necessarily sparse. From the foregoing and other inducements not necessary to mention we must conclude that our legislature was making very liberal concessions to the railroad companies mentioned to the end that our people might be provided with the best and most accessible means of travel and transportation then known to civilized life. This spirit actuating our people was entirely in harmony with that actuating the people of every other part of our country at that time. The application of steam to the locomotive and the steam railway has recently been demonstrated to be feasible and every part of the country was vying with every other part in offering concessions to railroad companies to construct their lines of railroad to remote parts in aid of domestic expansion. It was the renaissance or the romance of railroad building. In the South and West and the middle West where the States and Federal government owned large areas of wild lands these concessions took the shape of liberal land grants by State and National governments in aid of railroad constructions. In the East where the States and Federal government had parted with title to their lands railroad companies were incorporated by acts of the legislature and authorized to condemn rights of way from one to two hundred feet wide through the lands of private individuals and were offered other liberal inducements in lieu of lands to aid in the constructon of their systems of road. *Page 623
In the light of the enumerated circumstances impelling the grant in question let us see how similar grants both as to rights of way and lands in aid of railroad construction have been interpreted in other jurisdictions. The leading Federal case shedding light on this question is Northern Pac. Ry. Co. v. Townsend, 190 U.S. 267, 23 Sup. Ct. Rep. 671, wherein the court construing a right of way grant in a Congressional Act similar to that involved in the case at bar, said:
"Nor can it be rightfully contended that the portion of the right of way appropriated was not necessary for the execution of the powers conferred by Congress, for, as said in Northern Pacific Railroad Co. v. Smith, 171 U.S. 261, 275, speaking of the very grant under consideration: 'By granting a right of way four hundred feet in width, Congress must be understood to have conclusively determined that a strip of that width was necessary for a public work of such importance.' Neither courts nor juries, therefore, nor the general public, may be permitted to conjecture that a portion of such right of way is no longer needed for the use of the railroad and title to it has vested in whomsoever chooses to occupy the same. The whole of the granted right of way must be presumed to be necessary for the purpose of the railroad, as against a claim by an individual of an exclusive right of possession for private purposes."
Kindred v. Union Pac. R. Co., 168 Fed. Rep. 648, affirmed in225 U.S. 582, 32 Sup. Ct. Rep. 780; Northern Pac. Ry. Co. v. Smith, 171 U.S. 260, 18 Sup. Ct. Rep. 794; Northern Pac. R. Co. v. Ely, 197 U.S. 1, 25 Sup. Ct. Rep. 302; Great Northern R. Co. v. Steinke, 261 U.S. 119, *Page 624 43 Sup. Ct. Rep. 316; Missouri, K. T. Ry. Co. v. Watson, 74 Kan. 494, text 511, 87 Pac. Rep. 687, text 693; Oregon Shore Line Ry. Co. v. Quigley, 10 Idaho 770, text 783, 80 Pac. Rep. 401.
In the Oregon Short Line case, the Supreme Court of Idaho, construing the grant there in question said:
"It is also contended in this case that, notwithstanding the grant of the two hundred foot right of way, the railroad company cannot take a decree quieting title to more than it occupies and uses, or is actually necessary for the use of which the grant is made. We do not think this position can be sustained. Under these grants, the question of the reasonable amount of land necessary for such use is not open to consideration and determination of the courts. The grant by Congress to the Utah and Northern Railway Company of a right of way one hundred feet on each side of the central line of its track was a conclusive determination of the reasonable and necessary quantity of land to be dedicated to such use, and carried with it the right of possession in the grantee therein named and its successors."
The construction of Federal grant by a State court is necessarily controlled by the Federal decisions on the same subject matter. Northern Pac. Ry. Co. v. Townsend,supra; Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U.S. 1, 14 Sup. Ct. Rep. 548; Missouri, K. T. Ry. Co. v. Watson, supra.
In construing State legislative grants such as are involved here and were before the court in Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v Townsend, and Oregon Short Line Ry. Co. v. Quigley,supra, the State Supreme Courts have generally followed the rule as announced in these cases unless the *Page 625 condition of the grant was modified by constitutional or statutory provisions. Fort Worth L C. Ry. Co. v. Western Stockyards Co., (Tex.Civ.App.) 151 S.W. Rep. 1172; Central Pac. R. Co. v. Droge, 171 Cal. 32, 151 Pac. Rep. 663; Croley v. St. Louis S.W. Ry. Co., of Texas, (Tex.Civ.App.)56 S.W. Rep. 615; Clendaniel v. Conrad, 3 Boyce (Del.) 549, 83 Atl. Rep. 1036; Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Borough of Freeport, 138 Pa. St. 91, 20 Atl. Rep. 940; McLucas v. St. Joseph G. I. R. Co.,67 Neb. 603, 93 N.W. Rep. 928; 97 N.W. Rep. 312; Western New York P. R. Co. v. Vulcan Foundry Machine Co., 251 Pa. 383,96 Atl. Rep. 830; 22 R. C. L. 869; Conwell v. Philadelphia R. R. Co., 241 Pa. 172, 88 Atl. Rep. 417. See Note to Dublin v. Ohio River R. Co. 73 W. Va. 166, 80 S.E. Rep. 145, L.R.A. 1916B 653, text 657.
The same rule is generally applied in those States where the railroad companies incorporated by an Act of the Legislature and authorized to acquire by condemnation or otherwise its right of way through private premises. Seaboard Air Line R. v. Olive, 142 N.C. 257, 55 S.E. Rep. 263; Railroad v. French,100 Tenn. 209, 43 S.W. Rep. 771, 66 Am. St. Rep. 752; East Tennessee, V. G. Ry. Co. v. Telford's Ex'rs, 89 Tenn. 293,14 S.W. Rep. 776; Southern Pac. Co. v. Hyatt, 132 Cal. 240,64 Pac. Rep. 272; Northern Counties Inv. Trust v. Enyard, 24 Wn. 366,64 Pac. Rep. 516; McLucas v. St. Joseph G. I. R. Co.,67 Neb. 603, 93 N.W. Rep. 928; 97 N.W. Rep. 312; Roberts v. Sioux City P. R. Co., 73 Neb. 8, 102 N.W. Rep. 60.
This brings us to the question of adverse possession which has been injected as one of the determining influences on the scope and effect of Section 28. In this connection we may say that the authorities are without conflict in holding that the right of way so granted or condemned cannot under any circumstances be acquired by *Page 626 prescription or adverse possession, though in some states, as in Tennessee, it has been held that such right of way or portion of it not in actual use might be used for agriculture or other purposes not inconsistent with the grant so long as not necessary for railroad purposes.
We also note a strong line of decisions some of which are identical with the foregoing holding in effect that railroads are public highways, that the public is vitally interested in the efficiency of the service to be rendered by them, and that for reasons of public policy the doctrine of adverse possession should no more apply to their rights of way than it should to public highways in general. Sapp v. Northern Cent. Ry. Co.,51 Md. 115; Northern Pac. R. Co. v. Townsend, 190 U.S. 267,23 Sup. Ct. Rep. 671; Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Borough of Freeport 138 Pa. St. 91, 20 Atl. Rep. 940; Railroad v. French, 100 Tenn. 209,43 S.W. Rep. 771, 66 Am. St. Rep. 752; Southern Pac. Co. v. Hyatt, 132 Cal. 240, 64 Pac. Rep. 272, 54 L.R.A. 522.
Opposed to the view last expressed we find much authority to the effect that a railroad company does not stand on a par with public highways in general and that a railroad company is under the same obligation to keep trespassers off its right of way as private parties are to keep them off their private premises. Georgia Railroad and Banking Co. v. Gardner, 113 Ga. 897,39 S.E. Rep. 299; Illinois Cent. R. Co. v. Wakefield, 173 Ill. 564,50 N.E. Rep. 1002; Pittsburgh, C. C. and St. L. R. Co. v. Jellison, 42 Ind. App. 628, 86 N.E. Rep. 501; Louisville N. R. Co. v. Smith, 125 Ky. 336, 101 S.W. Rep. 317, 128 Am. St. Rep. 254; Paxton v. Yazoo M. V. R. Co., 76 Miss. 536,24 South. Rep. 536; Walsh v. Chicago, B. K. C. Ry. Co.,19 Mo. App. 127; Spottiswoode v. Morris E. R. Co., 61 N.J.L. 322,40 Atl. Rep. 505; Southern Ry. v. Gossett, *Page 627 79 S.C. 372, 60 S.E. Rep. 956; Texas P. R. Co. v. Maynard, (Tex.Civ.App.) 51 S.W. Rep. 255; Northern Pac. R. Co. v. City of Spokane, 45 Wn. 229, 88 Pac. Rep. 135; Alexander City Union Warehouse Storage Co. v. Central of Georgia R .Co.,182 Ala. 516, 62 South. Rep. 745; New York, N.H. H. R. Co. v. Cella, 86 Conn. 275, 85 Atl. Rep. 521; Mobile O. R. Co. v. Strain, 125 Miss. 697, 88 South. Rep. 274; Dulin v. Ohio River R. Co., 73 W. Va. 166, 80 S.E. Rep. 145.
We have examined all cases cited in the preceding paragraph and others of similar import and none of them apply to public grants. Most of them apply to rights of way acquired by private grant or purchase and when the lands so claimed have been fenced and in actual use by the claimant for the statutory period adverse and hostile to the claim of the railway company. A few of these cases apply to rights of way acquired by condemnation and while in Kentucky and a few other States the courts have held that the right of way of the railway company in its right of way so acquired can be extinguished by adverse possession, others equally as respectable hold that the interest of the railway company acquired by condemnation being a mere easement for railroad purposes cannot be extinguished by adverse user, that those enjoying such user were tenants by sufferance and would be compelled to abandon the right of way when it become necessary to use it for railroad purposes.
In some States, such as Massachusetts, Connecticut, Missouri, Nebraska, North Carolina, New Hampshire, Vermont, and others, the question of whether or not a railroad right of way can be acquired by adverse possession is controlled by constitutional and statutory provisions, all of which so far as we have been able to find are in line with the law as announced in the Townsend and Oregon Short Line *Page 628 cases and in other State and Federal cases construing public grants of land for right of way purposes. Fisher v. New York N.E. R. R. Co., 135 Mass. 107; Gay v. Boston A. R. R.,141 Mass. 407, 6 N.E. Rep. 236; Turner v. Fitchburg, R. Co.,145 Mass. 433, 14 N.E. Rep. 627; Purifoy v. Richmond D. R. Co.,108 N.C. 100, 12 S.E. Rep. 741; Costello v. Grand Trunk Ry. Co., 70 N.H. 403, 47 Atl. Rep. 265; Drouin v. Boston M. R. Co., 74 Vt. 343, 25 Atl. Rep. 957; New York, N.H. H. R. Co., v. Cella, 86 Conn. 275, 85 Atl. Rep. 521; McLucas v. St. Joseph G. I. R. Co., 67 Neb. 603, 93 N.W. Rep. 928;97 N.W. Rep. 312.
To establish title by adverse possession in this State it must be shown that for a period of seven years the claimant or his predecessors in title held hostile possession with or without color of title for said period and that such possession must be actual, continuous, exclusive, open and notorious, Secs. 2935, 2936, Rev. Gen. Stats. of Fla. 1920. If a right of way easement of a railway company has been acquired by condemnation, prescription or otherwise, the use by adjoining land owners of the unused parts of such right of way for grazing and cultivation has been held as not adverse to the enjoyment of the easement. Roberts v. Sioux City P. R. Co.,73 Neb. 8, 102 N.W. Rep. 60, 2 L.R.A. (N.S.) 272.
In Smith v. Pittsburgh C. C. St. Louis Ry. Co., 26 Ohio Cir. Ct. Rep. 44, it was held that whether a railroad company has a fee or an easement, any permitted use by an abutting land owner of a part of the right of way up and until needed for railway purposes exclusively cannot be said to be adverse in any hostile sense. Slocumb v. C. B. Q. R. Co., 57 Iowa 675,11 N.W. Rep. 641; Sapp v. Northern Cent. R. Co., 51 Md. 115.
In Northern Counties Inv. Trust v. Enyard, 24 Wn. 366,64 Pac. Rep. 516, it was held that when the grantors of plaintiffs in ejectment occupied, cleared, fenced and cultivated *Page 629 land for over ten years, which was subject to a railroad right of way, such occupation was not adverse, but permissive since it was not inconsistent with such right of way, and hence the railroad easement was not extinguished by plaintiff's possession.
In Mobile O. R. Co. v. Donovan, 104 Tenn. 465,58 S.W. Rep. 309, it was also held that occupation of a right of way by the owner of the fee, so long as it was not required for railroad purposes, is not adverse so as to start the statute of limitations running against the railroad company.
From an examination of many cases the authorities are in conflict on the question of whether or not the fencing and cultivation of a railroad right of way, or of such portions thereof as are not covered by the tracks and in actual use, is so inconsistent with the rights of the railroad as to amount to adverse possession. Cases supporting the affirmative of the issue are, Maysville B. S. R. Co. v. Holton, 100 Ky. 665,39 S.W. Rep. 27; Illinois Cent. R. Co. v. Houghton, 126 Ill. 233,18 N.E. Rep. 301, 1 L.R.A. 213; Matthews v. Lake Shore M. S. Ry. Co., 110 Mich. 170, 67 N.W. Rep. 1111; Spottiswoode v. Morris E. R. Co., 61 N.J.L. 322, 40 Atl. Rep. 505. Where the English rule is discussed. Cases supporting the negative of this issue are Virginia S.W. R. Co. v. Crow, 108 Tenn. 17,64 S.W. Rep. 485; Northern Counties Inv. Trust v. Enyard, 24 Wn. 366,64 Pac. Rep. 516; East Tennessee, V. G. Ry. Co. v. Telford's Ex'rs, 89 Tenn. 293, 14 S.W. Rep. 776, 10 L.R.A. 855, and other cases cited in this opinion.
To recapitulate briefly we have then in the country railroad rights of way acquired by legislative and congressional grant, private grant, purchase, gift, condemnation and prescription. As to legislative and congressional grants of such rights of way, unless modified by statute, the general rule is that the area or dimensions of the grant are not open to judicial investigation and determination, that such questions *Page 630 were concluded by the authority providing the grant and that it was intended to secure to the grantee the permanent enjoyment of the granted right of way so long as the railroad of the required character should be operated upon it regardless of any new or unexpected conditions that may subsequently arise. Northern Pac. Ry. Co. v. Townsend, supra; Oregon Short Line Ry. Co. v. Quigley, supra; Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Borough of Freeport, supra.
We have found no exceptions to this rule except in Arkansas and Illinois. In Arkansas the granting act was an elastic one providing a right of way "not exceeding one hundred feet inwidth on each side of and through its entire length." The railroad company on acquiring the right of way constructed a fence enclosing fifty feet on each side of the railroad. The plaintiff enclosed with a fence his land up to the fence along the right of way, cleared, occupied and cultivated the land continuously for fourteen years, and the Arkansas court held that under such showing the lands not included in the fenced right of way were not necessary for railroad purposes and were acquired by adverse possession against the claim of the railroad company. St. Louis, I. M. S. R. Co. v. Martin,104 Ark. 274, 149 S.W. Rep. 69. In Illinois the railroad company was granted a right of way of 200 feet in width, but was required to construct a fence separating the right of way from the adjoining land on each side. Shortly after acquiring its right of way the company constructed a substantial fence fifty feet from the center of its road on each side. The Illinois court held this conduct of the railroad company to be an abandonment of that part of the right of way granted but not inclosed, and since it had been in continuous occupation and cultivation for more than twenty years it was lost to the railroad company. Illinois Cent. R. Co. v. Moore, 160 Ill. 9,43 N.E. Rep. 364; Spottiswoode v. Morris E. R. Co., 61 N.J.L. 322,40 Atl. Rep. 505, where *Page 631 the Illinois rule is discussed and other Illinois cases cited. These facts would clearly lift the Arkansas and Illinois cases from the general rule.
As to rights of way acquired by private grant, purchase, gift, condemnation and prescription it has already been pointed out in this opinion that in many States these are controlled by statute and the statutes so controlling apply the rule announced in the Townsend and Oregon Short Line cases,supra. In States where no controlling statutes intervene the courts have generally held that such parts of a railroad right of way as are acquired by private grant, purchase, gift, condemnation or prescription and are not inclosed or covered by the tracks of the railroad company and its erection may be acquired against it by adverse possession. There are some notable exceptions to this rule as to those acquired by condemnation and prescription, some courts holding as to these, the weight of authority is, that they cannot be acquired by adverse possession against the railroad company.
This brings us to a determination of the scope and effect of the grant involved in the case at bar, and if we are to be guided by the precedents presented from a careful analysis of the cases here cited we are impressed with the view that the grant in the instant case, like all others of a kindred nature, must be interpreted in the light of controlling statutes and the peculiar facts affecting it.
Chapter 610, Laws of Florida, was signed by the Governor and became effective January 5th, 1855. In our examination of legislative and congressional grants we have found none parallel to this. It designated specific roads to be aided as objects of Internal Improvement, required them to accept the provisions of the Act within six months and defined the conditions that the designated roads must meet in order that the benefits of the Acts might become available to them. These conditions were more fully defined in *Page 632 the sections of the granting Act quoted and outlined early in this opinion, and when complied with constituted a closed contract between the railroad companies and the State for the purpose named in the Act.
In this view of the case paragraphs two and three of Section 4354, Revised General Statutes of Florida, 1920, being a part of Section 10 of Chapter 1987, Acts of 1874, Laws of Florida, became unimportant and could have no bearing whatever on Chapter 610 because the Act of 1874 was "An Act to provide a general law for the incorporation of Railroads and Canals" in this State, while Chapter 610 was "An Act to provide for and encourage a liberal system of Internal Improvements in this State." Chapter 1987 was enacted twenty years subsequent to Chapter 610, was prospective in its effect, dealt with another subject-matter, made no reference to nor was it in any way connected with Chapter 610, and every right acquired by the railroad companies under Chapter 610 had accrued long before Chapter 1987 was enacted. A careful analysis of the title, the preamble, Sections one, four, five, six, seven, fifteen, eighteen, twenty, twenty-two, twenty-eight, and twenty-nine of Chapter 610 can leave no doubt as to the purpose of said Act. The salient features of these sections have been discussed in this opinion; the record shows that the road was completed in 1859, and under the terms of the Act it being one of the roads to be aided as a work of internal improvement, we are well within the decided cases in applying the rule announced in the Townsend and Oregon Short Line cases which is in effect that the width, area, necessity for, and reasonableness of the right of way grant were conclusively determined by the legislature and none of these matters are subject to attack at this time.
The tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth and fourteenth grounds of the motion to strike present the question that *Page 633 appellant has lost portions of the right of way in question by conveyance to third parties.
This question is predicated on the premise that the appellant having acquired title under Section 29 to some of the sections of land through which its right of way ran, acquired under Section 28, when said sections were conveyed, no right of way having been excepted in the deed of conveyances, none can now be claimed except that actually occupied and used by the railroad.
All rights of way acquired by virtue of Section 28, Chapter 610, were defined as to width in the Act, and as to survey and definite locations by plat filed in the office of the Secretary of State as provided in Section 20 of said Act. No such purchasers from the appellant or its predecessors are here complaining, but if they were we think they took title subject to the right of way grant which was in aid of internal improvement. To this extent the grant was impressed with a public use and it was accepted by appellants' predecessors on the implied condition that it be devoted to the uses designated in the Act. In its conclusiveness there is no better evidence of title than a legislative grant. The granting Act is equal in dignity to a patent and all those acquiring title to public lands over which a right of way has been granted take subject to such grant. 32 Cyc. 996; Southern Pac. Co. v. City of Reno, 257 Fed. Rep. 450; Lewis v. Rio Grande Western Ry. Co., 17 Utah 504,54 Pac. Rep. 981; Nadeau v. Union Pac. R. Co.,253 U.S. 442, 40 Sup. Ct. Rep. 570; Northern Pac. R. Co. v. Wadekamper,70 Wn. 392, 126 Pac. Rep. 909; Doran v. Central Pac. R. Co.,24 Cal. 246; Kinion v. Kansas City, Ft. S. M. R. Co.,118 Mo. 577, 24 S.W. Rep. 636; Churchill v. Choctaw Ry. Co.,4 Okla. 462, 46 Pac. Rep. 503.
The fact that the predecessors in title of appellants were as to some sections the beneficiaries of both the right of way and the grant in aid of construction is not material. *Page 634 The Courts have repeatedly recognized a marked distinction between grants of right of way and grants in aid of railroad construction. Both are grants in praesenti, but the right of way grant is unlike the grant in aid of construction in that it takes effect on the definite location of the road as of the date of the grant. Northern Pac. R. Co. v. Wadekamper, supra. Examinations of the granting act involved here reveals other distinctions that have been fully noted.
If it be true that no right of way can now be claimed by the appellant except that in actual use by it in those sections where its predecessors in title took both the right of way and the grant in aid of construction is not material, and its predecessors made no right of way exceptions in conveying the lands in aid of construction, then it necessarily follows that the estates of the appellant in those sections where it took both the right of way and the lands in aid of construction merged. Where two estates merge they must be in one and the same person at one and the same time and in one and the same right. Jackson v. Relf, 26 Fla. 465, 8 South. Rep. 184; 10 R. C. L. 666; Forthman v. Deters, 206 Ill.1 59, 69 N.E. Rep. 97, 99 Am. St. Rep. Note p. 152, where the question of merger of estates is fully treated; H. A. L. D. Holland Co. v. Northern Pac. R. Co., 208 Fed. Rep. 598, approved in 214 Fed. Rep. 920. The estates here brought in question may have been in one and the same persons at one and the same time, but by the very nature of the Act creating them they were held by different right and for a different purpose. The grant of the right of way was impressed with a public use, while the grant of the lands in aid of construction was with the express purpose that they be sold in order that the work of internal improvement be aided. We can see no theory under which the two estates would merge, or by which the *Page 635 grantees of appellant as to these sections would be different from its grantees as to other sections.
The first, second, fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth grounds of the motion to strike will be treated together as they present the question of whether or not the right of way in question or any portion thereof can be lost by continuous and long permissive use.
The record discloses that some twelve years prior to the institution of this suit the appellee or its predecessors established the public road in question from Gainesville to Waldo, in Alachua County, Florida; that the said road has been continuously used by the public since it was established as the main highway between the said towns, and that no objection has ever been raised by appellant or any one in its behalf, to said use till the institution of this suit. The record also discloses that the public road in question is on the two hundred-foot right of way granted to appellant by Section 28 of Chapter 610.
Appellee contends that having passively acquiesced in the use by the public of this portion of the lands so granted it for right of way purposes for all these years, said lands have been forfeited and can no longer be claimed by the appellant as part of its right of way. This contention is disposed of by what we have already said on the subject of adverse possession, but it is not out of place to say here that if this had been a right of way acquired by purchase or private grant such might have been the law; however, our courts as shown in this opinion have recognized a clear distinction between rights of way thus acquired and those acquired by legislative or public grant, and we think there are fundamental differences between the two. A right of way by purchase or private grant is actuated primarily by the hope of reward or profit flowing to the grantor either directly or indirectly, while legislative or public grants are *Page 636 actuated by the anticipation of benefits flowing to the whole people which is accomplished by inducing immigration to the remote parts of the forest, the prairie and the valley, stimulating commercial, industrial or domestic expansion and impregnating all of these material benefits with the arts of civilization and the religion of Judea. In addition to this a legislative grant may be termed a weaving or conversion of the sovereign legislative will of the State or the Nation into the law of the land and it is not in the power of the courts to add to or take from such statutes.
Public grants like that involved in the instant case can be justified on no other grounds but the ones enumerated here, or those of like import. To one familiar with the history of our State every reason for the granting Act in question is evident. This being true, the public acquired a material interest in the road, and to hold that any portion of said right of way can be acquired by long permissive use would be totally inconsistent with the interest of the general public in the grant. It is not shown that the right of way has been abandoned or that there are intervening statutes that would authorize the railroad company to release by sale or grant any oprtion of said grant. In granting a right of way two hundred feet wide in aid of internal improvement the legislature must have had in mind future needs and development of the roads and to hold that it could be adversely acquired except by abandonment or by virtue of the operation of intervening statutes would be inconsistent with the interest of the public therein. It could not have been contemplated that at the time the grant was made a right of way two hundred feet wide was necessary for railroad purposes, and no particular date could have been named when such necessity would arise. The construction of tracks and other erections throughout the entire length of the right of way was in the nature of conditions, there existing ample assertion on the part of the railroad *Page 637 company of title to the entire grant and the act itself was notice to the world of the grant. It would therefore be unreasonable to hold that the mere non-user of a part of the grant parallel with and contiguous to that in actual use would revert to the public because the public had enjoyed a permissive, and not a hostile use of it. Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Borough of Freeport, 138 Pa. St. 91, 20 Atl. Rep. 940; Southern R. Co. v. Vann, 142 Tenn. 76; 216 S.W. Rep. 727; 22 R. C. L. 869.
The following State and Federal cases involve grants strikingly similar to that involved in this particular case and are illuminative of the points in issue: Powell v. Atchison, T. S. F. R. Co., 215 Mo. 339, 114 S.W. Rep. 1067; Chicago, M. St. P. R. Co. v. Hanken, 140 Iowa 372, 118 N.W. Rep. 527; Union Pac. R. Co. v. Theden, 104 Kan. 289, 178 Pac. Rep. 441; McLucas v. St. Joseph G. I. R. Co. 67 Neb. 603, 93 N.W. Rep. 928;97 N.W. Rep. 312; Western New York P. R. Co. v. Vulcan Foundry Machine Co., 251 Pa. St. 383, 96 Atl. Rep. 830; Central Pac. R. Co. v. Droge, 171 Cal. 32, 151 Pac. Rep. 663; Great Northern R. Co. v. Steinke, 261 U.S. 119, 43 Sup. Ct. Rep. 316; Stuart v. Union Pac. R. Co., 227 U.S. 342, Sup. Ct. Rep. 338; Kindred v. Union Pac. R. Co., 225 U.S. 582, 32 Sup. Ct. Rep. 780; Note to Dulin v. Ohio River R. Co., supra; 32 Cyc. 996, citing many cases; Denver R. G. R. Co. v. Mills, 222 Fed. Rep. 481; Barnes v. Southern Pac. Co., 300 Fed. Rep. 481.
The record shows a permissive use of a portion of the granted right of way on the part of the public for twelve years or more prior to the institution of this suit. It is not shown that such use is inconsistent with the purpose of the grant, or that that part of the right of way so used by the public is at this time, or will be at any near future date necessary for railroad purposes. It is a well known fact *Page 638 that beaten paths and highways may be found and daily used along every railroad track in the country. Where such highways traverse public grants like the one in question, they cannot ripen into title against the railroad company by adverse possession or permissive user; but after long indulgence under the circumstances of this case they will not be restrained unless it can be shown that their use is inconsistent with the grant for railroad purposes, or that the part so used by the public is necessary for the purpose of the grant. East Fla. Tel. Co. v. Seaboard Air Line Ry. Co., 85 Fla. 378,96 South. Rep. 95; Mobile O. R. Co. v. Donovan, 104 Tenn. 465,58 S.W. Rep. 309; Northern Counties Inv. Trust v. Enyard, 24 Wn. 366,64 Pac. Rep. 516; Railroad v. French, 100 Tenn. 209,43 S.W. Rep. 771, supra; Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Borough of Freeport, 138 Pa. St. 91, 20 Atl. Rep. 940; Cases cited in Note to Dulin v. Ohio River R. Co. supra. McLucas v. S. Joseph R.I. Ry. Co.67 Neb. 603.
The decree below is therefore reversed, with directions to proceed in line with the view expressed in this opinion.
Reversed.
BROWN, C. J., AND ELLIS, STRUM AND BUFORD, J. J., concur.
WHITFIELD, J., dissents in part.