Savannah & Thunderbolt Railroad v. Mayor of Savannah

Montgomery, Judge.

The only question for the consideration of the Court in this case is, has the Legislature the power‘to grant to a street railway the right to run through the squares intersecting Abercorn street, in Savannah, without the consent of the corporation, and without compensation to the city? The Mayor and Aldermen of Savannah hold the title to the streets, squares, lanes, etc., in trust for the “ accustomed use of" the inhabitants of the city, under the Act of May 1st, 1760, and the Acts amendatory thereof: 33 Ga., 614-616. “The corporation cannot alien or grant the public property, for purposes different from the object of its original appropriation:” Ibid., 615. And yet we will find that the corpora*606tion has diverted the squares of the city from the purposes of their original appropriation. The original purpose to which the squares were appropriated can only be found, so far as authorities at my command have enabled me to ascertain, in the second volume of the Georgia Historical Collections, pages 252-3, in a paper entitled, “A True and Historical Narrative of the Colony of Georgia, in America, by Patrick Tailfee (Telfair?), M. D., Hugh Anderson, M. A., D. A. Douglass and others, landholders in Georgia,” etc., first printed for the authors by P. Timothy, at Charleston, in the year 1741. There we find that “ the plan of the town was beautifully laid out in wards, tithings and public squares, left at proper distances for markets and public buildings, the whole making an agreeable uniformity.” Again : A public mill for grinding corn was first erected at a considerable expense, in one square of the town; but, in about three years’ time, without doing the least service, it fell to the ground. In another square of the town, a second was set up, at a far greater expense, but never finished; and is now erased and converted into a house for entertaining Indians, and other such like uses.” These, then, were the uses to which the squares were put, eight years after the foundation of the town, and nineteen years before the Act of 1760. It is difficult to understand how the squares could have been used, either as markets or as mill-sites, without being traversed by vehicles of every description. And this must have been the “accustomed use,” mentioned in the Act of 1760, unless the use had changed within the nineteen years preceding the Act, of which change I can find no record. When the squares were enclosed, and vehicles and horses excluded, some old ordinance of the city, not accessible to me, may show.

This brief historical retrospect shows that the original appropriation of the squares, at least, of those laid out at the foundation of the town, was not as parks, or of pleasure grounds; and therefore, if there is any peculiar sanctity to *607be attached to dedications of that character (which is not conceded), the original squares of Savannah cannot claim the benefit of it. I, therefore, find that in point of fact the squares were dedicated precisely as were the streets. Indeed, having been diverted without authority of the Legislature from the original purposes of the dedication, the question might be raised as to whether the Legislature might not compel, if they chose so to do, a return of the use of the same squares to those purposes — that is, to their use as thoroughfares. The charter of the plaintiffs in error does this to the extent of the permission granted to run one class of vehicles through them. It is not seriously questioned that as to the streets the Legislature has not the right of eminent domain in them, which .enables it to place an additional servitude upon them. The city of New York holds the title to the streets of that city, upon the same trusts and limitations that the city of Savannah holds the streets, squares, lanes and passages of that city, to-wit: for the use of the public, and not as corporate property.” And the trust of the city being publiai juris, it is under the unqualified control of the Legislature; and any appropriation of it to public use by legislative authority is not a taking of private property, so as to require compensation to the city to render it constitutional: ” The People et al. vs. Kerr et al., 27 N. Y. R., 188. I cannot doubt that the power exists with the State Legislature, without the consent or license of the municipal corporations to so control the use of the public streets of the city as to authorize the construction of a railroad track therein, on which city passengers may be transported for hire: ” Ibid., page 214. But it is said that the dedication of the squares to the public was a contract in which both the public and the individual lot owners along the squares have acquired vested rights.

The reply is, first, All contracts are made subject to the right of eminent domain. A contract is, therefore, not violated by the exercise of the right: ” The West River *608Bridge Company vs. Joseph Dix et al., 6 Howard, S. C. R., 507. Especially is this true as to incorporations for public purposes: The Town of East Hartford vs. Hartford Bridge Company, 10 Howard, 511. “It is, therefore, clear that whatever in the nature of a contract could be considered to exist in such a case, by a grant to a town of some public privilege, there must be implied in it a condition that the power still remained, or was reserved in the Legislature to modify or discontinue the privilege in future, as the public interests might, from time to time, appear to require :” East Hartford vs. Hartford Bridge, 10 Howard, 536. The appropriation of property to one public use by the Legislature does not deprive it of putting an additional servitude thereon: Boston Water Power Company vs. Boston and Worcester Railroad Company, 23 Pick., 396-7; 1 Redfield on Railways, 260, note. Secondly, the Mayor and Aldermen of Savannah “cannot get an injunction to restrain the running of a railroad on the ground of injury to lot-owners along the line : ” The People vs. Law, 34 Barb., 508. Again : “ The laying of a railway upon the surface of a street, so that, except at the instant of the passing of a train, vehicles and horsemen and footmen may pass freely in and across the street,” does not materially interrupt the ordinary use of the street through which it is allowed to pass.” “In that case the street remains, is open, free; in that case a new use is made of the street, without abridging its ancient use: ” Tiie Savannah, Albany and Gulf Railroad Company vs. Shields, 33 Ga., 616; Hamilton vs. The New York and Harlem Railroad Company, 9 Paige’s Ch. R., 170. So that the trust interest, held by the Mayor and Aldermen of Savannah, is not damaged ; and for injury to private interests, if there be any, the persons injured are the proper parties to complain.

Conceding, however, that the squares were originally dedicated as parks or pleasure grounds, rather than as “ markets overt,” as was then, and is, perhaps, now, the custom in many parts of England, where “ fairs and markets ” are held, still, *609the power of the Legislature to lay the additional servitude is indisputable. The case of Wellington et ad., petitioners, was an application for a mandamus to compel county commissioners to lay out a highway through a public park, set aside as such by Act of the Legislature, with privilege only to foot passengers to pass through. The Court refused the mandamus, on the ground that the Act had taken away the power from the commissioners, but says, “this decision does not involve the sovereign right of eminent domain, or affect the power of the Legislature to appropriate this property to other public uses, as public exigences may arise:” 16 Pick., 105. Again, on page 104, the Court says, “ considering the power of the Legislature (to appropriate the park to other public uses) undeniable, the question is, whether the Act (setting aside the property as a park) by its terms and provisions, does supersede the power of the commissioners to lay out a highway over this common,” etc. Once more, on page 103: “ It is manifest that, in cases of rare occurrence, as that of a railroad or other similar work, if property, could not be appropriated to public use by the Legislature, it could not be done at all, because there is no provision by law for its being done in any other way. The right of the sovereign power of the State is incontestible. No other provision being made for its exercise, it is, therefore, necessarily vested in the Legislature. Such is the present case, that of a public park, promenade and place for military parade.” See, also, 17 Georgia, 60 and 61. Our judgment, therefore, is:

1. The State has the same right of eminent domain over the streets and squares of Savannah, dedicated to the use of the inhabitants of the city, by Act of 1760, and those since laid out upon the common, dedicated by that Act to the same use, as it has over other territory of the State, and may lay an additional servitude upon such streets and squares by granting to a corporation the right to run a street railway, whose cars are drawn by animal power through them, without the consent of the Mayor and Aldermen of the city.

*6102. The Mayor and Aldermen of the city of Savannah have no such property in the streets and squares of the city, under the Act of 1760, or any Act amendatory thereof, as entitles them to pecuniary compensation for the additional servitude, so placed upon the streets and squares by the Legislature. Nor have they the right to an injunction restraining the construction of the railway for the benefit of the residents along such streets and squares. If such residents are damaged by the construction of the railway, they will be heard by the Courts, upon a proper case made.

3. The Act of December 11th, 1871, authorizes the Savannah and Thunderbolt Company to run their railway through the squares, intersecting Abercorn street.

Judgment reversed.