A railway company which undertakes to exercise the power to condemn property for its use must be able to show a legislative warrant for the power, and to establish that the proposed use of the property sought to be condemned is for a purpose within the legitimate scope of its organization. In the matter of Niagara Falls & Whirlpool Ry. 108 N. Y. 375; Chicago etc. R. Co. v. Wiltse, 116 Ill. 449; Tracy v. Railway, 80 Ky. 259. Has the railway company in this case brought itself within either branch of this rule ? These are questions presented by this appeal.
The petition filed by the railway to condemn the land in question sets forth that it is the successor to the Cairo & Fulton Railroad — a- line located north and south through the State ; that the charter of that company authorizes the building of branches from its main line, and “that a branch of its road is surveyed and located over and upon”, the land in question, which is situate in Sebastian county. The complaint in this case, which is filed by the land owner to enjoin the prosecution of the condemnation proceeding, and the proof taken in the cause, show that the company is operating a line of railway between two points in Sebastian county. Nothing more is shown in relation to the building, survey or location of the road. We know judicially that Sebastian county is in the extreme western part of the State and remote from the line of the old Cairo & Fulton Railroad. That railway had the legislative warrant to build branches ; but a branch is an offshoot of the trunk and cannot exist independently of it. A disconnected road is an independent line, and not a branch. The charter of the Cairo & Fulton Railroad conferred no authority upon that corporation to build independent lines or branches from other lines. It had no legislative warrant, therefore, to exercise the power of eminent domain for that purpose.
Without halting to consider whether the appellant can exercise the privilege of the Cairo & Fulton Railroad to build branches without complying with the general law for the construction of railways, the question whether the court is at liberty to treat the road in Sebastian county as a branch of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway has given me no little concern. There is no indication in the record that it has or is intended to have any connection 'with the main line. There is not even an allegation to that effect. Conceding- that the Cairo & Fulton Railroad could have beg-un the construction of a branch at a point far removed from the main line, the power to take property in invitum for the purpose could not have been exercised except upon a clear showing of a bona fide intent to push the enterprise through presently to the trunk connection which alone authorized its existence. But we leave the question open because the appellee has not challenged the company’s, authority on that ground either here or in the lower court. It may be that the facts which were known to the parties justified the conclusion that the legislative warrant existed, and that they refrained from entering upon the enquiry in the trial court for that reason. For the purposes of this case, therefore, we take it that the railway has legislative authority for the exercise of the power of eminent domain on the line designated in Sebastian county.
The vexed question for determination is, is the company seeking to condemn the land for railroad purposes— that is, for public use ?
3. as to He «se.
The appellee argues that the proof shows that the railway s proceeding to condemn is prosecuted, not for its own use, but for the use and benefit of the Western Coal & Mining Company, a corporation which owns and operates a coal mine near the appellant’s line of railway. The managers of the railway were probably instigated by the coal company to institute the condemnation proceeding, and they doubtless intended that the coal company should derive a benefit therefrom. But those facts alone do not furnish a legal reason sufficient to warrant judicial interference with the power delegated to the corporation by the legislature. If the land is needed for legitimate railroad purposes, the motive which influenced the railway managers in undertaking the work will not take from it' its public character. A proposed public user will not be enjoined by the courts upon the ground that it will further private interests. De Camp v. Hibernia Ry. 47 N. J. L. 44; National Docks R. Co. v. Central R. Co. 32 N. J. Eq. 755; South Chicago R. Co. v. Dix, 109 Ill. 237; Dunham v. Hyde Park, 75 id. 371; Lewis, Em. Dom. sec. 646.
A railway cannot exercise the right of eminent domain to establish a private shipping station for an individual shipper. If the station is for the exclusive use of a single individual, of a collection of individuals less than the public, that stamps it as a private use, and private property cannot be taken for private use. The fact that the railway’s business would be increased by the additional private facilities is not enough to make the use public. Rensselaer etc. Ry. v. Davis, 43 N. Y. 137. To be public the user must concern the public. If it is an aid in facilitating the business for which the public agency is authorized to exercise the power to condemn, or if the public may enjoy the use of it not by permission but of right, its character is public. When once the character of the use is found to be public, the court’s enquiry ends, and the legislative policy is left supreme, although it appears that private ends will be advanced by the public user. It is common for the interest of some individuals to be advanced, while that of others is prejudiced, by the location of railway stations and switches when there is no motive on the part of the railway officials to discriminate between them. That result is seen in the original location of every line of railway. But the courts do not assume to. interfere with the right of the company to locate its line, stations or switches. In this case, the railway located its sidetracks contiguous to the mine of the coal company, rather than to that of the appellee who is a rival miner. The evidence is abundant that side tracks were necessary to facilitate and hasten the business offered to the company at that point. That, of itself, is sufficient to give public character to the use to which the land was to be devoted. Moreover, at that point upon this very land,- as the proof shows, there is established a shipping station for coal. The railway’s franchise empowers it to establish none but public stations. It can place no unreasonable restraint on the right of the public to use it. If the railway maintains a coal shipping station at that point, and unreasonably refuses to accord to the appellee, or others who have occasion to ship coal therefrom, facilities for doing so, the courts can afford a remedy for the wrong ; and if the railway abuses the privilege of condemning private property for a public use by turning the property acquired by condemnation to a private use, doubtless the easement it acquired by condemnation may be revoked, and the possession restored to the owner of the fee.
The fact that tracks are extended upon the lands of the coal company for its exclusive use is not a matter to concern the appellees, for the reason before stated — that is, a public use is first subserved. If no use could be made of the side tracks except to subserve the interest of the coal company, the power to condemn could not be exercised for that purpose. Sholl v. German Coal Co. 118 Ill. 427. But, as we have seen, that is not this case.
In the case of De Camp v. Hibernia R. Co. 47 N. J. L. 44, one terminus of the railroad which sought to exercise the right of eminent domain was under ground and on private property, so that the public had no means of 'access to it at that point. The charter of the company authorized it to become a common carrier of freight only. The court held that lands along the route could be taken against the will of the owner, and gave these reasons for the ruling : “ Bvery one of the public having' occasion to send materials, implements or machinery for mining purposes into, or to obtain ores from, the several mining tracks adjacent to the location of this road, may use this railroad for that purpose, and of right may require the company to serve him in that respect, and that is the test which determines whether the use is public. * * * It is the right which characterises the enterprise, and that is public.”
In the case of the South Chicago Ry. v. Dix, 109 Ill. 237, the railway company laid out a side track, one terminus of which was at the water works of a village, and was there used to deliver coal for the use of the water works. The side track was built apparently in obedience to an ordinance passed by the village attempting to require the railway company to reach its water works. The court held that the power of eminent domain could be exercised to take land for the side track, saying: “ It is insisted that this is a mere private use, and that the track was built to serve this use. * * * This certainly shows that the track does serve this private use, and that it was designed to do so ; and if it served this use merely, and was not an aid in the convenient operation of the main line of the railroad, appellee’s position would be maintained. But if, in addition to serving such use, the track be one which is necessary for the convenient operation of the railroad, then it may properly come within the purview of a side track. A side track can surely be none the less such because, in addition to the purposes of a side track proper, it sub-serves some other private individual use.” That case is not unlike the one in hand.
There are numerous cases holding that a railway built for the purpose of reaching a coal mine or a manufacturing establishment is a public enterprise entitled to exercise the power of eminent domain, provided the public has the right to use it. That right makes the use public. Lewis, Em. Dom. sec. 171 and cases cited in notes; Mills, Em. Dom. sec. 28; Kettle River Rd. Co. v. Eastern Ry. Co. 41 Minn. 461; Phillips v. Watson, 63 Iowa, 28; DeCamp v. Hibernia Ry. 47 N. J. L. 44; Hays v. Risher, 32 Pa. St. 169, 177.
The decision in the case of Roberts v. Williams, 15 Ark. 43, 49, is based upon the same reasoning, and sustains the theory of these cases. It is there held that an individual may exercise the right of eminent domain for the purpose of establishing a road from his premises to a public highway. The case is in harmony with the weight of authority upon the subject. Por a collection of the cases, see 6 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 529; note to Beekman v. Ry. 22 Am. Dec. 693. Roberts v. Williams may then be said to sustain the position that the State’s right of eminent domain may be exercised to lay out a public road, though it be no thoroug'hfare, and has one terminus on private property.
These cases furnish illustrations of what is a public use, and are valuable in the determination of this cause for that reason only. It does not follow that, because private property may be taken for the use of a railway built to connect a coal mine with the arteries of commerce, any railway may condemn land to construct a lateral road from its main line for the purpose of reaching a coal mine. Ordinarily, authority is confined to the construction of a line between given termini, and such side tracks as are necessary for the operation of the line. In such cases there is no authority to build branches or lateral roads. Chicago etc. R. Co. v. Wiltse, 116 Ill. 449; So. Chicago Ry. v. Dix, 109 Ill. 237; Edgewood Railroad's Appeal, 79 Pa. St. 257.
The company in this case is undertaking only to obtain land for side tracks which appear to be necessary for use in operating the road.
It is argued that the company shows no necessity for taking this land for side tracks because the right of way on the opposite side of the track extending fifty feet from its center is not occupied by tracks ; and, further, that the company, having' once exercised the right of eminent domain to condemn a right of way for its main line, has exhausted its power, and for that reason can condemn no more. Neither position is tenable. Having' determined that the side tracks 'are necessary for 'the conduct of the company’s business, the location must be left to the company’s discretion, unless there is a very clear abuse of it. In this case it was only a question as to which of two competing miners should have the benefit of the location. We cannot interfere to give it to the appellee. Moreover, the proof tends to show that it would be more expensive to lay out the tracks on the appellee’s side, and the width of the right of way on that side is not such as the company contends will best serve their convenience.
3. Discreto locate sut-
As to the last point mentioned above, we concur in the statement of the law made in Mills on Hminent Domain at sec. 58« : “The power to make necessary side tracks means to make them when they become necessary ; otherwise it would be the power to make unnecessary side tracks. Such a power may be exercised when necessary, and hence is not exhausted by one exercise.” Union Pac. Ry. v. Atchison, etc. Ry. 5 Am. & Eng. R. Cases (Kas.), 395.
4 Exteilt makelfde-0
Whether we look to the charter of the Cairo & Fulton Railroad Company or to the general railroad law, the power is given to condemn lands necessary for side tracks. Mansf. Dig. sec. 5467. See Carmody v. Railroad Co. 111 Ill. 69.
Hor these reasons the decree of the court is wrong. Reverse and dismiss the complaint.*
As to the power to condemn, a right of way for railroad sidings to private establishments, see note to the principal case in 20 L. R. A. 434 (Rep).