The bill of exceptions taken in this case incorporates within it all the evidence given on the trial; and a motion having been made for a new trial, on the ground, among others, that the verdict was not sustained by sufficient evidence, and that motion having been overruled, and the ruling excepted to, a foundation is laid, under our practice as prescribed by statute, for a review of the finding of the jury on matters of fact. Accordingly we have read and considered the evidence; but as its incorporation in the report of the case would be intolerably tedious, and of no practical value to any one, suffice it to say that if the rulings of the court below on matters of law shall be found to be free from error, we would not, in this case, disturb the verdict of the jury on matters of fact. '
We proceed, then, to the consideration of the matters. of law which the case presents; and to this end we are led, in the first place, to the inquiry: What is the nature of the plaintiff’s ease as made by himself? And on what theory, in respect to it, does he begin and proceed in it ? • It is not an actioxx for the assertion of
It is claimed in argument by the railroad company, that under section 12 of the act of May 1, 1852, “to provide for the creation and regulation of incorporated companies,” etc. (8 Curwen’s Stat. 1880), it had the power, in invitum, as against the canal company, to appropriate the canal for the purposes of its railroad; and if it were necessary in this case to pass upon this question, we should find it to be one not easily resolved in favor of the authority claimed. The power of one corporation, in the exercise of the delegated right of eminent domain, to appropriate, without consent, to its own uses, what constitutes the material body of another corporation, aud which the latter has obtained by the exercise of a like delegated authority, is a power so extraordinary and so susceptible of abuse, that its existence certainly ought not to be inferred from statutory phraseology of doubtful import. But we do not find it necessary in this case to pass upon the question, for it is sufficiently apparent that the proceeding by which the canal was transferred from the canal company to the railroad company, though adversary in form, was in fact an amicable one — a matter of bargain and sale — and the canal company is not here complaining. Its rights are out of the case, except in so far as it may be necessary to consider them incidentally, with a view to the determination of the rights of the plaintiff, Hatch ^ and, as against him, the right of the railroad company to make the appropriation by a proper proceeding is unquestionable.
How, then, stands the case as to him? As before observed, he does not in his action seek to contest the fact of appropriation, nor to undo, it. He does not seek to recover, the land *from, nor [120
The right of eminent domain (the right to subject private property to public uses, with the concurrent obligation to make full compensation therefor) is inherent in the state, and when it is lodged to any extent in corporations it is a delegated right, and is limited by the uses for the furtherance of which, on the ground of public policy, it is conferred. The exercise of the right of eminent domain is primarily and mediately the act of the state; and corporations to which it has been delegated and by which it is immediately exercised, are but instrumentalities of the state, although they may have, and generally do have, corporate interests intermingled with and growing out of the exercise of this sovereign prerogative of the state. When the original appropriation of the plaintiff’s lands was made for the purposes of a canal, it was a matter of interest both to the state and to the canal company. The power^to make it was 121] conferred on the canal ^company because it was in furtherance of state policy for the public good; and the power was exercised by the canal company in furtherance of its own supposed corporate interests. These interests of the canal company, and this policy of tho state, might be abandoned; and it is conceded that, if they were
The plaintiff, then, was entitled to compensation from the railroad company for the full value of such land as it may have taken from him not embraced in the appropriation made by the canal company; and for such additional burdens as may have been imposed upon the lands covered by the original appropriation; and for damage dotie or accruing to his adjacent lands, by reason of the additional appropriation, if any, and of the change of structure and of use from those of a canal to those of a railroad, in so far as such damages are peculiar to himself as a proprietor, and not common to the public
The general principles applicable to the case having thus been disposed of, the particular rulings of the court below alleged for error remain to be considered.
And as to these rulings, we are of opinion:
1. The plaintiff, in his own testimony as a witness, does not claim that any contract ever existed between him and the canal conqmny for a water-power to be furnished by it to him, nor that any such power was ever enjoyed by him. For this, and for other reasons, there was no error in the rulings of.the court below in respect to it.
2. The court below did not err in ruling that the plaintiff had no well-founded claim for damages on account of the loss of the convenience of watering farm stock at the canal, nor for the loss of the convenience of navigating the canal for his own private purposes. The property of the canal company in its canal was absolute; and 128] its right of control over it was ^exclusive; it might have fenced in its canal, and fenced out the plaintiff from any access to its waters, and so have excluded him from either or both of these conveniences, and he would have had no legal ground of complaint. If, during the existence of the canal, he enjoyed either of these conveniences, it was as a matter of sufferance by the canal company, and not as a matter of right against it.
3. The court below held that in so far as the plaintiff’s access between public highways and his adjacent lands were affected to his inconvenience or damage by reason of the change of the uses of the easement from those of a canal to those of a railroad, he was entitled to compensation ; but, if his convenience of access to and from his lands and the highways adjoining them remained the same, the fact that his passage along public highways to and from one portion of his lands and another was by such change made less safe or convenient, he was not on this account entitled to any compensa
4. The questions whether, on the appropriation of land for the purposes of a railroad, inci’eased danger of fire to buildings on adjoining lands of the owner on whom the easement is imposed, is-a proper element in the estimate of damages on -account of such appropriation, and if so, how far, are theoretically and practically
In its charge to the jury, the court below said: “ The plaintiff sought to recover damages for certain incidental injuries which he alleges he sustained in consequence of the conversion of the canal into a railroad. As to most of the matters embraced .by this claim, 125] I was satisfied they did not form a *proper subject for compensation in damage, and therefore excluded the evidence offered. But, as to two of them, evidence was received. The first was as to increased danger from fire to the buildings, fences, and other property on the plaintiff’s land. When this evidence was offered, however, I became satisfied it was not sufficient to establish any appreciable increase of danger from fire, that any attempt to estimate ■damages from it would only involve the most uncertain conjectures, .and that it ought to be withdrawn from your consideration. I ■therefore rule out all evidence upon this point.”
Looking into the evidence embodied in the bill of exceptions, we ¡find the plaintiff has a house about one hundred and fifty feet from the railroad, on the south side, and that he has a barn about one hundred, and a house about two hundred feet from the railroad, on "the north side. We are not prepared to say, as at present advised, that the court below erred in its ruling on this point, and it is fairly ■entitled to the benefit of our serious doubts ; and, on the whole, we •prefer, on the general question, to await the possible revelation of ■.further light upon it.
5. In what was said by the court below in its charge to the jury, in respect to the berme bank of the canal, we see no error. A berme bank for the canal was necessary for the uses of a canal; .and whether it consisted of a natural or artificial deposit of earth ■can make no difference. It must have formed a part of the original .appropriation by the canal, unless there were a special agreement to
For error in the charge of the court below, in respect to the third point above considered, the judgment is reversed, new trial awarded, ¡and cause remanded.