Source: https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/223/390/
Timestamp: 2019-04-19 04:20:09+00:00

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Justia › US Law › US Case Law › US Supreme Court › Volume 223 › Cincinnati v. Louisville & Nashville R. Co.
Cincinnati v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co.
After it admission into the Union, the legislative power of the State of Ohio was not restricted in any way by the provisions of Article 2 of the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, except as limited by its own constitution, and that state has every power of eminent domain which pertain to the other states.
Article 2 of the Northwest Ordinance did not forbid the appropriation by eminent domain of a contract dedicating land to the common use and benefit of a town.
the City of Cincinnati thereunder, condemning a right of way across the public landing at Cincinnati are not unconstitutional as impairing the obligation of the contract dedicating the landing as a common for the use and benefit of the town forever.
A dedication of land as a common for use and benefits of the town forever as shown on a plan, and the acceptance by the town and the sale of lots under the plan constitute a contract, the obligation whereof is protected by the contract clause of the federal Constitution.
The right of every state to exercise the power of eminent domain as to every description of property is an inherent power without which it cannot perform its functions.
The power of eminent domain was not surrendered by the states to the United States or affected by the federal Constitution except that it must be exercised with due process of law and on compensation's being made.
The power of eminent domain extends to tangibles and intangibles, including choses in action, contracts, and charters.
An appropriation under eminent domain with compensation of a contract neither challenges its validity nor impairs the obligation. It is a taking, not an impairment, of its obligation.
Every contract, whether between the state and an individual or between individuals only, is subject to the law of eminent domain, for there enters into every engagement the unwritten condition that it is subject to appropriation for public use.
The ordinance of the Northwest Territory ceased to be, in itself, obligatory upon the states carved from that territory after their admission into the Union as states, except so far as adopted by the states themselves and made a part of the laws thereof.
On its admission, whatever the conditions may have been prior thereto, whether from the conditions of the Northwest Ordinance or other territorial government, a state at once becomes entitled to and possessed of all the rights of dominion and sovereignty which belonged to the original states, and all limitations on sovereignty in the Act of admission not subsequently adopted by the state itself are inoperative. Coyle v. Oklahoma, 221 U. S. 559.
When the United States as an independent sovereign creates a territorial government with legislative authority, subject only to limitations of the creating act, it will be presumed to grant to the new dependent government the vital powers incident to and necessary to sovereignty unless it plainly appears to be withheld.
Art. 2 of the Northwest Ordinance, giving power only to take property in a public exigency for compensation, will be broadly construed as simply limiting the general right of eminent domain by the requirement that compensation be made.
A public exigency exists for the common preservation when the legislature declares that, for a bona fide public purpose, there should be a right of way for a common carrier across a particular piece of property, and in such a case, the propriety of the appropriation cannot be questioned by any other authority. United States v. Jones, 109 U. S. 519.
Quaere whether the only power of eminent domain to which a contract is subordinate is the power as it existed at the time that the contract was made or at the time of appropriation.
The facts, which involve the constitutionality of a municipal ordinance of Cincinnati and statute under which it was passed permitting condemnation for a right of way, are stated in the opinion.
Under an Act of the Legislature of the State of Ohio of May 9, 1908, being § 3283a, and an ordinance of the City of Cincinnati in pursuance of that act, the defendant railroad company instituted, in a court of the State of Ohio, a suit to condemn a right of way for an elevated railroad track across the public landing at Cincinnati. Pending the condemnation proceeding, the City of Cincinnati filed a bill in one of the common pleas courts to enjoin the railroad company from constructing its railway across said public landing, in pursuance of its agreement and contract with the city under the ordinance mentioned, and to restrain the prosecution of its pending petition for the condemnation of an easement of way across the landing. The ground upon which it was sought to stop the condemnation proceeding and prevent the company from constructing its elevated tracks across the public landing was that § 3283a, Revised Statutes of Ohio, under which alone an easement of way might be appropriated, was repugnant to Art. I, § 10 of the Constitution of the United States, forbidding any state to pass any law impairing the obligation of a contract, insofar as § 3283a applied to the particular property across which an easement of way was sought to be appropriated.
"use and occupy for an elevated track any portion of any public ground lying within the limits of a municipality and dedicated to the public for use as a public ground, common, landing, or wharf, or for any other public purpose,"
excepting streets, alleys, and public roads. It is provided that, before instituting a proceeding for the appropriation of the needed easement, which is to be according to a general statute referred to, such company shall submit plans for the structure, and come to an agreement with the city council of the municipality concerned as to the terms and conditions upon which the easement shall be occupied.
The proprietors of the grant of land upon which the City of Cincinnati was originally laid out made a plan or plat of the proposed town, according to which plan a strip of ground between Front Street and the Ohio River was set apart "as a common for the use and benefit of the town forever." The effect of the sale of the town lots under this plan has long since been held to constitute a dedication of the riverfront strip to the public use, and to have vested in the City of Cincinnati a valid title in trust for the public use in the same manner that streets were held under the same plat or plan. Cincinnati v. White, 6 Pet. 431. This dedication was made in 1789, and the property has ever since been used as a public landing or wharf.
A demurrer to the petition was sustained by the court of common pleas, and the bill dismissed. This was affirmed upon appeal to the circuit court, and again affirmed upon appeal to the supreme court of the state.
Revised Statutes of Ohio, is an impairment of the contract, forbidden by the 10th section of the first article of the Constitution of the United States. But the right of every state to authorize the appropriation of every description of property for a public use is one of those inherent powers which belong to state governments, without which they could not well perform their great functions. It is a power not surrendered to the United States, and is untouched by any of the provisions of the federal Constitution, provided there be due process of law -- that is, a law authorizing it, and provision made for compensation. This power extends to tangibles and intangibles alike. A chose in action, a charter, or any kind of contract are, along with land and movables, within the sweep of this sovereign authority.
The constitutional inhibition upon any state law impairing the obligation of contracts is not a limitation upon the power of eminent domain. The obligation of a contract is not impaired when it is appropriated to a public use and compensation made therefor. Such an exertion of power neither challenges its validity nor impairs its obligation. Both are recognized, for it is appropriated as an existing, enforceable contract. It is a taking, not an impairment of its obligation. If compensation be made, no constitutional right is violated. All of this has been so long settled as to need only the citation of some of the many cases. Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge, 11 Pet. 420; West River Bridge Co. v. Dix, 6 How. 507; N.O. Gas Co. v. La. Light Co., 115 U. S. 650; Long Island Water Supply Co. v. Brooklyn, 166 U. S. 685; Offield v. Railroad Co., 203 U. S. 372.
Every contract, whether between the state and an individual or between individuals only, is subject to this general law. There enters into every engagement the unwritten condition that it is subordinate to the right of appropriation to a public use. West River Bridge Co.
v. Dix, 6 How. 507; Long Island Water Supply Co. v. Brooklyn, 166 U. S. 691, 166 U. S. 692.
These general propositions are not challenged.
"No man shall be deprived of his liberty or property but by the judgment of his peers or the law of the land, and should the public exigencies make it necessary for the common preservation to take any person's property or to demand his particular services, full compensation shall be made for the same."
But the ordinance of 1787, as an instrument limiting the powers of government of the Northwest Territory, and declaratory of certain fundamental principles which must find place in the organic law of states to be carved out of that territory, ceased to be in itself obligatory upon such states from and after their admission into the Union as states except insofar as adopted by such states and made a part of the law thereof. This has been the view of this Court, so often announced as to need no further argument. Pollard's Lessee v. Hagan, 3 How. 212; Permoli v. New Orleans, 3 How. 589; Escanaba Co. v. Chicago, 107 U. S. 678, 107 U. S. 688.
"Whatever the limitation upon her powers as a government whilst in a territorial condition, whether from the ordinance of 1787 or the legislation of Congress, it ceased to have any operative force, except as voluntarily adopted by her, after she became a state of the Union. On her admission, she at once became entitled to and possessed of all the rights of dominion and sovereignty which belonged to the original states. She was admitted, and could be admitted, only on the same footing with them. The language of the resolution admitting her is 'on an equal footing with the original states, in all respects whatever.' 3 Stat. 536. Equality of constitutional right and power is the condition of all the states of the Union, old and new. Illinois therefore, as was well observed by counsel, could afterwards exercise the same power over rivers within her limits that Delaware exercised over Black Bird Creek and Pennsylvania over the Schuylkill River."
In Coyle v. Oklahoma, 221 U. S. 559, the case of Escanaba Co. v. Chicago, and the cases cited therein, were fully reviewed and held applicable to conditions imposed by Congress in the Enabling Act under which Oklahoma was admitted, and all limitations in that act were held inoperative after admission insofar as they had not been subsequently adopted by the state, and were in derogation of the equality in power of that state with the other states of the Union.
the terms of the ordinance of 1787 is a law impairing the obligation of a contract.
But the assumption that the power of eminent domain possessed by the Northwest Territory in 1787 was limited as claimed is untenable. The clause referred to assumes the existence of a general power of eminent domain in the government, and provides that, when exerted, there must be full compensation for the property taken or the services required. That this is so is apparent not only from the language of the clause, but from a general consideration of the purpose and object of the congressional act in which the article appears. The ordinance of 1787 was a law providing for the government of the territory of the United States northwest of the River Ohio. It provided for the appointment of a governor and secretary and for the appointment of judges and the organization of courts with common law jurisdiction. To the governor and judges was granted legislative power to adopt and publish such laws of the original states as should seem to be adapted to the conditions, which were to be and remain in force unless disapproved by Congress. Authority to elect a legislature was conferred when there should be five thousand inhabitants.
by the power to adopt and publish the laws of any original state deemed appropriate, and by the second section there was conferred upon the governor and legislature, when organized, "authority to make laws in all cases . . . not repugnant to the principles and articles in this ordinance established and declared." This legislative power, temporarily in the governor and a majority of the judges, and then in the governor and the legislature, when organized, included, by necessary implication, the general power to provide for the appropriation of private property for public purposes. If this is not the case, then the ordinance granted no power of that kind whatever, for the clause above cited is obviously a mere restriction by which compensation is required.
"The provision found in the Fifth Amendment to the federal Constitution and in the Constitutions of the several states, for just compensation for the property taken, is merely a limitation upon the use of the power. It is no part of the power itself, but a condition upon which the power may be exercised. It is undoubtedly true that the power of appropriating private property to public uses, vested in the general government -- its right of eminent domain, which Vattel defines to be the right of disposing, in case of necessity and for the public safety, of all the wealth of the country -- cannot be transferred to a state any more than its other sovereign attributes, and that, when the use to which the property taken is applied is public, the propriety or expediency of the appropriation cannot be called in question by any other authority."
mere territorial dependency, is of no consequence. The United States was an independent sovereign, and when it created a territorial government with legislative authority subject only to the limitations of the creating act, it granted to this new dependent government this vital power unless it plainly appears that it was withheld.
it undiminished. And when a corporation alleges that a state has surrendered, for seventy years, its power of improvement and public accommodation in a great and important line of travel, along which a vast number of its citizens must daily pass, the community have a right to insist, in the language of this Court, above quoted, 'that its abandonment ought not to be presumed in a case in which the deliberate purpose of the state to abandon it does not appear.' The continued existence of a government would be of no great value if, by implications and presumptions, it was disarmed of the powers necessary to accomplish the ends of its creation, and the functions it was designed to perform transferred to the hands of privileged corporations. The rule of construction announced by the court was not confined to the taxing power, nor is it so limited in the opinion delivered. On the contrary, it was distinctly placed on the ground that the interests of the community were concerned in preserving, undiminished, the power then in question, and whenever any power of the state is said to be surrendered or diminished, whether it be the taxing power or any other affecting the public interest, the same principle applies, and the rule of construction must be the same."
Nor should the particular language of the article above set out be given a narrow or hypercritical meaning. The plain purpose was but to limit the general right of eminent domain by the requirement that compensation should be made. A public "exigency" exists, for the "common preservation," when the legislature declares that, for a bona fide public purpose, there should be a right of way for a common carrier across a particular piece of property. The uses to which § 3283a authorizes a condemnation of a right of way are undeniably public, and not private, uses. When that is the case, "the propriety or expediency of the appropriation cannot be called in question by any other authority." United States v. Jones, 109 U. S. 519.
It follows, then, first that the legislative power of the State of Ohio was not restricted in any way by the provisions of the second article of the ordinance of 1787 after its admission to the Union, and it has every power of eminent domain which pertains to other states, unless limited by its own Constitution, and second that, if the law of eminent domain as it existed at the time of the dedication is to be read into the contract, that that law, properly interpreted, was not such as to forbid an appropriation such as is here involved.

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