Court Opinion

ID: 3972051
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:30:34.664773+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:17:51.667157
License: Public Domain

This action, in form trespass to try title, was brought by E.W. Cave to recover ten acres of land over which the railway company's track was constructed without right in the year 1876.
The action was brought on October 28, 1885, and Cave was the owner of the land when it was first occupied by the company to whose rights the defendant company has succeeded.
Defendant disclaimed as to all the land except a strip fifty feet wide occupied as right of way, pleaded the statutes of limitation of ten years in bar of plaintiff's right to recover, and by cross-bill sought condemnation of right of way.
The cause was tried without a jury and resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff for the land, but on the cross-bill the right of way was condemned and damages assessed at $4000, on payment of which within ninety days it was decreed that the right of way should vest in the company. *Page 139 
One thousand dollars of the sum awarded was for the part of the land condemned for right of way, and the other three thousand for injury to the remainder of the tract.
It is insisted that, "the judgment of the court is contrary to the law and evidence in this, that it finds for the plaintiff E.W. Clave against the defendant company the Texas Western Railway Company, for damages by way of depreciation in value sustained by that portion of ten-acre lot 38 not included in the fifty foot strip occupied by the railway as its right of way, on which the railway is situated, notwithstanding the uncontradicted evidence showed that the road had been constructed thereon and in operation more than two years previous to the institution of the suit, and that therefore all claims for damages other than the depreciation in value of the strip actually occupied by the road had been barred by the statutes of limitation, said statutes of limitation and the facts above stated having been pleaded by the defendant company."
We do not see upon what theory it could be held that plaintiff is barred of his right to recover all damages he would be entitled to if the company had not occupied the land at all and was seeking to condemn before entering.
The land belongs to plaintiff, as the cross-bill admits, and will continue so to do until the company may pay the compensation awarded, and we see no reason why he should be held barred by a former occupancy which in no way divested his title on any item which goes to make up the compensation the company must pay before it can lawfully use the right of way.
It might as well be held that plaintiff was barred from recovering damages for the condemnation of the right of way itself by reason of a former occupancy not sufficient to confer the right, as to hold that he is barred from recovering for injury to land not, actually condemned but made less valuable by the condemnation of the right of way, for the one element of damages as well as the other enters into the compensation to be paid for the taking, and neither can be barred so long as the land has not in some lawful manner been burdened with the easement.
The damages awarded by the judgment are all prospective in character, the price for which the future burden is placed on the land; and a holding that past wrongful occupancy, which gave no right to continue to occupy, would cut off the right of a land owner to damages based on every element entering into the measure of compensation for taking of land for a public use could find no justification in principle or authority.
Such a holding could stand only on the theory that the wrongful possessor, who thereby has acquired no property in the thing possessed, should for his wrong doing be placed in a more favorable position when he seeks to secure the right to possess than would the person *Page 140 
who seeks lawfully to acquire the right to possess and use before he takes possession. The law offers no such rewards for wrong doing. For any injury done to plaintiff's land or use of it occurring more than ten years before this action was brought he was doubtless barred.
The court found that the tract of land through which the railway runs was worth when the railroad was first constructed over it from $50 to $100 per acre, but that at the time of trial it would be worth $1000 per acre if the railway was not on it or to continue on it, and it is urged that:
"The judgment of the court is contrary to law and evidence in this, that it finds for the plaintiff E.W. Cave against the defendant the Texas Western Railway Company, and in estimating the damages takes as the basis for such estimate the value of the land at the time of the trial, and not at the time when the road was built on the property and the cause of action accrued and the strip of land taken and appropriated by the defendant company."
At the time the railway was constructed on plaintiff's land the law furnished a method whereby the railway company might have had condemned for its use so much of the land as was necessary, and had it done so plaintiff's damages would have been assessed with reference to the value of the land at that time, but this it did not, and now seeks to do when the land has become much more valuable than it formerly was, and the price it must now pay is the sum which the value of the land at time of condemnation makes necessary to compensate the owner for the taking.
The wrongful possession was not a "taking" within the meaning of the laws, which prohibit the appropriation of private property to a public use without due compensation to its owner.
If the railway company desired to condemn land worth only $50 or $100 per acre it should have caused condemnation to be made when that was its value; and not having done so it has no just cause to complain that the law gives to the land owner damages based on the value of the land when it did have condemnation made.
The unauthorized construction of the railway on plaintiff's land gave defendant no right in or to the property, and its value at the time such possession began can not affect the quantum of damages, which must be measured by the value of the hand at the time of condemnation and consequent injury to the owner by the taking, for, although increased in value while defendant was wrongfully in possession, the land was still the property of plaintiff, and it can not be appropriated to the public use without adequate compensation first made, unless this is done with his consent.
If defendant is now compelled to pay more for right of way than it would have been compelled to pay had condemnation been made at an earlier day, this results from its own failure to take such steps at an *Page 141 
earlier period as it might and ought to have taken before taking possession of the land.
The other assignments of error are based upon the assumption that the record shows that plaintiff bought the Land after the railway was constructed over it, but the express finding of the court was that he was owner when possession was taken, and there is nothing in the record to show that this finding was not correct, even if we could look to the abstract of title which is found in the record, hence it is not necessary to determine what would be plaintiff's rights if he had purchased the land after the railway was constructed upon it.
Finding no error in the judgment, it will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Delivered March 6, 1891.