The failure of the state court to pass on the federal right or
immunity specially set up of record is not conclusive, but this
Court will decide the federal question if the necessary effect of
the judgment is to deny a federal right or immunity specially set
up or claimed, and which, if recognized and enforced, would require
a judgment different from one resting upon some ground of local or
general law.
Under the laws of Illinois, the draining of bodies of land so as
to make them fit for human habitation and cultivation is a public
purpose, to accomplish which the state may by appropriate agencies
exert the general
Page 200 U. S. 562
powers it possesses for the common good, and § 40 1/2 of the
Farm Drainage Act of that state was a proper exercise of the police
power of the state. The rights of a railroad company to a bridge
over a natural watercourse crossing its right of way, acquired
under its general corporate power, are not superior and paramount
to the right of the public to use that watercourse for the purpose
of draining lands in its vicinity in accordance with plans adopted
by a drainage commission lawfully constituted under the Farm
Drainage Act.
Although the opening under a bridge constructed by a railroad
company may be sufficient at the time to pass all water flowing
through the watercourse, there is an implied duty on the part of
the company to maintain an opening adequate and effectual for such
an increase in the volume of water as may result from lawful and
reasonable regulations established by appropriate public authority
from time to time for the drainage of lands on either side of the
watercourse.
Uncompensated obedience to a regulation enacted for the public
safety under the police power of the state is not taking property
without due compensation, and the constitutional prohibition
against the taking of private property without compensation is not
intended as a limitation of the exercise of these police powers
which are necessary to the tranquility of every well ordered
community, nor of that general power over private property which is
necessary for the orderly existence of all governments.
In this case, the proper drainage of the land in the district
being impossible without the removal of a railway bridge over the
natural watercourse into which the lands drained and the
construction of a bridge with a larger opening for the increased
volume of water,
held that:
It is the duty of the railway company, at its own expense, to
remove the present bridge, and also (unless it abandons or
surrenders its right to cross the creek at or in that vicinity) to
erect at its own expense and maintain a new bridge in conformity
with regulations established by the Drainage Commissioners, under
the authority of the state, and such a requirement, if enforced,
will not amount to a taking of private property for public use
within the meaning of the Constitution, nor to a denial of the
equal protection of the laws.
This is a contest between certain Drainage Commissioners in
Illinois and the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railway Company
as to the validity of a demand made by the former that the latter
should remove the bridge and culvert now maintained by it over Rob
Roy Creek, in Kendall County, Illinois, and, if it continues to
maintain a bridge and culvert at the same point, that one be
substituted that will meet the requirements of a certain plan of
drainage adopted by
Page 200 U. S. 563
those commissioners. Let us see in what way the dispute
arises.
This suit or proceeding is based in part on what is known as the
Farm Drainage Act of Illinois, in force July 1, 1885, entitled, "An
Act Provided for Drainage for Agricultural and Sanitary Purposes,
etc." Hurd's Ill.Stat. 1901, p. 712. By that act, the commissioners
of highways in each town, in the several counties under township
organization, are constituted Drainage Commissioners for all
drainage districts in their respective towns, with power as a body
politic to sue and be sued, contract and be contracted with.
Section 1. Owners of lands are authorized to
"drain the same in the general course of natural drainage, by
constructing open or covered drains, discharging the same into any
natural watercourse, or into any natural depression, whereby the
water will be carried into some natural watercourse, or into some
drain on the public highway, with the consent of the commissioners
thereto, and when such drainage is wholly upon the owner's land, he
shall not be liable in damages therefor to any person or persons or
corporation."
Section 4.
The act also provided:
"When the case involves a system of combined drainage in one
town, and it is proposed that the cost shall be borne
proportionately by the several parties benefited, a petition
addressed to the Drainage Commissioners shall be presented to the
town clerk, signed by a majority in number of the adult owners of
land lying in a proposed district, and they shall be the owners in
the aggregate of more than one third of the lands lying in the
proposed district, or by the owners of the major part of the land
and who constitute one third or more of the owners of the land in
the proposed district, setting forth the boundaries, or a
description of the several tracts of land thereof or fractions as
usually designated: . . . Said petition shall state that the lands
lying within the boundaries of said proposed district require a
combined system of drainage or protection from wash or overflow;
that the petitioners desire that a drainage district may be
Page 200 U. S. 564
organized, embracing the lands therein mentioned, for the
purpose of constructing, repairing, or maintaining a drain or
drains, ditch or ditches, embankment or embankments, grade or
grades, or all or either, within said district, for agricultural
and sanitary purposes, by special assessments upon the property
benefited thereby."
Section 11. Again:
"Upon the organization of a drainage district, the commissioners
shall go upon the land and determine upon a system of drainage,
which shall provide main outlets of ample capacity for the waters
of the district, having in view the future contingencies, as well
as the present. . . . The maps and papers showing the final
determination as to the system of drainage shall be filed in the
clerk's office and be recorded in the drainage record."
Section 17. Hurd's Rev.Stat.Ill. 1901, pp. 713, 714, 717.
Section 40 1/2 has, however, a more special application to the
present case. It is in these words:
"The commissioners shall have the power and are required to make
all necessary bridges and culverts along or across any public
highway or railroad which may be deemed necessary for the use or
protection of the work, and the cost of the same shall be paid out
of the road and bridge tax,
or by the railroad company, as
the case may be:
Provided, however, notice shall first be
given to the road or railroad authorities to build or construct
such bridge or culvert, and they shall have thirty days in which to
build or construct the same, such bridges or culverts shall, in all
cases, be constructed so as not to interfere with the free flow of
water through the drains of the district. Should any railroad
company refuse or neglect to build or construct any bridge or
culvert as herein required, the commissioners constructing the same
may recover the cost and expenses therefor in a suit against said
company before any justice of the peace or any court having
jurisdiction, and reasonable attorney's fees may be recovered as
part of the cost. The proper authorities of any public road or
railroad shall have the right of appeal the same as provided for
individual landowners."
Section 40 1/2. Hurd's Rev.Stat.Ill. 1901, 723.
Page 200 U. S. 579
It is contended by the defendants in error that § 56 of what is
known as the levee act has a bearing on the case. That section need
not, however, be set out, as the supreme court of the state
adjudged in this case that a district organized under the Farm
Drainage Act was subject only to the provisions of that act, and
that the Drainage Commissioners could not claim any authority under
the other act.
Chicago, B. & Q. Ry. Co. v. People of
Illinois ex rel. &c., 212 Ill. 103.
See also Gauen v.
Drainage District, 131 Ill. 446;
Drainage Commissioners v.
Volke, 163 Ill. 243;
McCaleb v. Coon Run Drainage
District, 190 Ill. 549.
The present proceeding was instituted in the Circuit Court of
Kendall County, Illinois, by the defendants in error as Drainage
Commissioners for the Bristol Drainage District in that county
against the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railway Company. It is
a petition for mandamus.
Besides a general demurrer, the railway company demurred
specially upon the ground that a judgment in favor of the
commissioners would take its property for public use without
compensation, and therefore without due process of law, as well as
deny to it the equal protection of the laws, in violation of the
Constitution of the United States. The demurrer was overruled. The
defendant having elected to stand by its demurrer, judgment was
rendered ordering a writ of mandamus as prayed for in the petition.
That judgment was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Illinois, 212
Ill. 103, and hence the present writ of error.
As the case was determined upon the demurrer, the facts are to
be taken as alleged in the petition. The case, thus presented, is
as follows:
The drainage district in question was organized under the Farm
Drainage Act above referred to, and contains about 2,000 acres of
land on both sides of Rob Roy Creek, across which are the road and
right of way of the railway company. For more than fifty years
before the district was established, that creek had been, as it now
is, a natural watercourse. Prior
Page 200 U. S. 566
to June 24th, 1903, the commissioners located a ditch or drain
on the line of the creek for the purpose of enlarging its channel
or watercourse, and thereby enabling the lands in the drainage
district to be better drained and made more tillable.
The railway company operated and maintained its road across Rob
Roy Creek not under any specific grant of authority, but under its
general corporate power to construct, operate, and maintain a
railroad. It placed a bridge or culvert twelve by thirty feet at
the point where the road crosses the creek. In constructing a
foundation for the bridge or culvert, the company sank or placed in
the creek at the point of crossing huge wooden timbers and stones,
thereby preventing the deepening and enlarging of the creek by the
commissioners unless they removed such timber and stones, and if
that be done, the result will be the destruction of the bridge or
culvert. The present channel or water way of the creek, under the
bridge or culvert is three feet in depth and twelve feet in width.
It is insufficient to allow the natural flow of water in the ditch
or drain proposed to be constructed by the commissioners. The
estimated cost of this ditch or open drain is $20,000. The present
bridge across the creek does not exceed $8,000 in value, and a new
bridge, conforming to the plan of the Commissioners, will cost not
exceeding $13,000.
On the twenty-fourth of June, 1903, the Drainage Commissioners
notified the railway company in writing that a bridge was necessary
at the point where the company's right of way would be crossed or
intersected by the proposed ditch; that it was necessary to enlarge
the opening under the present bridge; that the proposed improvement
was to be the waterway of a combined system of drainage established
in the vicinity under the charge and direction of the Drainage
Commissioners of the district; that the main ditch of the drainage,
where it will intersect the company's right of way, must be of the
width of twenty-three feet and of the depth of nine and one-half
feet, the bridge constructed to be of the width of twenty-three
feet
Page 200 U. S. 567
in the clear at the surface or level of land, and to permit at
least sixteen feet in the clear at the bottom of the ditch. The
notice stated that the company was required, in pursuance of the
statute in such case made and provided, to build and construct such
bridge within thirty days from the date of the notice, in default
whereof the commissioners would construct the same at the cost and
expense of the company.
The company disregarded the notice and failed to build and
construct the required bridge or culvert at the point of
intersection with the creek, in accordance with the dimensions
specified in the notice, and so as to permit such enlargement of
the channel under the bridge as would be sufficient for the natural
flow of water in the proposed ditch or drain.
The petition averred that a majority of the lands of the
drainage district were swamp or slough lands, and in their present
condition were not subject to cultivation, but by means of the
proposed deepening and enlarging of Rob Roy Creek, and as a result
of the removal of the timbers and stones in the creek and the
enlargement and deepening of the creek, all the lands in the
drainage district would be "greatly improved, and made good,
tillable land, subject to cultivation;" that the proposed location
of the ditch or drain along the creek was the best route or means
for drainage of the district, constituting the only natural
watercourse of the drainage district, and affording the only
natural outlet or way of drainage of the lands to make them
tillable; that, if said improvement and enlargement of the ditch
was made and the timbers and stones removed from the creek at the
point of crossing, all of the lands of the district would be made
good, tillable lands for general farming purposes, and that the
proposed construction of a ditch or drain along Rob Roy Creek, when
completed in accordance with said plans, would
"not divert or carry waters which by nature of force of gravity
would flow or drain into any other natural watercourse in said
drainage district or the vicinity thereof."
The commissioners allege in their petition that the neglect,
Page 200 U. S. 568
failure, and refusal of the railway company to remove the
timbers and stones it had placed in the creek, and to construct and
enlarge the opening under its bridge or culvert, had prevented them
from completing the construction of the ditch or drain in
accordance with the plans adopted by them; that it was necessary
for the use and protection of the proposed drainage work that the
opening underneath the bridge or culvert be constructed and
enlarged in the manner indicated in order that the lands in the
district might be drained in accordance with said plans; which
plans "are reasonable for the suitable and proper drainage of said
district."
The relief asked was a writ of mandamus commanding the railway
company to forthwith enlarge, deepen, and widen the waterway over
and across the company's right of way across Rob Roy Creek.
Page 200 U. S. 579
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
1. The first question is one of the authority of this Court to
review the judgment below. As we have seen, the railway company
insisted in the court of original jurisdiction that the statute
under which the Drainage Commissioners proceeded
Page 200 U. S. 580
could not be applied in this case without taking its property
for public use without compensation, and therefore depriving it of
property without due process of law, or without denying to it the
equal protection of the laws, guaranteed by the Constitution of the
United States. The judgment of the trial court was adverse to that
view. In the supreme court of the state, the railway company, by
its assignments of error, preserved its objection based on
constitutional grounds. That court did not, in words, refer to the
Constitution of the United States, and its opinion concluded:
"Entertaining the views above expressed, and founding our
conclusion upon the rights and duties of the parties as found in
the common law, we deem it unnecessary to pass upon the
constitutionality of section 40 1/2 of the Farm Drainage Act."
The contention is that as the state court based its judgment on
the common law duty of the railway company, and not expressly on
any federal ground, it cannot be said that there was any
denial of the federal right claimed by the company;
consequently, it is argued, this Court is without jurisdiction to
reexamine the final judgment. Rev.Stat. § 709.
Undoubtedly, the general rule is that, where the judgment of the
state court rests upon an independent, separate ground of local or
general law, broad enough or sufficient, in itself, to cover the
essential issues and control the rights of the parties, however the
federal question raised on the record might be determined, this
Court will affirm or dismiss, as the one course or the other may be
appropriate, without considering that question. But it is equally
well settled that the failure of the state court to pass on the
federal right or immunity specially set up, of record, is not
conclusive, but this Court will decide the federal question if the
necessary effect of the judgment is to deny a federal right or
immunity specially set up or claimed, and which, if recognized and
enforced, would require a judgment different from one resting upon
some ground of local or general law. And such plainly was the
effect of the judgment in this case. If, as the railway company
contended, the proposed
Page 200 U. S. 581
action of the Drainage Commissioners would deprive it of
property without due process of law and also deny to it the equal
protection of the laws, then a judgment should have been rendered
for the company. And that result could not be avoided merely by
silence on the federal question, and by placing the judgment on
some principle of the common law. The constitutional grounds relied
on must, if sustained, displace or supersede any principle of
general or local law which, but for such grounds, might be
sufficient for the complete determination of the rights of the
parties. The claim of a federal right or immunity specially set up
from the outset went to the very root of the case and dominated
every part of it. If that claim be valid, then the law is for the
railway company; for the supreme law of the land must always
control. Therefore, a failure to recognize such federal right or
immunity, and the decision of the case on some ground of general or
local law, necessarily has the same effect as if the claim of
federal right or immunity had been expressly denied. That claim
having, then, been distinctly set up by the company, and being
broad enough to cover the entire case, it may not be ignored, and
this Court cannot refuse to determine whether the alleged federal
right exists and is protected by the Constitution of the United
States. If the case had been decided in favor of the railway
company on some ground of local or general law, then the claim of a
federal right would have become immaterial, and we could not have
reexamined the judgment. But the decision was otherwise, and was,
in law, a denial of the claim of a federal right.
For these reasons, we are of opinion that this Court has
jurisdiction to reexamine the final judgment of the state court so
far as it involved the federal right or immunity specially set up
by the railway company.
2. The concrete case arising upon the petition and the demurrer
is this: a public corporation, charged by law with the duty of
causing a large body of lands, principally swamp and slough lands,
to be drained and made capable of cultivation,
Page 200 U. S. 582
has, under direct legislative authority, adopted a reasonable
and suitable plan to accomplish that object. That plan requires the
enlarging and deepening of the channel of a natural watercourse
running through the district, which is the only natural outlet or
way of drainage of the lands of the district -- the best and only
practicable mode by which the lands can be made tillable. But that
plan cannot be carried out unless the timbers and stones in the
creek -- placed there by the railway company when it constructed
the foundation for its present bridge -- are removed. The timber
and stones referred to cannot, however, be removed without
destroying the foundations of the present bridge and rendering it
necessary (if the railway company continues to operate its road,
which we assume it intends to do) to construct another bridge with
an opening underneath wide enough to permit a channel sufficient to
carry off the waters of the creek as increased in volume under the
drainage system adopted by the commissioners.
The contention of the railway company is that, as its present
bridge was lawfully constructed, under its general corporate power
to build, construct, operate, and maintain a railroad in the county
and township aforesaid, and as the depth and width of the channel
under it were sufficient at the time, to carry off the water of the
creek as it then flowed, and now flows -- the foundation of the
bridge cannot be removed and its use of the bridge disturbed unless
compensation be first made or secured to it in such amount as will
be sufficient to meet the expense of removing the timbers and
stones from the creek and of constructing a new bridge of such
length and with such opening under it as the plan of the
commissioners requires. The company insists that to require it to
meet these expenses out of its own funds will be, within the
meaning of the Constitution, a taking of its property for public
use without compensation, and therefore without due process of law,
as well as a denial to it of the equal protection of the laws.
The importance of these questions will justify a reference to
some of the adjudged cases; referring first to those
recognizing
Page 200 U. S. 583
the distinction between an incidental injury to rights of
private property resulting from the exercise of governmental
powers, lawfully and reasonably exerted for the public good, and
the taking, within the meaning of the Constitution, of private
property for public use.
In
Transportation Co. v. Chicago, 99 U. S.
635,
99 U. S. 642,
which involved a claim for damages directly resulting from the
construction by the City of Chicago of a tunnel under Chicago
River, whereby for a very long time the plaintiff was prevented
from using its dock and other property for purposes of its
business; in
Mugler v. Kansas, 123 U.
S. 623,
123 U. S. 669,
which related in part, to the lawful prohibition by the State of
the use of private property in a particular way, whereby its value
was materially diminished, if not practically destroyed; in
N.Y. & N.E. Railroad Co. v. Bristol, 151 U.
S. 556,
151 U. S. 557,
151 U. S. 571,
which involved the question whether a railroad company could be
required, at its sole expense, to remove a grade crossing which it
had lawfully established and used, and to establish another
crossing at a different place; in
Chicago, Burlington &
Quincy R. Co. v. Chicago, 166 U. S. 226,
166 U. S. 252,
in which one of the questions was whether it was a condition of the
exercise by the state of its authority to regulate the use of
property owned by individuals or corporations, that the owner
should be indemnified for the damage or injury resulting from the
exercise of such authority for legitimate public purposes; in
Gibson v. United States, 166 U. S. 269,
166 U. S. 271,
166 U. S. 276, in
which the owner of a farm on an island in the Ohio River at which
there was a landing, sought to recover compensation for the injury
done to the farm by reason of the construction by the United States
of a dike for the purpose of concentrating the waterflow in the
main channel of the river, and in
Scranton v. Wheeler,
179 U. S. 141,
179 U. S. 164,
which involved the question whether the United States was required
to compensate an owner of land fronting on a public navigable
river, when his access from the shore to the navigable part of such
river was permanently obstructed by a pier erected in the river
under
Page 200 U. S. 584
the authority of Congress for the purpose of improving
navigation -- in each of those cases, this Court recognized the
principle that injury may often come to private property as the
result of legitimate governmental action, reasonably taken for the
public good and for no other purpose, and yet there will be no
taking of such property within the meaning of the constitutional
guaranty against the deprivation of property without due process of
law, or against the taking of private property for public use
without compensation. To this class belongs the recent, and, as we
think, decisive case of
New Orleans Gas Light Co. v. Drainage
Commission, 197 U. S. 453, to
be hereafter adverted to in another connection. In this class may
also be placed
Mills v. United States, 46 F. 738. That was
the case of an improvement by the United States of the navigation
of Savannah River, which resulted in so raising the water in that
river as to make it impossible to prevent the flooding of adjacent
rice fields that were ordinarily and naturally drained into the
river, and rendering it necessary that expense be incurred in order
to provide new drainage from those fields into a back river, where
the water levels were suitable. In commenting upon that case, this
Court said, in
United States v. Lynah, 188 U.
S. 445:
"Obviously there was no taking of the plaintiff's lands, but
simply an injury which could be remedied at an expense, as alleged,
of $10,000, and the action was one to recover the amount of this
consequential injury. The court rightfully held that it could not
be sustained."
See also Bedford v. United States, 192 U.
S. 217, and
Manigault v. Springs, 199 U.
S. 473.
We refer also, as having direct application here, to some of the
cases, familiar to the profession, that recognize the possession by
each state of the power, never surrendered to the government of the
Union, of guarding and promoting the public interests by reasonable
police regulations that do not violate the Constitution of the
state or the Constitution of the United States.
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1;
Railroad Co. v. Husen,
95 U. S. 465;
Patterson v.
Kentucky, 97 U.S.
Page 200 U. S. 585
501,
97 U. S. 503;
Morgan v. Louisiana, 118 U. S. 455,
118 U. S. 464;
Hennington v. Georgia, 163 U. S. 299,
163 U. S.
308-309;
N.Y., N.H. & H. Railroad Co. v. New
York, 165 U. S. 628,
165 U. S.
631.
We assume that the drainage statute in question is entirely
consistent with the Constitution of Illinois. It is so regarded by
the supreme court of the state, and that is all-sufficient in this
case. We assume, also, without discussion -- as from the decisions
of the state court, we may properly assume -- that the draining of
this large body of lands so as to make them fit for human
habitation and cultivation is a public purpose, to accomplish which
the state may, by appropriate agencies, exert the general powers it
possesses for the common good. By the removal of water from large
bodies of land, the state court has said, and by
"the subjection of such lands to cultivation, they are made to
bear their proper proportionate burden to the support of the
inhabitants and the commerce of the state. Their value is
increased, and thereby their contribution in taxes to the state and
local governments is increased."
C., B. & Q. Ry. Co. v. People, 212 Ill. 103, 119.
It is conceded that this public purpose cannot be certainly and
effectively attained except through the plan adopted by the
Drainage Commissioners. Further, the regulations against which the
railway company invokes the Constitution have a real, direct, and
obvious relation to the public objects sought to be accomplished by
them; in no sense are they arbitrary or unreasonable. Indeed, it is
admitted that the plan of the commissioners is appropriate and the
best that can be devised for draining the lands in question. But
the railway company in effect, if not in words, insists that the
rights which it asserts in this case are superior and paramount to
any that the public has to use the watercourse in question for the
purpose of draining the lands in its vicinity, although such
watercourse was in existence, for the benefit of the public, long
before the railway company constructed its bridge. This contention
cannot, however, be sustained except upon the theory that the
acquisition by the railway company of a right of way through the
lands in
Page 200 U. S. 586
question, and the construction on that right of way of a bridge
across Rob Roy Creek at the point in question, carried with it a
surrender by the state of its power, by appropriate agencies, to
provide for such use of that natural watercourse as might
subsequently become necessary or proper for the public interests.
If the state could part with such power, held in trust for the
public -- which is by no means admitted -- it has not done so in
any statute, either by express words or by necessary implication.
When the railway company laid the foundations of its bridge in Rob
Roy Creek, it did so subject to the rights of the public in the use
of that watercourse, and also subject to the possibility that new
circumstances and future public necessities might, in the judgment
of the state, reasonably require a material change in the methods
used in crossing the creek with cars. It may be -- and we take it
to be true -- that the opening under the bridge as originally
constructed was sufficient to pass all the water then or now
flowing through the creek. But the duty of the company, implied in
law, was to maintain an opening under the bridge that would be
adequate and effectual for such an increase in the volume of water
as might result from lawful, reasonable regulations established by
appropriate public authority from time to time for the drainage of
lands on either side of the creek. Angell on Watercourses, 6th ed.,
p. 640.
The Supreme Court of Illinois said in this case:
"The right of drainage through a natural watercourse or a
natural waterway is a natural easement, appurtenant to the land of
every individual through whose land such natural watercourse runs,
and every owner of land along such watercourse is obliged to take
notice of the natural easement possessed by other owners along the
same watercourse."
Again, in the same case:
"Where lands are valuable for cultivation, and the country, as
this, depends so much upon agriculture, the public welfare demands
that the lands shall be drained; and, in the absence of any
constitutional provision in relation to such laws they have been
sustained. upon high authority, as the exercise of the
Page 200 U. S. 587
police power."
Further:
"A natural watercourse, being a natural easement, is placed upon
the same ground, in many respects as to the public right, as is a
public highway. At the common law, if a railroad or another highway
crosses a natural watercourse or a public highway, such highway or
railroad must be so constructed across the existing highway or
waterway, and so maintained, that said highway or waterway, as the
case may be, shall not only subserve the demands of the public as
they exist at the time of crossing the same, but for all future
time. . . . The great weight of authority is, that, where there is
a natural waterway, or where a highway already exists and is
crossed by a railroad company under its general license to build a
railroad, and without any specific grant by the legislative
authority to obstruct the highway or waterway, the railroad company
is bound to make and keep its crossing at its own expense, in such
condition as shall meet all the reasonable requirements of the
public as the changed conditions and increased use may demand."
The court said that the implied authority of the company to
build its present bridge was coupled with its common law duty
"to build its bridge over the natural watercourse with a view of
the future as well as the present contingencies and requirements of
such watercourse, and with the further implied provision that there
remained in the state, whenever the public welfare required it, the
right to regulate its use."
Still further:
"The subject [the draining of lands] was deemed of such
importance that the people, by Section 31 of Article IV of the
Constitution of 1870, conferred upon the general assembly plenary
powers in making provision for drainage for agricultural and
sanitary purposes, and pursuant to that power the general assembly
passed the act under which the appellees are proceeding, declaring
that the organization should be for agricultural and sanitary
purposes. The drainage districts organized as are the appellees,
under that law are invested with the right of eminent domain and
the power of taxation, upon the theory that they are public
utilities and are held to be
quasi-public corporations. In
their organic character,
Page 200 U. S. 588
they do not represent merely the individual property owners or
themselves, but they represent the state in carrying out its
policy, as found in the common law and declared by its Constitution
and statutes. It has been so often said that it need only be
adverted to here, that corporations such as appellant do not hold
their property and exercise their franchises strictly in a private
right, but that from the nature of their business and their
relation to society they are public corporations in a sense, and
are subject to public control and regulation, though with their
grant of power to traverse the state with their lines of railroad
it cannot be said that their right of private property attaches to
every highway and watercourse over which their roads may be
constructed. To so hold would render such enterprises, which are
designed for the benefit of the state, obstacles to its progress
and a menace to its general welfare. . . . Of course, in the
exercise of the right of the public interest, as against such
corporations, the demand must be reasonable, and must clearly
appear to be for the public welfare. In this case, it is not
questioned that the improvement of Rob Roy Creek, as proposed, is
necessary for the proper drainage of the lands comprising the
drainage district. The petition alleges that such enlargement is
necessary and that the same cannot be carried on with the
obstructions placed in the bed of said creek by appellant. This the
appellant does not deny."
C., B. & Q. Ry. Co. v. People, 212 Ill. 109,
110-111, 114, 118.
In
Ohio & Miss. R. Co. v. McClelland, 25 Ill. 140,
144, it was said -- indeed, all the cases hold -- that "the power
to enact police regulations operates upon all alike;" that that
power
"is incident to and a part of government itself, and need not be
expressly reserved, when it grants rights or property to
individuals or corporate bodies, as they take subservient to this
right."
A case quite in point is that of
Kankakee & Seneca R.
Co. v. Horan, 131 Ill. 288. That was an action against a
railroad company to recover for damage from the backing of water
upon plaintiff's land by reason of an insufficient culvert
constructed
Page 200 U. S. 589
by it for the passage of water from a certain natural
watercourse. The contention of the company was that the culvert
when constructed was sufficient for the flow of water at the time,
and that it was not bound to make such provision as was necessary
for an increase of water in the slough subsequently arising from
the drainage into it of the lands along its course. Upon this
point, the Supreme Court of Illinois said:
"We do not subscribe to this doctrine. The Parker slough was a
watercourse, and it was the legal right of anyone along its line
for miles above the railroad, where the water naturally shed toward
the slough, to drain into it, and no one below, owning land along
the slough, would have any legal remedy against such person so
draining water into the slough above him, for any damage done to
his inheritance by means of an increased flow of water caused
thereby. In other words, the slough was a legal watercourse for the
drainage of all the land the natural tendency of which was to cast
its surplus water, caused by the falling of rain and snow into it,
and this whether the flow was increased by artificial means or not.
It would seem legitimately to follow that the railroad company, in
providing a passageway for the slough, was bound to anticipate and
provide for any such legal increase of the water flow. If it did
not, it was doing a wrong and legal injury to any one situated like
the appellee, who received injury in consequence of a failure on
its part to do its duty."
See also the following Illinois cases:
People v.
Chicago & Alton R. Co., 67 Ill. 118;
Chicago, Rock
Island & Pacific R. Co. v. Moffitt, 75 Ill. 524;
Chicago & Northwestern Ry. Co. v. Chicago, 140 Ill.
309;
Ohio & Miss. Ry. Co. v. Thillman, 143 Ill. 127;
Frazer v. Chicago, 186 Ill. 480, 486.
Many cases in other courts are to the same general effect. They
negative the suggestion of the railway company that the adequacy of
its bridge and the opening under it for passing the water of the
creek at the time the bridge was constructed determines its
obligations to the public at all subsequent periods. In
Cooke
v. Boston & Lowell R. Corp., 133 Mass. 185, 188,
Page 200 U. S. 590
it appeared that a railroad company had statutory authority to
cross a certain highway with its road. The statute provided that,
if the railroad crossed any highway, it should be so constructed as
not to impede or obstruct the safe and convenient use of the
highway. And one of the contentions of the company was that the
statute limited its duty and obligation to provide for the wants of
travelers at the time it exercised the privilege granted to it. The
court said:
"The legislature intended to provide against any obstruction of
the safe and convenient use of the highway, for all time, and if,
by the increase of population in the neighborhood, or by an
increasing use of the highway, the crossing which at the outset was
adequate is no longer so, it is the duty of the railroad
corporation to make such alteration as will meet the present needs
of the public who have occasion to use the highway."
In
Lake Erie & Western R. Co. v. Cluggish, 143 Ind.
347, the court said (quoting from
Lake Erie & Western R.
Co. v. Smith, 61 F. 885):
"The duty of a railroad to restore a stream or highway which is
crossed by the line of its road is a continuing duty, and if, by
the increase of population or other causes, the crossing becomes
inadequate to meet the new and altered conditions of the country,
it is the duty of the railroad to make such alterations as will
meet the present needs of the public."
So, in
Indiana v. Lake Erie & Western R. Co., 83 F.
287, which was the case of an overhead crossing lawfully
constructed on one of the streets of a city, the court said:
"If, by the growth of population or otherwise, the crossing has
become inadequate to meet the present needs of the public, it is
the duty of the railroad company to remedy the defect by restoring
the crossing so that it will not unnecessarily impair the
usefulness of the highway."
The cases to which we have referred are in accord with the
declarations of this Court in the recent case of
New Orleans
Gas Light Co. v. Drainage Commission, 197 U.
S. 453. That case would seem to be decisive of the
question before us. It there appeared that a gas company had
acquired an exclusive right
Page 200 U. S. 591
to supply gas to the City of New Orleans and its inhabitants
through pipes and mains laid in the streets. In the exercise of
that right, it had laid its pipes in the streets. Subsequently a
drainage commission, proceeding under statutory authority, devised
a system of drainage for the city, and in the execution of its
plans it became necessary to change the location in some places of
the mains and pipes laid by the gas company. The contention of that
company was that it could not be required at its own cost to shift
its pipes and mains so as to accommodate the drainage system; that
to require it to do so would be a taking of its property for public
use without compensation, in violation of the Constitution of the
United States. This Court said:
"The gas company did not acquire any specific location in the
streets; it was content with the general right to use them, and
when it located its pipes, it was at the risk that they might be at
some future time, disturbed, when the state might require, for a
necessary public use, that changes in location be made. . . . There
is nothing in the grant to the gas company, even if it could
legally be done, undertaking to limit the right of the state to
establish a system of drainage in the streets. We think whatever
right the gas company acquired was subject, insofar as the location
of its pipes was concerned, to such further regulations as might be
required in the interest of the public health and welfare. These
views are amply sustained by the authorities.
National
Waterworks Co. v. City of Kansas, 28 F. 921, in which the
opinion was delivered by MR. JUSTICE BREWER, then circuit judge;
Gas Light & Coke Co. v. Columbus, 50 Ohio St. 65;
Jamaica Pond Aqueduct Corp. v. Brookline, 121 Mass. 5;
In re Deering, 93 N.Y. 361;
Chicago, Burlington &
Q. R. Co. v. Chicago, 166 U. S. 226,
166 U. S.
254. In the latter case, it was held that uncompensated
obedience to a regulation enacted for the public safety under the
police power of the state was not taking property without due
compensation. In our view, that is all there is to this case. The
gas company, by its grant from the city, acquired no exclusive
right to the location of its pipes in the streets, as chosen
Page 200 U. S. 592
by it, under a general grant of authority to use the streets.
The city made no contract that the gas company should not be
disturbed in the location chosen. In the exercise of the police
power of the state, for the purpose highly necessary in the
promotion of the public health, it has become necessary to change
the location of the pipes of the gas company so as to accommodate
them to the new public work. In complying with this requirement at
its own expense, none of the property of the gas company has been
taken, and the injury sustained is
damnum absque
injuria."
The learned counsel for the railway company seem to think that
the adjudications relating to the police power of the state to
protect the public health, the public morals, and the public safety
are not applicable, in principle, to cases where the police power
is exerted for the general wellbeing of the community apart from
any question of the public health, the public morals, or the public
safety. Hence, he presses the thought that the petition in this
case does not, in words, suggest that the drainage in question has
anything to do with the health of the drainage district, but only
avers that the system of drainage adopted by the commissioners will
reclaim the lands of the district, and make them tillable or fit
for cultivation. We cannot assent to the view expressed by counsel.
We hold that the police power of a state embraces regulations
designed to promote the public convenience or the general
prosperity, as well as regulations designed to promote the public
health, the public morals, or the public safety.
Lake Shore
& Mich. South. Ry. Co. v. Ohio, 173 U.
S. 285,
173 U. S. 292;
Gilman v.
Philadelphia, 3 Wall. 713,
70 U. S. 729;
Pound v. Turck, 95 U. S. 459,
95 U. S. 464;
Railroad Co. v. Husen, 95 U. S. 470.
And the validity of a police regulation, whether established
directly by the state or by some public body acting under its
sanction, must depend upon the circumstances of each case and the
character of the regulation, whether arbitrary or reasonable, and
whether really designed to accomplish a legitimate public purpose.
Private property cannot be taken without compensation for public
use under a police regulation relating
Page 200 U. S. 593
strictly to the public health, the public morals, or the public
safety, any more than under a police regulation having no relation
to such matters, but only to the general welfare. The foundations
upon which the power rests are in every case the same. This power,
as said in
Carthage v. Frederick, 122 N.Y. 268, has always
been exercised by municipal corporations
"by making regulations to preserve order, to promote freedom of
communication, and to facilitate the transaction of business in
crowded communities. Compensation has never been a condition of its
exercise, even when attended with inconvenience or pecuniary loss,
as each member of a community is presumed to be benefited by that
which promotes the general welfare."
The constitutional requirement of due process of law, which
embraces compensation for private property taken for public use,
applies in every case of the exertion of governmental power. If, in
the execution of any power, no matter what it is, the government,
federal or state, finds it necessary to take private property for
public use, it must obey the constitutional injunction to make or
secure just compensation to the owner.
Cherokee Nation v.
Southern Kansas Railway, 135 U. S. 641,
135 U. S. 659;
Sweet v. Rechel, 159 U. S. 380,
159 U. S. 399,
159 U. S. 402;
Monongahela Nav. Co. v. United States, 148 U.
S. 312,
148 U. S. 336;
United States v. Lynah, 188 U. S. 445. If
the means employed have no real, substantial relation to public
objects which government may legally accomplish -- if they are
arbitrary and unreasonable, beyond the necessities of the case --
the judiciary will disregard mere forms, and interfere for the
protection of rights injuriously affected by such illegal action.
The authority of the courts to interfere in such cases is beyond
all doubt.
Minnesota v. Barber, 136 U.
S. 313,
136 U. S. 320.
Upon the general subject there, is no real conflict among the
adjudged cases. Whatever conflict there is arises upon the question
whether there has been or will be in the particular case, within
the true meaning of the Constitution, a "taking" of private
property for public use. If the injury complained of is only
incidental to the legitimate exercise of governmental powers for
the public good, then there is
Page 200 U. S. 594
no taking of property for the public use, and a right to
compensation, on account of such injury, does not attach under the
Constitution. Such is the present case. There are unquestionably
limitations upon the exercise of the police power which cannot,
under any circumstances, be ignored. But the clause prohibiting the
taking of private property without compensation
"is not intended as a limitation of the exercise of those police
powers which are necessary to the tranquillity of every well
ordered community, nor of that general power over private property
which is necessary for the orderly existence of all governments. It
has always been held that the legislature may make police
regulations, although they may interfere with the full enjoyment of
private property, and though no compensation is given."
Sedgwick's Stat. & Const.Law 434.
It remains to deal with a particular aspect of the case. The
opening under the present bridge, we assume from the record, was
sufficient, when the bridge was constructed, to pass all the water
naturally flowing in the creek from lands in that locality. It is
sufficient if the channel of the river be left as it is now. The
commissioners demand, however, as they may rightfully do in the
public interest, a larger, deeper, and wider channel in order to
accommodate the increased volume of water in the creek that will
come from the proposed plan of the commissioners. But that is a
matter which concerns the public, not the railway company. The duty
of the company will end when it removes the obstructions which it
has placed in the way of enlarging, deepening, and widening of the
channel. It follows, upon principles of justice, that, while the
expense attendant upon the removal of the present bridge and
culvert and the timbers and stones placed by the company in the
creek, as well as the expense of the erection of any new bridge
which the company may elect to construct in order to conform to the
plan of the commissioners, should be borne by the railway company,
the expense attendant merely upon the removal of soil in order to
enlarge, deepen, and widen the channel must be borne by the
district. The expense to be borne by the district and the
railway
Page 200 U. S. 595
company, respectively, can be ascertained by the state court in
some appropriate way, and such orders made as will be necessary to
facilitate the execution of the plan of the commissioners.
Without further discussion, we hold it to be the duty of the
railway company, at its own expense, to remove from the creek the
present bridge, culvert, timbers, and stones placed there by it,
and also (unless it abandons or surrenders its right to cross the
creek at or in the vicinity of the present crossing) to erect at
its own expense and maintain a new bridge for crossing that will
conform to the regulations established by the Drainage
Commissioners, under the authority of the state, and such a
requirement if enforced will not amount to a taking of private
property for public use within the meaning of the Constitution, nor
to a denial of the equal protection of the laws.
Leaving it to the state court to give effect to these views by
appropriate orders, and subject to the above qualifications, the
decree of the state court is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES, concurring:
I concur in the main with the judgment of the Court. I agree
that the public authority has a right to widen or deepen a channel
if it sees fit, and that any cost that the railroad is put to in
rebuilding a bridge the railroad must bear. But the public must pay
for the widening or deepening, and I think that it does not matter
whether what it has to remove is the original earth or same other
substance lawfully put in the place of the original earth. Very
likely, in this case, the distinction is of little importance; but
it may be hereafter. I suppose it to be plain, as my brother BREWER
says, that, if an expense is thrown upon the railroad unlawfully,
its property is taken for public use without due compensation.
Woodward v. Central Vermont Railway Co., 180 Mass.
599.
Page 200 U. S. 596
I am authorized to say that my brothers WHITE and McKENNA agree
with my view.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER, dissenting:
The question in this case is a narrow one, yet of profound
importance, and involving, as in my judgment it does, a grievous
wrong to owners of private property, I am constrained to dissent.
Conceding the regularity of the proceedings and the power of the
state to drain the lands in the drainage district, and, if
necessary therefor, to compel the building of a new and enlarged
bridge over Rob Roy Creek, I dissent from the conclusion that the
state may cast the entire cost of such rebuilding upon the railroad
company.
It appears from the petition, which was demurred to, and whose
allegations of fact must therefore be taken as true, that the
drainage district consists of about 2,000 acres on both sides of
Rob Roy Creek; that a majority of the lands of said drainage
district are swamp or slough lands, and, under natural conditions,
not subject to cultivation, but by drainage will all be greatly
improved and made good tillable lands. The railroad company has for
forty years maintained a bridge or culvert over Rob Roy Creek which
has answered and does answer all its purposes and necessities. The
cost of the ditches and drains in the drainage district in
accordance with the plans adopted by the commissioners is estimated
at $20,000. The railroad bridge or culvert across the creek does
not exceed in value $8,000, and a new bridge or culvert can be
constructed at a cost of not exceeding $13,000. The drainage act
provides for an appraisement of the damage done to any tract by the
construction of the proposed work, and a judgment in favor of the
owner against the commissioners of the district for that amount. It
also provides for an assessment of the benefits to the different
tracts upon the basis of which assessments taxes are to be levied
to pay for the construction and maintenance of the drainage system.
In other words, any damage done to
Page 200 U. S. 597
any particular tract by the construction of the drainage system
is to be paid to the owner of that tract, if a private individual,
and the tracts which are benefited are to be charged with the cost
in proportion to the amount of benefit received. Section 40 1/2 of
the drainage act then provides:
"The commissioners shall have the power and are required to make
all necessary bridges and culverts along or across any public
highway or railroad which may be deemed necessary for the use or
protection of the work, and the cost of the same shall be paid out
of the road and bridge tax,
or by the railroad company, as
the case may be:
Provided, however, notice shall first be
given to the road or railroad authorities to build or construct
such a bridge or culvert, and they shall have thirty days in which
to build or construct the same, such bridges or culverts shall, in
all cases, be constructed so as not to interfere with the free flow
of water through the drains of the district. Should any railroad
company refuse or neglect to build or construct any bridge or
culvert as herein required, the commissioners constructing the same
may recover the cost and expenses therefor in a suit against said
company before any justice of the peace or any court having
jurisdiction, and reasonable attorney's fees may be recovered as
part of the cost. The proper authorities of any public road or
railroad shall have the right of appeal the same as provided for
individual landowners."
According to this, if any bridge or culvert on any public
highway is needed in order to perfect the drainage system, the cost
of it is to be paid out of the public funds; but if a bridge or
culvert is required on a railroad, the cost of it must be paid by
the railroad company. And this is arbitrary, without any
appraisement of benefits or damages.
Now the property of a railroad company is private property. It
cannot be taken for public uses without just compensation. True, it
is used by the owners in performing the
quasi-public work
of transportation, but it is not given up to public uses generally.
It is not devoted to education or the improvement of farm lands,
or, indeed, any other use than that of transportation.
Page 200 U. S. 598
If taken therefrom and devoted to other public uses, it is the
taking of private property for public uses. That this can be done
may be conceded, but only upon just compensation.
When private property is taken for public uses, compensation
must be paid. That is the mandate of the federal Constitution and
of that of nearly every state in the Union. Independently of such
mandate, compensation would be required. In 2 Kent, p. 339 (12th
ed.), it is said:
"A provision for compensation is a necessary attendant on the
due and constitutional exercise of the power of the lawgiver to
deprive an individual of his property without his consent, and this
principle in American constitutional jurisprudence is founded in
natural equity, and is laid down by jurists as an acknowledged
principle of universal law."
See also cases cited in the note, especially
Gardner v. Newburgh, 2 Johns.Ch. 162, 166.
In
Sinnickson v. Johnson, 17 N.J.L. 129, 145, referred
to approvingly by this Court in
Pumpelly
v. Green Bay Company, 13 Wall. 166,
80 U. S. 178,
and
Monongahela Navigation Company v. United States,
148 U. S. 312,
148 U. S. 324,
it was said:
"This power to take private property reaches back of all
constituted provisions, and it seems to have been considered a
settled principle of universal law that the right to compensation
is an incident to the exercise of that power; that the one is so
inseparably connected with the other that they may be said to exist
not as separate and distinct principles, but as parts of one and
the same principle."
If this be true when the taking is for that which is solely a
public use, how much more true is it when the taking is largely for
the benefit of private individuals, and at best, only incidentally
for the benefit of the public? Now the sole purpose of this
proceeding, as admitted by the demurrer, was the transformation of
these swamp and untillable lands into good tillable lands -- in
other words, to that extent, increasing the value of the farms in
the hands of their private owners. While the statute
Page 200 U. S. 599
under which these proceedings were had contemplates drainage for
agricultural and sanitary purposes, there is nothing in this record
to show that any sanitary result was contemplated, and the only
object disclosed is the direct beneficial result to the owners of
these swamp lands. There is not the slightest intimation that the
health, morals, or safety of the community will be promoted, or is
intended to be promoted, by the drainage. I quote the exact
language of the petition:
"And the petitioners aver that the aforesaid location of the
ditch or drain along the said Rob Roy Creek was for the purpose of
enlarging the channel or watercourse of the aforesaid Rob Roy
Creek, and thereby enabling the land in said drainage district to
be better drained and render the soil in said district more
tillable."
"
* * * *"
"And your petitioners aver that a majority of the lands of said
drainage district are what is known as swamp or slough land, and
under the present condition are not subject to cultivation, but by
means of the proposed deepening and enlarging of said Rob Roy
Creek, as herein described, and as a result of the removal of said
timbers and stones in said Rob Roy Creek at the place aforesaid,
and of the enlargement of and deepening of said Rob Roy Creek, all
of the lands in said drainage district will be greatly improved,
and made good, tillable land, subject to cultivation."
If it be a principle of natural justice that private property
shall not be taken for public purposes without just compensation,
is it not equally a principle of natural justice that no man shall
be compelled to pay out money for the benefit of the public without
any reciprocal compensation? What difference in equity does it make
whether a piece of land is taken for public uses or so many dollars
for like purposes?
Cary Library v. Bliss, 151 Mass. 364,
378-379;
Woodward v. Central Vermont Railway Company, 180
Mass. 599, 603.
But it is said that this is done under the police power of the
state, and that that can be exercised without any provision for
Page 200 U. S. 600
compensation. It seems to me the police power has become the
refuge of every grievous wrong upon private property. Whenever any
unjust burden is cast upon the owner of private property which
cannot be supported under the power of eminent domain or that of
taxation, it is referred to the police power. But no exercise of
the police power can disregard the constitutional guaranties in
respect to the taking of private property, due process, and equal
protection, nor should it override the demands of natural justice.
The question in the case is not how far the state may go in
compelling a railroad company to expend money in increasing its
facilities for transportation, but how far it can go in charging
upon the company the cost of improving farms along the line of its
road.
Again, it will be perceived that, by the section quoted, if, in
consequence of the drainage, a bridge or culvert is required on any
public highway, its cost is paid out of the public funds; but
whenever a bridge or culvert is required along or across a
railroad, the company is charged with the cost. In the one case,
the public pays, and in the other, a private owner. It is not
pretended that the railway is in any way benefited by the drainage.
Its property is not improved, its revenues are not increased. The
reconstruction of the bridge or culvert is not needed by it in its
work of transportation. It has used this present bridge for over
forty years, meeting in that time all the demands of the public for
transportation. So that, receiving no benefit, it is charged with
the cost of reconstruction -- about $13,000 -- in order to improve
the value of the lands belonging to private owners in this drainage
district, when, if a highway crossed at the same place and a new
bridge or culvert was required, the cost of it would be paid out of
the public funds. I cannot conceive how this can be looked upon as
"the equal protection of the laws."
Further, even under the conclusion reached by the Court, the
plaintiff in error should recover its cost, and in accord with the
common practice in this Court, the order should be that the
judgment be reversed and the case remanded for further
proceedings
Page 200 U. S. 601
not inconsistent with our opinion.
Stanley v. Schwalby,
162 U. S. 255,
162 U. S. 282.
Why should it be compelled to pay two or three hundred dollars in
costs when it has shown that the decision below placed an improper
charge upon it, the amount of which is not disclosed, and which may
be a very substantial sum?
I am therefore constrained to dissent from both the opinion and
judgment.