(After stating the foregoing facts.)
1. After the proceedings to condemn were in progress, and it had been claimed that there were irregularities, it was agreed between the parties that they should be waived, and that the hearing should be had before the assessors. If the notice of the intention *345to condemn was not duty served, or if it was more extensive in describing the interest sought to be condemned than it should have been, these things at most were irregularities, and, under the terms of the agreement, were waived. Nor was this altered by a subsequent agreement, after the appeal, that the appellants might on the trial raise any question that they could have raised before the assessors. After having waived all irregularities, they could not have raised this question before the assessors. 2 Lewis, Em. Lorn. (2d ed.) §§362, 541.
2. The notice served by the railroad company stated, in one part of it, that the company desired to condemn a right of way one hundred feet in width, with title in fee simple to the land embraced therein; and in another, that it was seeking to condemn a right of way with the fee therein. It was contended that, under such proceedings, the company could not acquire a fee-simple title, and that this statement in the notice rendered it void. Under the statutes in some States, it has been held that a railroad company acquired a fee in the land condemned for a right of way, subject to revert to the owner or his heirs if the land should cease to be used for the purposes for which it was condemned. Under other statutes the interest condemned has been held to be a mere easement. Under still others, the condemnation is said to vest complete title. Generally, in construing a statute authorizing the taking of private property for public use, it will not. be implied that a greater interest or estate can be taken than is necessary to satisfy the language and object of the act; and if the constitution and statute are both silent on the subject, usually only an easement can be taken. If the statute declares the amount of interest which can be acquired, it will control. 13 Cyc. 1020, 1021, and notes. In the general law for the incorporation of railroads in this State, codified mainly from the act of 1892 (Acts 1892, p. 42), occur certain expressions from which it might be argued that the condemnation by a railroad company for a right of way carried something more than a mere easement. Civil Code, §§2167 (3), 2170. Where the condemnation is merely to allow one railroad to use in part the right of way of another, it would seem clear that the condemning road could acquire no more than an easement. The first road to condemn would not acquire a fee-simple, indefeasible title, and the second, in.condemning the right *346to use a part of its right of way, would apparently obtain only an easement. Civil Code, §§2167, 2170. '
In 1894 (Acts 1894, p. 95, Civil Code, §§4657 et seq.) an act was passed providing for the method.of condemnation of property and assessment of damages by all corporations or other persons authorized by law to take or damage private property for public-purposes. 'This does not confer the right of condemnation where-it does not otherwise exist, but regulates the manner of exercising the right, and provides the extent of the interest which shall be-acquired. It is applicable to a variety of persons, natural or artificial. Civil Code, §4685. In respect to most, if not all of these, an easement is all that is necessary and all that is acquired by condemnation. Thus it has been held that a telegraph company condemning a part of a right of way of a railway obtained merely an easement. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co., 120 Ga. 268 (48 S. E. 15). The Civil Code §4683, provides, that, upon condemnation and payment, the corporation or other person “shall become vested with such interest in the property taken as may be necessary to enable the corporation or person taking to exercise their franchise or conduct their business; and whenever the corporation or person shall cease using the property taken for the purpose of conducting their business,, said property shall revert to the person from whom taken, his. heirs or assigns.” Under this law, whether a railroad company-can obtain by condemnation a fee defeasible upon ceasing to use the property for the purposes of its business, or a mere easement,, it -is unnecessary to decide. Certain it is that the condemnation, does not vest in the company a fee-simple estate, but that the reversion provided for in the section just quoted attaches itself^ as a condition of the law. A railroad seeking to condemn under this law can not acquire an indefeasible fee-simple estate, although it may seek to do so. " '
The notice of intention to condemn showed that it was a proceeding to have compensation assessed and determined “as provided by the law of said State.” The law of the State on the' subject is that to which reference is made above. Although the. notice stated that it was desired to condemn a fee-simple estate' or “a right of way, with the fee therein,” the amount of interest which would be acquired is limited by the law, whether distinctly *347stated in the notice or not. It did not, therefore, render the proceeding void because the notice referred to the acquirement of the fee instead of such interest as might be necessary for the conduct of its business, as the lhw provides. The law would prevail over the notice, as to the extent of the interest obtained by condemnation. At most, describing the estate which the company desired to obtain by condemnation as a fee or fee simple was an irregularity. In a somewhat similar ease it was said that the condemning company would acquire at least an easement. Gurney v. Minneapolis etc. Co., 63 Minn. 70 (30 L. R. A. 534, 65 N. W. 136).
3-6. ’When objection was made to the statement in the notice that it was desired to condemn a fee-simple interest, the company proposed to amend the notice so as to show that it was desired to condemn such interest as the statute authorized. It was proposed to amend not only the notice but also the award of the assessors, for that purpose; and to state that, before the condemnation proceedings were instituted, the company had sought to agree with the landowners upon a mere right of way and use of the strip of land described, for railroad purposes, and that the owners refused to agree upon any compensation for any use of the strip for railroad purposes; and also by alleging that, after the award, the company had tendered to the landowners the full amount thereof, and it had been accepted by them. The proposed amendment was rejected. The award of assessors could not be amended by the mere act of one of the parties; but the case was on appeal in the superior court, and the award was no longer binding, but was like the judgment of an inferior tribunal from which an appeal has been taken.
If the notice served on the landowners for the purpose of commencing condemnation proceedings was void, and objection was duly made, it could not be amended after the assessment and appeal so as to make it valid. The notice is the commencement of the proceeding. If such proceeding has not a valid basis at its’ beginning, it can not be amended into validity after the assessment, by an amendment seeking to relate back and furnish a lawful basis, where none existed before. But if the proceeding was valid, even though irregular, upon appeal in the superior court we know of no reason why such an amendment could not be made *348as merely to concede that the fee-simple title could not be condemned, and to show that the company would only claim by condemnation the amount of interest in the land which the statute would give them. This is different from an effort on the part of the company seeking to condemn to ratify a notice which was unauthorized when given. Bridwell v. Gate City Terminal Co., 127 Ga. 520 (56 S. E. 624). In Savannah Railway Co. v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co., 115 Ga. 554 (3) (42 S. E. 1), the right of amendment as to mere description of the property sought to be condemned was recognized.
The Civil Code, §4669, declares that the notice shall describe the property or franchise and the amount of interest therein sought to be condemned. No reason appears why a mere misdescription could not be amended on appeal. Especially so after waiver of any irregularity.
Nor do we see why an amendment could not be made to the pleading, so' as to allege that the landowners had received the amount awarded by the assessors. An owner can not receive and hold money under an award, and on appeal dismiss, the proceedings for irregularity. Such receipt and holding would itself operate as a waiver, and leave for determination the question of the proper amount of damages or compensation to be assessed. Civil Code, §4680.
7. The notice of an intention to condemn stated that the company had endeavored to buy the strip of land described, for the purpose of a right of way. While the case was pending on appeal in the superior court, an amendment was offered, stating that the company had endeavored to obtain a right of way only and the use for railroad purposes and that the owners had refused to agree upon any compensation for any use or to any extent for such purposes. We do not see why this could not be done. A recital of preliminary negotiation in the notice is not a jurisdictional or unalterable statement.
Judgment reversed.
All the Justices concur.