115 Minn. 514 | Minn. | 1911
Action to recover $4,375, being one-half of the cost of the bridge hereinafter referred to, based upon a written contract between the parties hereto, which is referred to as “Exhibit A.” The cause was tried by the district court of the county of Hennepin without a jury, and findings of fact and conclusions of law made in plaintiff’s favor. The defendant appealed from an order denying its alternative motion to amend the findings and conclusions of law or for a new trial. The appeal, in legal effect, is only one from an order denying a motion for a new trial. Horton v. Crowley Electric Co. 108 Minn. 508, 122 N. W. 312. The appeal, however, raises the questions here urged by the defendant.
The evidence, documentary and oral, exclusive of Exhibit A, bearing directly or indirectly upon the question, is voluminous; but our conclusion, as to the effect of the recitals in Exhibit A, renders unnecessary any extended reference to such evidence. The evidence is practically conclusive that the defendant’s railway tracks at the locus in quo are not located in any street or public way; that they are located in an artificial depression some twenty feet below the natural surface of the land at that point; that the plaintiff, by its park board, in 1888 acquired the necessary land therefor and established, and has ever since maintained, a parkway or park boulevard on each side of the defendant’s right of way and tracks at the locus in quo; that in 1889 the park board constructed a wooden bridge over the tracks of the defendant at the level of the natural surface of the land, thereby connecting the separated parts of the parkway or boulevard; that the bridge was, without any objection or protest by the defendant or its predecessors in interest, continuously maintained by the park board and used by the public until 1905, when it became unsafe for parkway purposes; that a large amount of travel, suitable to the parkway, passed over the bridge; and, further, that a bridge over the defendant’s tracks is reasonably necessary for the safety and convenience of the public. There was no evidence tending to show that the public ever acquired a parkway or public way over the defendant’s railway tracks other than by a common-law dedication. Whether the evidence, exclusive of Exhibit A, was sufficient to sustain the finding of the trial court is a fairly debatable question; but the evidence, including Exhibit A, is practically conclusive, as between the parties hereto, that there is, and was when Exhibit A was executed, a public way across the locus in quo.
The city was designated in the contract, Exhibit A, which was made February Y, 1905, as the party of the first part, and the
Tbe party of tbe second part is maintaining and operating its railway tracks across tbe line of tbe parkway or street, known as Park Boulevard, in tbe city of Minneapolis. Such railway tracks are laid in a depression, wbicb was made by excavation of tbe soil, over wbicb a wooden bridge was constructed, in tbe year 1887, for tbe purpose of carrying tbe traffic of Park Boulevard. Tbe bridge bas fallen into a state of decay and disrepair, and a new bridge is necessary. Tbe party- of tbe first part is of tbe opinion that it is under no obligation to rebuild sucb bridge, and that it bas tbe legal right either to grade tbe parkway by filling tbe excavation with earth, or to require tbe party of tbe second part, to construct and maintain a bridge. Tbe party of tbe second part- is of the opinion that it bas a right to maintain and use its tracks in their present position, and that it is under no duty or obligation to construct a bridge over tbe same. It is desirable that a bridge shall be immediately constructed to serve tbe public needs, and a plan for sucb bridge bas been mutually agreed upon by tbe parties hereto, and neither party is willing to waive any of its legal rights, nor to assume or incur any greater liability in tbe premises than is required of it by law. Tbe parties hereto have mutually agreed upon a course of action to secure tbe immediate construction of tbe bridge. Therefore the parties hereto do hereby agree that sucb bridge shall be immediately constructed by tbe party of tbe second part in accordance with tbe plan agreed upon; and tbe party of tbe first part does hereby agree to pay one-half of tbe total cost of tbe bridge in tbe following times and manner: Tbe chief engineer of the party of tbe second part shall, from time to time, certify to the party of tbe first part tbe total amounts that have been actually incurred and paid by it in tbe construction of tbe bridge, wbicb amounts tbe party of tbe first part shall pay. It is expressly agreed that neither party does, by this agreement, waive any of its legal rights, nor assume, as against the other, any duty or obligation; and either party may, upon the completion of the bridge and tbe payment of its share of tbe expenses, bring an
This contract was modified by a supplemental one, made on March 7, 1905, providing only for an increase in the width and cost of the bridge. This contract contained' this recital: “Whereas, said parties entered into an agreement in writing dated February 7, 1905, for the construction of a certain bridge across the railway tracks of said jiarty of the second part at or near the junction of Queen Avenue South and Park Boulevard (so called) in the city of Minneapolis and state of Minnesota. * * * ”
The city claims that the appellant is estopped by the recitals to deny that there was a parkway or street across its railway tracks. Such was the view of the learned trial judge; but the appellant challenges the correctness of this conclusion. The law applicable to this question is well settled, and to this effect:
Recitals in a contract, which are consistent and certain in their terms, relevant to the subject-matter of the contract, and with reference to which the contract was made, estop the parties thereto to deny the facts recited. Red Wing Sewer Pipe Co. v. Donnelly, 102 Minn. 192, 113 N. W. 1, 120 Am. St. 619; 24 Am. & Eng. Enc. (2d ed.) 58; 16 Cyc. 721. The recitals in the contract, Exhibit A, are clearly within the rule stated. They are certain in their terms, consistent with each other, and relevant to the subject-matter of the contract, which was made with reference to them. The only claim made by the appellant to the' contrary is that the provision “that neither party waives any of its legal rights, nor assumes as against the other any duty or obligation,” qualifies the recital that there was a public way át the locus in quo, and leaves the appellant free to deny the truth of the recital. It is clear, from the recitals and provisions of the contract, that the clause thereof relied upon refers, not to the question of the existence of the public way, but to the construction of the new bridge over it and the legal duty and obligation of the respective parties to build it. The question as to the duty and obligation in such cases was then pending in the courts of this state and not definitely decided. See State v. St. Paul, M. & M. Ry. Co., 98 Minn. 380, 108 N. W. 261, 28 L.R.A.(N.S.) 298, 120 Am. St.
We hold that the finding of the trial court, to the effect that there was a public way across the locus in quo at the time the contract was made, is sustained by the evidence. This conclusion obviates the necessity of considering in detail the other contentions urged by the appellant, for it is now the settled law in this state that the uncompensated duty of constructing safety devices over railway tracks may be imposed upon the owners thereof by the state in the exercise of the police power. State v. St. Paul, M. & M. Ry. Co. supra; Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. Co. v. City of Minneapolis, supra, page 460, 133 N. W. 169. Whether the appellant is owner or lessee of the railway tracks in question is not, in view of the recitals and provisions of the contract, here material. We are not to be understood as intimating that, if in fact the appellant was a lessee, but in possession and operating, the tracks, it would be relieved from the duty of providing necessary safety devices over its tracks.
Order affirmed.