This suit was instituted by appellant railway company against the Western Stockyards Company and the Panhandle Packing Company to recover a strip of land 50 feet in width, being a portion of section 137, block 2, A. B. & M. surveys, Potter county, Tex. The strip of land in question, beginning 1,400 feet west of the eastern boundary line of said section at a point 50 feet north of the center of plaintiff’s main track for the southeast corner, thence north 50 feet for the northeast corner, and said strip 50 feet in width extending in a westerly direction parallel wih plaintiff’s main track to a point 2,065 feet east of the west boundary line of said section. The petition is in the usual form of trespass to try title, and contains a second count, pleading plaintiff’s title in detail. The substance of the second count is that plaintiff acquired the strip of land in question by virtue of its charter granted by-special act of the Legislature in 1873 (Laws 1873, c. 208), section 8 of said act being as follows: “That the right of way to be to the extent of 200 feet wide is hereby granted to said railway company through the public lands of the state of Texas and also the right to take and use in the construction of said road any timber or other material used in the construction of railways found lying upon any part of the public lands1 of this state.” The charter authorized the road to be constructed from a point at or near Ft. Worth, Tex., beginning at a junction with the Texas & Pacific Railway, and continuing in a northwesterly direction to the western boundary line of the state of Texas, in the direction of the city of Denver, Colo.; that plaintiff began the actual work of locating said line of road within one year after the date of its charter, and continued in accordance with the requirements of the law until the line was constructed, equipped, and in operation, which was in the month of April, 1888; that the road was constructed across the section in question in the year 1887; that at the time of the granting of its charter and until July 20, 1875, said land was known as section 137, and was vacant, unappropriated public domain, having been surveyed, located, and patented after July, 1875; that, by reason of the construction of its road, it became entitled to a strip of land 200 feet in width across said section; that the land in controversy is a part of the town of Amarillo, which town has since the construction of plaintiff’s road become a large and important shipping point having about 10,000 population, with two other lines of railway intersecting plaintiff’s line at said point, and it has become necessary for plaintiff to use and occupy the whole of said strip of land 200 feet in width across said section for tracks, switches, and other facilities for the proper operation and management of its s'aid line of road. The petition further sets out the history and origin and establishment of Western Stockyards Company, and alleges that said company constructed certain stock pens and stockyards1 on plaintiff’s line of road north of its main track, and was occupying the land in controversy, except that portion of it which had been conveyed by said Stockyards Company to the Panhandle Packing Company, a second corporation. Some of the questions presented for our consideration by this appeal have -been considered by us in disposing of the case of Ft. Worth & Denver City Railway Co. v. Southern Kansas Railway Co. et al.,
There is in the instant case an agreed statement of facts, a part of which is as follows: “That at the time said act was passed (May 26, 1873) all that portion of Northwestern Texas, within 100 miles of the land in controversy, and over which said corporation’s line of railroad and telegraph lines were subsequently located and constructed, was uninhabited and a large portion thereof (all that, portion being on what is called ‘Staked Plains,’ including where the land in controversy is located) was rarely visited or seen by man or beast, except that after the spring rain and green grass would come, usually in May or June, the buffalo and wild horse would roam there in large numbers to graze during the remainder of the spring and summer seasons, and bands of Indians would come and roam froin their reservations to hunt. This condition of affairs in said territory continued for a year or more after said act was passed, so that during said time the land in controversy and a very large portion of Northwestern Texas over which said line of railroad has been subsequently located was what is known as ‘frontier,’ and subject to incursions, and depredations by hostile bands of Indians, such as history shows to háve -been the conditions in far out frontier counties, rendering an undertaking of a survey and location of said line at said time correspondingly dangerous to life and property as well as expensive.” We presume that the above facts are shown in order to excuse appellant’s failure to comply with the fifteenth section of the special act, requiring appellant to file with the Commissioner of the General Land Office within six months after the organization of the company plans and maps, showing the line upon which it intended to construct its road. These facts are unnecessary in our opinion, because the grant took effect in prassenti. The case of Railway Co. v. Baldwin, supra, is only one of many cases decided by the Supreme Court of the United States, construing similar grants to railroads of a right of way across public lands, among which we cite D. & R. G. Ry. Co. v. Alling,
The judgment is therefore affirmed.
