51 Minn. 304 | Minn. | 1892
This action, which is one in ejectment, was before this court on a former appeal. 46 Minn. 330, (48 N. W. Rep. 1132.)
On the first trial the district court held that the defendant had acquired title by dedication to a public use. On the last trial it held, in substance, that it had acquired title through a parol contract or agreement with the plaintiff. The principal question is whether this finding was justified by the evidence.
It is conceded that the title to the land was originally in the plaintiff, and, of course, still is, unless it has in some way transferred it to the defendant. It is not pretended that the plaintiff ever executed any conveyance or any written agreement to convey to defendant; hence, if the title has ever passed, it must have been by virtue of matters entirely in pais.
The court finds that during the year 1870, and for more than 10 years thereafter, and until long after the defendant had taken possession of all the lands described in the complaint, and constructed its tracks thereon, William D. Washburn, C. C. Washburn, and Dorilus Morrison owned substantially all the capital stock of the plaintiff company, and, as its officers and directors, controlled its property, business, and affairs; that during the same time the plaintiff, its grantees and lessees, owned nearly all the water power and mill sites upon and along the west bank of the river at St. Anthony Falls; that during all of this time the two Washburns were stockholders and directors of the defendant company, and W. D. Washburn, as vice president or president of the defendant, had on its behalf the management, control, and direction of the location and construction of all its tracks, side tracks, and spur tracks upon the land in controversy, and upon or connected with the property of the plaintiff and the milling district in the city of Minneapolis. We assume that thus far the findings are supported by the evidence.
The court then finds: “That during the same time the said plaintiff, by its said directors, for the purpose of increasing the value and availability for use of plaintiff’s said property, and of increasing and hastening the development of manufacturing industries
“That, pursuant to such agreement and understanding, and at the instance of the Washburns, and with the full assent and knowledge of Morrison and all other directors and officers of the plaintiff, and for the special benefit and advantage of the plaintiff, as well as for the use and advantage of the defendant, the defendant, at its own cost, built and constructed permanently all its tracks described in the complaint, and entered into the possession thereof, and has ever since occupied the same as part of its railroad connecting its main line with its yard on the east of said land in dispute, and also connecting said main line and yard with its tracks to mills upon plaintiff’s milling property; and that defendant’s railroad tracks upon said land in dispute have greatly facilitated the carrying on of milling and manufacturing on plaintiff’s property, and greatly benefited and increased the value of süch property.
“That upon the taking by said defendant at plaintiff’s request, and constructing thereon for plaintiff’s benefit, but at its own cost, the railroad tracks of defendant, the plaintiff waived any further or other compensation for the land so taken than the special benefits to plaintiff’s remaining property resulting from the construction and permanent use in that place of such railroad tracks. That, besides the cost of construction of said tracks, defendant has since, to the knowledge of plaintiff’s directors and officers, expended large sums of money in repairs and replacement of such tracks and in construction of bridges for such tracks over said avenue, [10th avenue south,] without any objection by plaintiff, or any notice that defendant’s right to maintain and occupy said land permanently with said tracks was denied or disputed by plaintiff.”
There is no doubt of the correctness of the proposition announced by the trial judge in his memorandum, that, if a landowner, in consideration of special benefits to his property to be derived from railroad facilities, agrees to give the right of way to a railroad company, and accepts such special benefits as full compensation, and the railroad company accepts the offer, and builds its road, and affords such special benefits, the contract is as binding as if the railroad company had paid for the right of way in money. But the difficulty in this case is that there is an entire lack of evidence of any such agreement. There is not an intimation by any witness that any express agreement to that effect was ever made. If found to exist, it must be wholly implied from the conduct of the parties. What the learned trial judge probably meant was that the conduct of the plaintiff had been such as to estop it from now denying that there was such an agreement, and that consequently the situation is to be treated as equivalent to part performance of a parol agreement for the sale of an interest in real estate.
But the case is equally lacking in the essential elements of an estoppel in pais. Doubtless the plaintiff was interested in having defendant’s road extended down into the milling district, thereby enhancing the value of its property. " But the defendant was organized for pecuniary profit, and doubtless expected a return for its expenditures from the business to be obtained from the mills and other manufactories in that locality.
In view of this and the additional fact that the same men were the active managers of both corporations, it was naturally to be expected that they would to a certain extent work together for their common interests. But, as both were acting through the Washburns as their common agents, it can hardly be claimed that one was misled or deceived by the acts or conduct of the other.
It appears that in 1871 the defendant purchased of the plaintiff a tract of land south of the milling district proper for terminal grounds; also that other tracts in that vicinity were at different dates pur
The most, we think, that can be possibly claimed from the evidence is that the tracks were built under a parol license from plaintiff; and there is nothing better settled than that a mere license, not subsidiary to a valid grant, may be revoked at pleasure, and does not
The principle upon which courts of equity sometimes apply the doctrine of equitable estoppel to cases where the entry has been under a license is that the conduct of the licensor has been such that it would be a fraud on the licensee to permit the licensor to deny that there was a contract for an interest in the land, and hence they treat the case as one of a parol contract partly performed, which the court will enforce. But in this case there was an entire absence, not only of any actual contract between the parties, but also of any fraud, deception, or misrepresentation. If neither party knew that these tracks were being built on plaintiff’s land, of course there could have been no deception, nor could either party have been misled by the other. On the other hand, if both parties W6re aware of the fact, and the plaintiff gave defendant license, either express or implied
Again, if any implied agreement as to defendant’s occupancy of plaintiff’s land could be inferred, the terms are so indefinite and uncertain as to the extent or character of the privilege given, if any, that it would be utterly impossible to determine what it was. How many tracks, or where to be located, no court could possibly determine from any evidence in the case. The fact is that the entire evidence is of the most nebulous and illusive character. Throughout the entire case there seems to have been a commingling and confounding of various and independent entries upon plaintiff’s land, as well as upon the land of other parties, at wholly distinct periods of time, and an attempt to treat the evidence as to all as applicable to and determinative of the legal character of each, which could only be permissible if there had been some previous agreement between the parties under which all the entries had been made, and to which they were referable.
Without going further for authorities, it seems to us that, under the present condition of the evidence, the principles announced in Watson v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co., supra, and Johnson v. Skillman, 29 Minn. 95, (12 N. W. Rep. 149,) are entirely decisive of this case.
2. Upon the question as to what land was conveyed by plaintiff to defendant by the deed of September 20, 1873, which depended upon the location at that date of defendant’s original track, which was made the center line of the strip conveyed, all we deem necessary to say is that the evidence fully justified the finding of the trial court.
3. On the first trial the defendant produced a witness, one Fuller, who was examined and cross-examined, and his testimony taken down in full by the official reporter or stenographer of the court. Upon the second trial, it being made to appear that Fuller was a nonresident of this state, and a resident of the state of Washington, and had at no time since the first trial been within this state, the court, under the objection and exception of the plaintiff, admitted
In Greenleaf on Evidence (section 163) the rule is laid down quite as broadly. This, however, has been criticised as too broad by some courts, which hold that, to make the testimony admissible, it must appear that the witness is dead, insane, or by physical disability at the time of the trial unable to be examined, or that he is absent by the act or procurement of the party against whom the evidence is offered, or that his whereabouts cannot be ascertained, so that by the exercise of due diligence his deposition could not be taken. Bee 1 Greenl. Ev. § 163, and note; 1 Phil. Ev. 393, and note 114.
The admission of the testimony of a witness on a former trial is frequently inaccurately spoken of as an exception to the rule against the admission of hearsay evidence. The chief objections to hearsay evidence are the want of the sanction of an oath, and of any opportunity to cross-examine, neither of which applies to testimony given on a former trial. The real objection to such evidence is that it is only the testimony of some one else as to what the witness swore to on the former trial; and before the day of official reporters in our trial courts the accuracy or completeness of such evidence depended entirely upon the fallible memory of those who heard the witness testify. It can be readily seen why, under such circumstances, courts were disinclined to admit such evidence except in cases of actual necessity. But where the words of a witness as they come from his lips are taken down in full by an official court stenographer, this objection does not apply. We do not see why such testimony is not as satisfactory and reliable as a new deposition, taken out of the state, would be. Buies on such subjects should be practical,.and
(Opinion published 53 N. W. Rep. 639.)