185 Iowa 1259 | Iowa | 1919
The defendant company owns and operates a line of railroad in Muscatine County in this state. At the place under consideration, the company’s right of way and track extend from the southwest to the northeast, as indicated by the line A B C on the following plat.
The land lying along and to the east of the railway has, for many years, been very largely devoted to the raising of melons and other garden products. In the year 1899, the owners of these lands, or some of them, desiring more convenient shipping facilities, entered into an arrangement with the railroad company by which, in consideration of the construction and maintenance of a switch or spur track from
The icehouses referred to were, as we understand the record, at the southern terminus of the Hahn switch, at E. There was also built at the same point a warehouse for the storage of goods. In consideration of these and other privileges, which we will not extend this opinion to mention at large, Boynton undertook to pay to the railroad company, “as rental for the use of the said side tracks, switches, and connections at the pit, the sum of $1,089 yearly,” also certain switching and transportation charges, and to furnish for such transportation a certain minimum of carloads of
Returning now to the matter of the Hahn switch and its original construction, it appears that its terminus at or near the Stewart road was upon the land of one Hoopes. As did other landowners, Hoopes conveyed the right of way to the company. The deed therefor provided that such right of way was to be used for a switch or side track for the purpose of receiving, transporting, and unloading freight, and that the title so conveyed should revert to the grantor, should the switch thereafter be abandoned. This switch from the main line to the Stewart road has, at'all times since its construction, been maintained and used as a side track or convenience for the shipment of the products of 'the lands of that neighborhood, and for the delivery to the landowners of fertilizers, feed, and other supplies. In the more recent years of that period, the volume of business of that, character has diminished, but it has never been abandoned, and the company has at all times continued such possession, maintenance, and use of the track. Hoopes, the grantor above mentioned, is now dead, and the intervener in this action, as one of his heirs, has succeeded to the title to the land. On this land is another sand and gravel pit, and from time to time after the construction of the Hahn switch, and beginning before the extension of the track to the Boynton pit, sand and gravel had been shipped by Hoopes or by other landowners of that neighborhood over the Hahn switch to points on the main line. The Hoopes switch was not so situated as to permit of direct loading upon the cars, and the product was hauled to the track by wagons. These shipments were not very great, but were made in carload quantities, and continued for such length of time as to afford material bearing upon the question of the mutual understanding by the company and the public at that point concerning the purpose and use for which the switch track was
Thereafter, this action was begun in equity to confirm and establish plaintiff’s alleged right to exclude all competitors in its line of business from the use of the switch, and to enjoin the railway company from hauling or transporting over said switch the product of any sand or gravel pit other than plaintiff’s.
The defendant railway company* denies that the contract with plaintiff does or was intended to give the plaintiff any exclusive or superior right in the use of that part of the track known as the Hahn switch. Hoopes also inter
On trial to the court, the testimony developed the facts substantially as we have stated them. The court denied the demand for relief, dismissed the bill, and from this decree plaintiff appeals.
For the purposes of this case, it may be admitted that, under appropriate circumstances, a railway common carrier may construct or make use of a private track connecting its line with a factory or other business concern, without giving such connecting link a public character. But nothing of that kind is here presented, unless such private character may be attributed to the extension track from H on the Hahn switch to the plaintiff’s pit at D. That track and its use are not here in controversy. But the original track was designed, conceived, constructed, used, and its public character determined, long before the contract on which plaintiff relies was made. Let us suppose that, instead of improving the pit at D, plaintiff had acquired title to one located directly on the Hahn switch, — for example, at H, — and had then secured from the railroad company an agreement to operate that switch for the benefit of plaintiff’s business alone, and to exclude from such use all other dealers and shippers. It is quite unthinkable that, in such case, the right or power of the company to grant, or the right of the plaintiff to acquire, such exclusive use of the ¡switch, and divest it of the public character which it had borne for many years, would have the sanction or approval of any court.
IJ. Whether the contract between plaintiff and the railway company was'intended to give the former the exclusive advantage it claims, is a matter of dispute in the testimony of witnesses and arguments of counsel. The trial court held to the theory that such was the intention of the parties, but was of the opinion that the contract was, to that extent, void. As we agree with the view that the company was without power to grant the alleged exclusive rights in the use at the switch, it is unnecessary for us to go further into the construction of the agreement.
We do not undertake any review of the authorities cited. Their .general correctness may he conceded. None of them justifies any departure from the elementary principles, to say nothing of the provision of our statute which forbids discrimination by a railway earlier, and requires it to afford equal advantages to its patrons in the use of its transportation facilities. Code Supplement, 1913, Section 2125; 33 Gyc. 637; Roby v. State, 76 Neb. 450 (107 N. W. 766); Bedford, ete., Co. v. Oman, 115 Ky. 369 (73 S. W. 1038).
The decree below is both equitable and just, and it is— Affirmed.