delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action of ejectment brought by defendant in error against plaintiffs in error in the Superior Court in and for the county of Whitman, State of Washington, for land situate in the town of Palouse.
The trial court adjudged defendant in error the' owner in fee simple of theJand sued for, and that the plaintiffs in error were in the possession and occupation оf the portions thereof described in their answers against'the will and consent of the plaintiff (defendant in error), and were occupying and in possession thereof without right, except that the Northern Pacific Railway Company, as a public carrier, had a right to hold the possession of a strip of land. twenty-five feet wide, “being twelve and оne-half feet on each side of the center line between the rails of its main track over and across said land, and also a tract 100 feet square.” This tract was described. Defendant in error was adjudged entitled to recover “ all the rest of the land described in the -amended complaint.” And that a writ issue to put him in possession thereof, but not until ninety days from' the date of the judgment, and if an appeal should be taken and proceedings stayed then not until ninety days from the time the remittitur from the Su *126 preme Court affirming the judgment should be filed; and if, in the meantime, the railway company should commence proceédings in the proper court to condemn the land claimed by it and describеd in its answer, for railroad purposes, then said writ should not be issued .as to such* land it might seek to condemn, unless the company should afterwards dismiss such proceedings or fail to prosecute the same to final judgment and pay the award that might be made therein. The Supreme Court affirmed the judgment. 39 ■ Washington, 576.
The facts, as far as necessary to be stated, are that after proceedings in the land office,"to which the railway company was a party, a homestead patent was issued to defendant in error April 20, 1897, to lots 10, 11, 14 and 15 of section 1, township 16 N., range 45 E.' Willamette meridian. Defendant in error established his residence upon the land in 1883.
In 1886 and the first half of 1887, the Spokane and Palouse Railway Company constructed and completed, at great expense, a railroad' over lots 10 and 11, conforming to the survey previously made and staked out, and from and after its completion it was operated daily and continuously in the carrying of freight, passengers and mail. The right of way claimed was one hundred feet wide on eithеr side of the main line of railroad. It would be possible for plaintiff in-error, who is the successor of the Spokane company, to-carry freight, passengers and mail over a right of way not exceeding twenty-five feet in width, and a space of one hundred feet square would permit of the erection of a depot at the town of Palouse. But great inconvenience would result to the citizens of that town and vicinity and the railway company. For the convenient, prompt and expeditious handling of freight and the erection of elevators for storing grain and wheat a right of way of two hundred feet is necessary. At the time the railroad was surveyed and constructed defendаnt in error resided upon said lands and knew of its construction and the expenditure of large sums ■ of money therefor. About the *127 time of the survey he published a notice in the Palouse News, a newspaper published in the vicinity of the land, forbidding all persons from trespassing thereon. This is the only objection he made. In the month of August, 1887, the Northern Pacific Rаilroad Company, claiming to be the owner of lots 10 and 11, conveyed the same to William S. Powers, and he, on the fourteenth of September, of the same year, conveyed to the Spokane and Palouse Railway Company a right of way two hundred feet wide over lots 10 and 11, being the same then claimed by that company and now clаimed" by plaintiff in error, .the Northern Pacific Railway ■ Company. On the twelfth of May, 1897, the Spokane and Palouse Railway Company, Powers and . others, as ■ successors in interest of Po\yers under the above deed of conveyance-from the Northern Pacific Railroad Company, brought a suit against the defendant in error, which ,will hereafter bе' referred to and described. The complaint was amended. The date, of its filing as amended does not appear. It was sworn to February 19, 1898. A demurrer to the amended complaint was sustained and, the plaintiffs declining to plead further, a judgment was entered June 24, • 1898, dismissing the suit. The judgment was affirmed successively by the Supreme Court of the State and by this cоurt. No suit of any kind was commenced by .defendant in error to enjoin, the construction of or the maintenance of sáid railroad over said right of .way, except the suit at bar, which was brought shortly-after the decision of this court above mentioned. The summons was served on the Northern Pacific Railway Company on the ninth of October, 1901, and the complaint was filed on the fourth of June, 1902.
The Spokane and Palouse Railway Company conveyed the right of way in controversy and all of its property on the twenty-first of February, 1899, to the Northern Pacific Railway Company, which has ever since maintained and operated said road from Spokáne, Washington, to Lewiston, Idaho, and intervening рoints..
*128 The Northern Pacific Railway Company (we shall follow counsel’s example and treat the Northern Pacific Railway Company as the sole plaintiff in error, the individuals named being its lessees) assigns as error in its brief the ruling of the Supreme Court of the State, that the company “had no right of way under the act of Congress of March 3, 1875,” 18 Stat. 482, and thе ruling, “that the statute of limitations of Washington could not, because the laws of the United States forbade, commence to run until patent issued.” The limitation of the statute is ten years.
The defendant in error opposes as a bar to these defenses the judgment in his favor in the suit brought by the Spokane and Palouse Railway Company and William S'. Powers and others, which judgment was affirmed by this court. 180 U, S. 173. Plaintiff in error is the successor in interest of the Spokane and Palouse Railway Company, and is estopped by the judgment if that company would be.
The object of the suit in which the judgment was rendered, as appears from the findings of fact of the trial court, was to have Slaght, defendant in error, “declared a trustee, and as holding the land in trust” for the plaintiffs in the suit, and to require a conveyance from him to them,, and to enjoin him from bringing any action to oust them. The amended complaint, which is. made part of the findings, averred that the patent to Slaght was “issued under a misconstruction and misinterpretation of the law,” and that at the date of the issuance of said patent the land was not; nor was it at the time he applied to enter the same, public land, subject to settlement or entry under the land laws of the United States, other than the act of Congress approved July 2, 1864, granting' land to the Northern Pacific Railroad Company. The facts and circumstances from which these conclusions were deduced and justified were set forth with great particularity. It was averred that the Spokane and' Palouse Railway Company and other plaintiffs asserted and claimed title to certain portions of the land under and by virtue of certain instruments *129 duly made and delivered by Powers and his grantees. And it was also averred that the questions involved were of common and general interest to many persons whom it was impracticable to make parties, and that such persons and the plaintiffs were the owners in fee simple and had an indefeasible title, and were in possession of lots 10,11,14 and 15 of section 1, township 16 N, range 45 E., Willamette nleridian, and that Slaght claimed an interest or estate therein adverse to the plaintiffs, which claim was without any right whatever and that he had no estate, right; title or interest whatever in the land or any part thereof. And it was averred that he threatened to commence suits in ejectment, and, without suit, forcibly to dispossess' and eject plaintiffs from said premises dr a portion thereof unless enjoinеd. An injunction was prayed restraining him from selling the land and doing the acts described; that he be required to set forth the nature of his claim, and that his claim be determined; that he be adjudged to have no title or interest whatever to the land or any part thereof, and be enjoined from ever asserting any; “that the title of plaintiffs be decreed'goоd, valid, indefeasible fée simple, and free from all claims of said defendant;” that the patent be declared to have issued under a misconstruction of law, that he be held to be a trustee for the plaintiff, William L. Powers, and his grantees, both direct and through. mesne conveyance, and that Slaght be required to convey the land to Powers and his grantees. Slaght demurred to the complaint and the demurrer was sustained. The plaintiffs electing to stand on the demurrer, judgment was entered dismissing the suit. This „ judgment was affirmed, by the Supreme Court of the State and by this court, as we have seen.
The complaint in the suit did not show what-land or interest Powers deeded to the Spokane and Palouse Railway Company' but it appears from the findings that the Northern Pacific Railroad Company conveyed lots .10 arid 11 to Powers in August, 1887, and in September, 1887, Powers conveyed to the Spokane arid Palouse Railway Company the tract of
*130
land then used as its right of way, and that it is the same tract which was occupied by the plaintiff in error as its right of way. The basis of the title аlleged in the suit was the grant to the Northern Pacific Railroad Company by act of Congress of July 2, 1864. Rights under the act of Congress of March 3, 1873, or under the statute of limitations of the State, were not set up. The Spokane and Palouse Railway Company, nowcver, alleged that it and the other plaintiffs in the suit had a title in fee simple, and prayed in thе most comprehensive and detailed way to have it quieted against the claims of the defendant in error, which, it was alleged, were threatened to be asserted by suits and by force without suit. The question now to be decided is, is the decree in the suit
res adjudicata¶
Against this effect of the decree the railway company urges that it was.rendered on demurrer аnd “the estoppel extends only to the very point raised in the pleading, and does not bar another action based upon other facts.” The effect of the decree, it is insisted, was only to decide against the title specially set forth in the pleading. And further, “in this action [that at bar] the right asserted is a perpetual easement or way by virtue of the act of 1875 through the lands involved in the former suit. Not only was this right not pleaded in the former complaint, but under it the title now asserted could not' have been proved.” To sustain these conclusions the following authorities are cited:
Wiggins Ferry Company
v.
Ohio & Mississippi Company,
The citations are not apposite to thе present controversy. It is well established that a judgment on demurrer is as conclusive as one rendered upon proof.
Gould
v.
Evansville & Crawfordsville R. R. Co.,
In
United States
v.
California & Oregon Land Company,
This doctrine has illustrations in suits to quiet title. It was decided in Lessees of Parrish v. Ferris et al., 2 Black, 606, that the judgment in an- action to quiet title is conclusive of the title, whether adverse to the plaintiff in the action or to the defendant. In other words, it determines the merits of the plaintiff’s title as well as that of the defendant. In Indiana, Bloomington & Western Railway Co. v. Allen, 113 Indiana, 581, it was held that the railway company could not - assert against a judgment decreeing title in the plaintiff in'such an action the, right to construct and maintain a railway' over it. And in Davis v. Sennen, 125 Indiana, 185, it was decided that every possible interest of a defendant is cut off. And necеssarily every possible interest of the plaintiff is cut off if the judgment is in favor of the defendant, Parrish v. Ferris, supra.
Spokane and Palouse Railway Company alleged a title in fee simple, and'the truth of the allegation could be determined as well by demurrer as by proof, and the samé legal consequences followed from it.
Clearwater
v.
Meredith,
1
Wall. 25; Goodrich
v.
The City,
In the discussion thus far we have assumed, as contended by plaintiff in error', that the statute of limitations could commence to run before the patent issued, and we have also assumеd that rights under it were complete in the Spokane and Palousé Railway Company at the time of its suit, against Slaght. Lest the latter assumption be questioned it may be Avell to determine whether the other assumption be true. The Supreme Court decided against it on the authority of
Gibson
v,
Chouteau,
Judgment affirmed.
