Rice v. Lincoln & Northwestern Railroad

88 Neb. 307 | Neb. | 1911

Sedgwick, J.

- The plaintiff is the owner of certain real estate in Seward county, and began this action in the district court for that county to recover damages which he alleged lie liad sustained by reason of the wrongful act of the defendants upon and in relation to the said real estate. The defendants for answer and counterclaim alleged that the plaintiff had before that time contracted to sell and convey the real estate in question to the defendant, the Lincoln & Northwestern Railroad Company, upon certain conditions and terms which had all been 'complied with, and had afterwards refused to convey the same in accordance with his contract, and asked for a specific performance of the *309contract. The defendants also asked that the issue tendered by the counterclaim be first tried by the court without a jury. The court thereupon determined that the issue tendered by the answer and counterclaim should be first tried, and upon such trial found the issues in favor of defendants and entered a decree for the specific performance of the contract alleged by the defendants. The plaintiff has appealed.

It appears that plaintiff was the owner of the S. E. J of the S. W. {- of section 4, in township 9 N., of range 4 E., in Seward county. The railroad company was about to construct a line of road along the north side of this tract of land, and on the 10th day of May, 1906, entered into the following contract with the plaintiff: “Contract for Right of Way. For the consideration of the sum of one dollar to in hand paid, I, S. H. Rice, a single man, of Seward county and state of Nebraska, hereby covenant to and with the Lincoln & Northwestern Railroad Company that I will convey by good and sufficient deed, unincumbered, the right of way for the railroad of said company, all that part of the S. E. of the S. W. 7{- of sec. 4-9-4-E, lying and being north of a line drawn 75 feet from and parallel to on the south side of the center line of said railroad as now located on and across said land. We further agree that said company may proceed in the construction of said road over said land, and we will sell to the said railroad company such additional right of way as they may require at the rate of $60 dollars per acre, with the privilege of changing any watercourse necessary in the construction of said road, and the right to build and maintain a snow fence for the term of five months each year at any point where said snow fence may be deemed necessary within two hundred feet of either side of its right of way on said described land beginning November 15th and ending April 15th of each succeeding year; and I agree to settle all damage to tenant on account of his leasehold. Provided, that said railroad company shall during the years 1906 and 1907 construct its said railroad *310from on said land to.............and pay the said S. H. Rice the snm of $150, then this obligation shall be of force and virtue in law; but if said company shall neglect or refuse to pay the said sum within 1 month from date, then either party may have the damages for right of way assessed as provided by law. Witness our hands hereto this 10th day of May, A. D. 1906. S. H. Rice. Witness: J. M. Saxton.” (Indorsed) “S. H. Rice. Pd. 5-24,06. Draft 786. Pt. of S. E. -J S. W. \ Sec. 4-9-4-E.”

During the years- of 1906 and 1907 the railroad company constructed its railroad, using the tract of land described in the contract. On the 6th ,of September, 1907, the company served upon the plaintiff a demand in writing to convey to the company a strip of said land 65 feet wide and about 400 feet long adjoining on the south the strip of land described and specified in the said contract which the plaintiff had already conveyed to the company pursuant to the contract. With this written demand the company tendered $36 as the price of said land at $60 per acre, as stated in the contract, and also tendered a draft of a deed of the land demanded to be executed to the company from the plaintiff.

1. The first contention of the plaintiff is that, when the original right of way deed was executed by him to the company, any supposed claim that the company might have by virtue of the contract for the option to purchase more land was rescinded by the parties. The consideration of $1 named in the contract was paid by the company to the plaintiff at the time that the contract was executed, and, when the deed of right of way specified in the contract was executed by the plaintiff to the company, the amount specified in the contract as the purchase price of the land, $150, was paid by the company to the plaintiff, and the $1 which had been paid by the company at the time of the execution of the contract was returned by the plaintiff to the company. This transaction, it was urged, operated as a completion of the contract, .and no consideration remained for the option which the company *311is now claiming. We do not think that this transaction Avill admit of such a construction. The consideration for the contract entered into by the parties was the purchase by the company of the tract of land described and specified in the contract and the payment of $150 therefor. This Avould be a sufficient consideration for all the agreements of either party in the contract. The $1 Avas advanced as a part of the $150, and, when the deed was executed, the plaintiff was entitled to the remainder of $149. He was paid by a check which had been prepared by the company and which called for $150, and he therefore returned the $1. This transaction therefore cannot be considered an abandonment of any of the terms of the contract by either party.

2. The second proposition of the plaintiff as stated in the brief is as follows: “The said contract, assuming it to be otherwise valid, was void so far as it sought to bestow upon the railroad company the option to purchase additional lands, because it violated the rule against perpetuities.” It appears to be conceded by the company that if the exercise of its option to purchase was not limited as to time, and the contract had by express terms been extended to the “heirs, executors, administrators and assigns and the owner or owners for the time being of the lands conveyed and all persons who should and might be interested therein,” it would violate the rule against perpetuities. The company contends that it does not violate this rule for two reasons: The contract by its terms is personal to this plaintiff only, and it is limited in time to the construction of the railroad which again in express terms is limited to the two years named in the contract.

The contention that the contract was personal to the plaintiff and did not run with the land, and is therefore limited to the life of the plaintiff, is confidently presented in the brief. Our statute provides: “In the construction of every instrument creating or conveying, or authorizing or requiring the creation or conveyance of any real estate, or interest therein, it shall be the duty of the courts of *312justice to carry into effect the 'true interest (intent) of the parties, so far as such intent can be collected from the whole instrument, and so far as such intent is consistent with the rules of law.” Comp. St. 1909, ch. 73, sec. 53. It has been held that covenants in a deed of a party in possession of land run Avith the land Avhen the deed names the grantee personally with no other Avords. In the vieAV that we take of the second proposition of defendant upon this point, it is not necessary to determine Avhether the true construction of this contract is that the deed given pursuant thei'eto should contain covenants running with the land.

The second proposition of defendant on this point, that the contract should be construed to limit the exercise of the option to the time of the construction of the road, we think is right. “We further agree that said company may proceed in the construction of said road over said land, and we Avill sell to the said railroad company such additional right of Avay as they may require at the rate of $G0 dollars per acre, with the privilege of changing any watercourse necessary in the construction of said road.” By the first paragraph of the contract plaintiff agreed to convey “the- right of way for the railroad of said company.” The company was to “proceed with the construction of said road OArer said land,” and might need for that purpose “additional right of way.” The evidence shows that orchard, farm buildings and other AUiluable improvements are located so near to the right of way that, if this contract should be construed to mean that after the road was completed the company might take such part of the farm as it saAv fit, it Avould be too unconscionable to be enforced in a court of equity. Punctuation marks in a contract Avill not be alloAved, in a court of equity, to give the contract an unconscionable and inequitable meaning. If this contract were Avritten with the clause “with the privilege of changing any Avatercourse necessary” in parentheses, it would perhaps be patent to all that the words folhnviug, “in the construction of said road,” limit the Avords, “as *313they may require.” The agreement is that, if the company should require “additional right of way * * * in the construction of said road,” plaintiff shall convey it and he paid therefor at $G0 per acre. The exercise of the option, then, Avas limited to the two years in which the construction was to he .completed, and the rule against perpetuities is not violated.

3. The third contention of the plaintiff, that the defendants haAre an adequate remedy at law independently of the contract, is perhaps of importance in connection with the general equities of the case. It was, of course, proper and desirable that the parties adjust the matter by an agreement between them, and a contract for that purpose, otherwise unobjectionable, might be enforced The statute, however, contemplates that without a contract between the parties the company can obtain such land as it needs for the proper maintenance and operation of the road through the simple method pointed out by the statute and without unnecessary litigation.

4. The fourth objection that the plaintiff makes to this decree is that “it would be inequitable to enforce specific performance of this contract.” We think this objection is Avell taken. Mr. IToagland, who Avas the company’s engineer, was a witness for the defendant, and testified quite at length as to the construction of the road and the necessity of this additional land in that construction. As the engineer for the company it devolved upon him to determine what land was needed by the company in the construction of the road. He says that it was first decided that 150 feet of right of way was needed, and if in practice it was found that more was needed it was intended to obtain it later. When the improArement was begun, Middle Creek, which Avas very irregular in that locality, crossed the right of Avay opposite the land in question three times, running in a general direction from south to north. The public highway Avas north of the right of way. A neAV channel Avas cut straightening the creek so that it would cross the right of way but once. It *314was necessary to fill in the bed of the old channel where it formerly crossed the right of way. This channel was at some points as much as 36 feet below the required grade. The creek where this filling was done had been fed by springs, and it was necessary to place tiling to carry off the water. On the south side the base of the fill extended to within about 25 feet of the south line of the original right of way. The engineer stated that at one point it was within 23 feet, and Mr. Rice testified that it was 25 feet at the nearest point. The public road was changed to the south side of the right of way, passing under the railroad at the point nearly opposite the east line of the plaintiff’s land, and then running west along the shelf or “berm” constructed by the company. This shelf or berm was 25 feet wide, and was placed by the company along the grade to protect it from surface water, and perhaps for other purposes. The slope of the grade, together with this shelf or berm, extended within about four feet of the south line of the original right of way. The engineer testified that it was necessary that the drainage tiling should extend about 10 feet south of the south line of the right of way, and in maintaining the drain “it would be necessary to take up the tiling and reset them,” and that he figured on getting the dirt from the east end of this strip to make a fill which would be necessary in the future, and that additional right of way was required for these and other similar purposes. The plaintiff testified that this additional strip 65 feet wide extended to within 10 feet of his barn and within 12 feet of his house, and takes in both of his granaries and his grove.

It appears from the evidence that, when this contract was made, there was some discussion between the plaintiff and the company’s agent as to the probability that any more land would be necessary in the construction of the road; and the plaintiff testified that the company’s agent then said, “We might need it for additional trackage or other purposes in connection with building the road.” and that he said to the agent, “If that is the case, they will not *315put any trackage down • there.” His understanding was that if the company should put another track there, or some improvement of that kind, they might call upon him for additional right of way. If it is admitted that it is for the company and its engineer to determine how much right of way is necessary for the proper construction, maintenance and operation of the road, still, when we consider what use the company expects to make of this additional land, it seems clear that any one not an expert engineer would not have contemplated that this contract would have involved such serious consequences to the plaintiff’s property.

It has been frequently decided by this court that “courts of equity null not always enforce a specific performance of a contract. Such applications are addressed to the sound legal discretion of the court, and the court will be governed, to a great extent, by the facts and merits of each case, as it is presented.” Morgan v. Hardy, 16 Neb. 427. In Clarke v. Koenig, 36 Neb. 572, it is said: “Specific performance is not generally a legal right, but rests in the sound, legal, judicial discretion of the trial court.” See, also, Kofka v. Rosicky, 41 Neb. 328. In Hoctor-Johnston Co. v. Billings, 65 Neb. 214, it appears that the trial court took the evidence in full in regard to the circumstances surrounding the making of the contract, and in the opinion of the court by Holoomb, J., this evidence is discussed without regard to the express language of the contract itself, and its force is considered as tending to show that the specific enforcement of the contract would be inequitable. This evidence show’s clearly that the plaintiff never contemplated that any such amount of land would be required as is now demanded. The plaintiff was asked how the taking of this amount of land would affect his farm, and upon objection was not allowed to answer. This evidence would have been proper in the case. The case was carefully tried along the line of a rigid enforcement of an express contract. The former decisions of this court would require a more liberal in*316vestigation as to the real equities between the parties. If the defendant, the Lincoln & Northwestern Railroad Company, under this contract could take the plaintiff’s timber and bis granaries at $60 an acre, it might by the same construction have extended its demand a few feet farther so as to take his house and barn also. Tiie said defendant is not without remedy. It can demand such land as is needed for the proper maintenance of the road; and it will only be required to pay the plaintiff his actual damages caused by such taking.

The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.

Reversed.

Fawcett, J., concurs in the conclusion.
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