State ex rel. Portland & Seattle Railway Co. v. Superior Court

45 Wash. 270 | Wash. | 1907

Hadley, J.

This is a condemnation proceeding which was commenced in the superior court of Whitman county. That court determined the cause adversely to the petitioner on the question of public use and necessity, and the petitioner obtained from this court a writ of review for the purpose of reviewing the judgment of the superior court. The petitioner is the Portland and Seattle Railway Company, and it is engaged in constructing a branch line of railway from its main line near Pasco, Washington, easterly along the north bank of the Snake river, in this state, to Texas City. It is the purpose of the petitioner to connect such branch line at Texas City with the line of the Oregon, Washington and Idaho Railroad, which is being constructed from Texas City to Lewiston, Idaho, thus giving the petitioner traffic connection through to Lewiston. Texas City is situate immediately along the north bank of the Snake river, and the proposed line of petitioner is located some distance to the north of the river, and extends in an easterly and westerly direction at said place. Crossing the river from the south and passing through Texas City, leading thence on to the northward, is a line of the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company, extending from Portland, Oregon, to Spokane, Washington. It is also the purpose of the last-named company to connect at Texas City *274with the line of the Oregon, Washington and Idaho Railroad, thus effecting traffic connection with Lewiston, Idaho, over the same line which is to be used by the petitioning company, constituting what may be called a joint occupation of said line in course of construction to Lewiston.

Immediately to the west of the main line track of the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company’s Spokane line in Texas City, and extending to the northward from the river, is a tract of land consisting of some thirty-eight acres, which is owned by said company. The tract is somewhat wedge-shaped, extending the long way in an easterly and westerly direction, the wider end being to the east. The peculiar shape is due to the relative directions of the river boundary on the south and the abrupt bluff on the north. This tract was acquired by said company in the year 1899, and the company has built, maintained, and used thereon certain spur tracks running out from its main line. The purpose of its acquisition was to provide terminal and trackage facilities at that point, to relieve the congestion consequent upon increasing traffic, and also by reason of the proposed connection at that place with the said line to Lewiston. It is also the purpose of said company to construct other spur tracks within said grounds, and generally to use the same for car storage, switching and terminal purposes. The petitioning company has located its projected line so as to run about the center of this tract in an easterly and westerly direction, so as to cross the existing spur tracks of the other company at very acute angles, and even so as to cross 'the main track of the Spokane line with a curve of nine degrees and thirty minutes. This curve necessitates the elevation of the outer rail of the petitioner’s line about four inches. This proceeding is for the purpose of condemning a strip one hundred feet in width across said tract and located as above stated. After a trial before the court upon the question of public use and necessity, judgment was entered dismissing the petition.

*275The court found the facts with reference to the ownership and occupation of the tract by the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company as above stated, and also further expressly found as follows:

“ . . and will need the said 38-acre tract of land crossed by the survey of the petitioner’s line of railway as described in paragraph two of said petition, for use as a material and storage yard for cars, and for use as a terminal for the construction of shops and other terminal facilities, and that said The Oregon Railroad & Navigation Company, is using said land for said purposes, and intends to devote the same to said use, and that the same is necessary for it in the carrying on of its business as a common carrier of passengers and freight in serving the public.”

It was also further found as follows:

“That the proposed appropriation by the petitioner across said land is not necessary for it in the construction of its line, and such appropriation, if allowed, would destroy the usefulness of said property for railroad purposes to The Oregon Railroad & Navigation Company, and no -case of necessity has been made out by the petitioner for the appropriation of said land, or for the securing of the crossing sought to be acquired by its petition, and as the land sought to be appropriated from the other claimants, which land is described in paragraph four of said petition, cannot be used unless the same is used in connection with the land described in paragraph two of said petition, no necessity has been made out for said land described in paragraph four of said petition, or for the appropriation thereof to the petitioner.”

We think the findings are amply sustained by the evidence. The petitioner located its line arbitrarily across the grounds and tracks of the prior company, having regard to its own convenience in effecting the most direct connection with the Lewiston line, which is to the eastward of the tract of land sought to be condemned, and also of the tracks sought to be crossed. The location was made without reference to'the convenience and necessities of the prior company. An engineer who testified for the petitioning company stated that, taking *276the interests of both companies into consideration, it would not cut up the yard of the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company so much if the line of the petitioner should be kept along and near the north bank of the Snake river. He also stated that the yard would not be as good with petitioner’s line located where it is proposed as it would be if located either to the north or south of the proposed location. He also stated that there is no reason, either from an engineering or operating standpoint, why the petitioner cannot go up the north bank of the river, thus avoiding all the spur tracks of the prior company, and proceed practically on a tangent to its connection with the Oregon, Washington and Idaho line to- Lewiston. Another engineer testified that the cost of the construction of such river line would be about $28,000 as against $10,000 for the selected route, with the advantage to the river route of proceeding upon a tangent, while the located route proceeds upon a nine degree and thirty minute curve.

The petitioner contends that it has the right to arbitrarily select its place for crossing the main line and spur tracks of the prior company. It contends that the statute, Bal. Code, § 4335 (P. C. § 7090), authorizes such arbitrary selection. Whatever might be said of such a construction of the statute as applicable to the single and simple crossing of two main lines, it certainly should not be said that the statute was intended to give to a new locator the arbitrary power to select a route through the center of the yards and terminal grounds of a prior company, across the switch and storage tracks of the latter company, in such a manner as to seriously interfere with the usefulness of the tracks and qrounds. Such an interference with previously established rights in the older locator, rights established and used for the benefit and service of the public, would be wholly unwarranted unless public necessity required such interference. Perhaps such right of arbitrary selection of a route may exist as against purely private property which is owned and used wholly for private *277purposes, payment of the full damage being made; but it should not be so as to property which belongs to a public service corporation which has already been subjected to the service of a public use. In such case the established rights of the prior locator should be considered, and if the public necessities of the new locator can be reasonably as well served by another location, it ought not to be permitted to enter established grounds and cross a system of established and proposed tracks so as to seriously interfere with present traffic, and with plans for future and increased traffic. If there should be no other reasonable route, then, without doubt, the older locator would be subjected to the burden of the public necessities of the newer one. What may constitute another reasonable route must be a question of fact in each case, depending upon all the circumstances and the entire environment. Mere additional cost incident to another route would not necessarily and of itself show the route to be an unreasonable one. Again, the additional cost might be so great as to approximate a prohibitory amount, and thus render another location an unreasonable one. All the facts and circumstances attending each case must be considered in order to determine whether there is, or is not, a reasonable public necessity for taking the property which is already devoted to a public use. In this case we think the evidence does not show such public necessity in favor of the route sought to be condemned. It is not enough that it would serve the mere convenience of one railroad company to appropriate land devoted to the prior use of another, but it must appear that it is reasonably necessary in order to aid the new locator to discharge its public sei’vice duties.

“We have then the finding of the master, based upon ample testimony, that the land in question was acquired by the appellant company for the uses of its road, and that the same is necessary therefor. Can it now be taken by another corporation for the same or a similar use? It cex’tainly cannot be done for the mere convenience or profit of the latter. To *278justify such taking there must be a necessity; ‘a necessity so absolute that without it the grant itself will be defeated. It must also be a necessity that arises from the very nature of things over which the corporation has no control; it must not be created by the company itself for its own convenience or for the sake of economy.’ ” Sharon R. Co. v. Sharpsville R. Co., 122 Pa. St. 533, 17 Atl. 234, 9 Am. St. 133.

See, also, Barre R. Co. v. Granite R. Co., 61 Vt. 1, 17 Atl. 923, 15 Am. St. 877; Rutland-Canadian R. Co. v. Central Vermont R. Co., 72 Vt. 128, 47 Atl. 399; Seattle etc. R. Co. v. State, 7 Wash. 150, 34 Pac. 551, 38 Am. St. 866, 22 L. R. A. 217; State ex rel. Spokane Falls etc. R. Co. v. Superior Court, 40 Wash. 389, 82 Pac. 417.

The above authorities fully sustain the decision of the trial court under the facts in this case, and the decisions cited from this court we think are squarely in point.

The judgment is therefore affirmed.

Mount, C. J., Fullerton, Root, Crow, and Dunbar, JJ., concur.