67 Minn. 385 | Minn. | 1897
This action was brought to enjoin and prohibit defendant railway company from keeping and maintaining its double
The right of the defendant at that time to keep and maintain said double tracks and telegraph poles on said Lake street, upon the performance of certain conditions, which involved a slight change in the location of the tracks, the removal of side tracks and other obstructions from the street, the making and maintaining of public crossings at certain points, and also making provision for suitable and convenient access to the water, was distinctly affirmed in that action. From the evidence herein, it is shown that, immediately upon the entry of final judgment in that case, defendant not only removed its side tracks and other obstructions from the street, as required to do, but it also removed its wharves and steamboat landings and its station and depot buildings from the village limits; establishing a new station and new wharves about one mile east of the old, and also locating a flag station for some trains at a point west about one-fourth of a mile. It left nothing whatsoever in the street, or within the limits of the village, except its tracks and the telegraph poles. These it has maintained along Lake street, running daily a large number of trains through the street at a rate of speed varying from 20 to 30 miles an hour.
That the village and its people have been and are seriously injured and damaged by the removal of the station, and the running of trains in the middle of the street at this rate of speed, cannot be doubted, but these facts do not control the case now before us. It was brought upon the ground that as the necessity for depot facilities upon Lake street, and at the point where the depot buildings then stood, had been obviated and removed by the action of defendant in taking away its depot buildings and its adjacent wharves and landings, the necessity for maintaining its tracks and poles in the street had ceased. As both were a very serious injury and detriment to the use by the people of the water front, the good of the public, it was alleged, imperatively demanded their removal to
These findings were, in substance: First, that there was “no
By the assignments of error it is asserted that neither of these findings is supported by the evidence, and that the court erred in its conclusion of law based thereon. These findings are wholly disconnected and independent, so that it is not necessary, in order to sustain the conclusion of law, that both should be supported by the .proofs. One refers solely to the practicability, feasibility, and convenience of a route through the village, and, upon the evidence, determines that no other route would interfere less with the safety and convenience of the people than the one now pursued, or afford less obstruction to the public streets and highways of the village, while the other pertains solely to the plea of res judicata found in the answer, and set up as a complete bar to the cause of action. So that, if the second finding was justified by the proofs, the conclusion of law was correct, and no further consideration of this appeal would be required. In such case the first finding would become immaterial. If, upon the other hand, the evidence failed to sustain the plea in bar, no conclusion of law ordering judgment for defendant wholly predicated upon the second finding could be sanctioned.
At that time the defendant maintained a station with a passenger and freight depot at the village. It also maintained, in close proximity to the depot, wharves, and landings for boats plying upon the lake, thus affording facilities for joint traffic on the lake and by rail. It connected this traffic at this particular point, and by these facilities; and, to do this, the necessity for the occupation of Lake street by its tracks first arose, had since existed, and continued to exist at the time of the trial of the former action. It was these conditions, continuing and existing at the time of the trial, which largely influenced the court when making the finding from which we have quoted, and it is evident that this finding was quite potent in the final determination of the case. As made, the finding was upon the facts as they then existed. The conclusion of law, in so far as it was rested on this finding, was an application of legal principles to the facts as found, not to others which might arise in the future and be presented for adjudication.
The test to be applied is whether the same evidence will sustain both the former and the present action. If a party alleges a certain state of facts as his cause of action, and is defeated, it is no bar to recovery on another statement of facts constituting a different cause of action, although the transaction referred to and the relief sought in both actions are the same. West v. Hennessey, 58 Minn. 133, 59 N. W. 984.
“The conclusive character of a judgment extends only to identical issues, and they must be such not merely in name, but in fact and substance. If the vital issue of the later litigation has been in truth already determined by an earlier judgment, it may not again be contested; but, if it has not, — if it is intrinsically and substantially an entirely different issue, even though capable of being described in similar language, or by a common form of expression, — then the truth is not excluded, and the judgment no answer to the different issue.” Palmer v. Hussey, 87 N. Y. 303, 306.
On the facts as they were shown to exist at the time of the trial of the present action, the plaintiff, instead of seeking to contradict and overturn the former judgment, claimed the benefit of and relied upon it.
As the second finding of fact was unsupported by the evidence, we now turn to a consideration of the claim that the first finding is without evidence to sustain it. The only testimony received on the
The former testified as to the great inconvenience in reaching the water’s edge from the village, the buildings therein being north of the double tracks, and also the hazard and danger in using Lake street, the principal business thoroughfare, for the passage of teams, with many trains running thereon at a high rate of speed, and at all hours. That it clearly appeared from this evidence that the safety and convenience of the public, and its right to free access to a navigable body of water, had been greatly interfered with and obstructed by the operation of defendant’s trains, cannot be doubted.
The engineer testified as to the feasibility of another route for defendant’s railway through the village, by changing the line of road for something more than one mile, and produced a map of his proposed route, made from an actual survey. If this plan were adopted, the tracks through the village would be transferred from Lake street to a line nearly parallel with the street, about 300 feet northerly, and through the center of the three blocks which abut on Lake street. See plat, 50 Minn. 441, 52 N. W. 913. The new line would be about 150 feet longer than the old. From the map produced by the engineer, it seems that for about 400 feet the new route would be upon a county road, and would then cross four streets which intersect Lake avenue at right angles south of the proposed crossings. After testifying as to the length of the proposed route, the curves, the depth of cuts and height of fills which would have to be made, the engineer was permitted to give his opinion (defendant’s counsel objecting) that there was no physical necessity, by reason of the condition or surface of the ground in that vicinity, for the retention and maintenance of defendant’s tracks upon Lake street.
There was no evidence as to how this change would affect the operation of defendant’s road as a whole, or the convenience of the traveling public, or the rights of property holders along the new route, or the property over which it would have to pass. There was no testimony as to what expense the defendant might incur should it attempt to change its line, or how serious the change might be to the inhabitants of the village residing north of the proposed line. It seems to have been assumed by the plaintiff that because the
When examining the proofs on which the finding now in question was founded, it must be borne in mind that this was a proceeding to compel the removal of defendant’s line from where it had been located and operated for many years, and not a proceeding involving an original location. The statute which authorized the occupation of the street in the first instance, and under which defendant’s predecessor acted more than 25 years ago, conferred the right to construct a road upon, along, and over any public or private highway, “if the same shall be necessary.”
“Property was to be regarded as ‘necessary’ for the operation of the road if it was such as the company, in the reasonable exercise of its discretion, considered it best to procure for the most profitable use of the road to itself, and the most beneficial use of it to the public.”
And when exercising the right to appropriate the way, and to construct the railway line along and upon it, the burden of proof must
So in this case the plaintiff was not only met with the presumption, but it was also confronted with the former adjudication, — a bar to further proceedings unless it was shown that the conditions on which the adjudication was based had wholly changed. Realizing this, plaintiff introduced evidence to establish its contention that these conditions had changed, and also that it was no longer necessary that defendant should occupy Lake street, and, further, that public rights required a removal of the tracks to another locality. It admitted — what is undoubtedly true — that the burden of proof was upon it to show, not only that the necessity no longer existed, but that there were substantial grounds for a finding of the court that a more feasible, practicable, and convenient route could be obtained, and that the safety and convenience of the public demanded a change in the line at this particular point, and also that the proposed change would less obstruct the streets and highways of the village than the line in use.
Not only was the burden upon plaintiff in these respects, but a finding in its favor upon so important a matter would have to be based upon clear and convincing testimony. Evidence which would warrant a court, on a hearing to locate a railway line in the first instance, in finding that the public interests required it to be elsewhere located than upon some particular private or public way, would not necessarily uphold a like finding when the proceeding was to change and remove a line already constructed and in operation. If the rule we have announced was not the true one, every railroad company could be compelled to alter an established route at the caprice of a local public, as often as demanded, and almost without regard to the original decision upon the question of necessity, the interest of the general public, or the cost of alteration. Companies would be continually harassed by reason of changed conditions, and upon the ground that local necessities arising subsequent to the original location absolutely demanded alteration here and there in the general system and plan of the entire line.
Taking into consideration the character of the evidence received
Order affirmed.
Buck, J., took no part in tliis case.
Laws 1857, Ex. S. c. 1, § 7.