Alaska Pacific Ry. & Terminal Co. v. Copper River & N. E. Ry. Co.

3 Alaska 343
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedJune 11, 1907
DocketNo. 623A
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Alaska 343 (Alaska Pacific Ry. & Terminal Co. v. Copper River & N. E. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alaska Pacific Ry. & Terminal Co. v. Copper River & N. E. Ry. Co., 3 Alaska 343 (D. Alaska 1907).

Opinion

WICKERSHAM, District Judge

(orally). Thife is an application for an injunction on the part of the Alaska Pacific Railway & Terminal Company to restrain the Copper-River & Northwestern Railway Company, the Katalla! Company, and M. K. Rogers, the superintendent of the | defendant companies from entering upon plaintiff’s terminal grounds, opposite Martin Island, near Katalla, and building defendants’ railroad across the same, and from crossing! plaintiff’s tracks now built thereon. ,

The plaintiff company shows that it has located terminal grounds on the seashore for its road, and has built á grade on bridging across the ground along the line of its definite location, and is in possession thereof. The defendant .companies have begun their road a mile or two southward, and! are building over and across plaintiff’s terminal grounds, and will, unless restrained, cross plaintiff’s railroad upon grade. ¡

The amended complaint states plaintiffs cause of action in apt language, but for the purposes of this action it will not be necessary to read it. Both counsel and the Icourt are familiar with its allegations, but for present explanation the court will read the prayer thereof as follows:

“First. That an order be made and entered herein requiring the defendants, and each of them, to appear before the judge of) this court, now sitting at Juneau, Alaska, upon a certain day to show cause why they should not he restrained and enjoined from in any wise entering upon or encroaching upon the said terminal tract No. IB and right of way for 100 feet on each side of the-lines passing through said tract No. IB, and from in any wise erecting any structures for railroad purposes, or otherwise, upon said tract and right of way, and that they may be enjoined in the meantime until the hearing of the said order to show cause. ,
[345]*345“Second. That the plaintiff be adjudged the owner of and entitled to the possession of all the land within the exterior boundaries of said tract No. IB, also of the right of way for 100' feet on each side of lines of railroads, as indicated on said map and passing through said tract, and that upon the trial of this suit a decree be made and entered herein perpetually enjoining the defendants, and each of them, their agents, servants, and employes, and all persons working under them, from interfering with the exclusive right and enjoyment of the plaintiff herein to the possession of the land included within the exterior boundaries of the said tract No. IB and said right of way for 100 feet on each side of the lines of railroad passing through said tract, and for such other and further relief as to the court may seem meet and proper.”

Plaintiff company confines itself, by the allegations of the complaint, to the ground within the exterior boundaries of its terminal tract No. IB, and also includes within the prayer an application to prevent the defendants from crossing the line of plaintiff’s right of way in so far only as it is included within the limits of terminal tract No. IB. The court will restrain a railway company from entering upon private property and damaging it, or building railroads upon it, or any trespasses of that nature, until it shall have a right to do so under the law. In a proper case, where it is shown that a railroad company is entering upon the private” property of a citizen without having acquired the right to do so by law, by the exercise of the law of eminent domain or otherwise, it may become the court’s duty to issue an injunction or temporary restraining order to give the plaintiff an opportunity to litigate its rights; but that rule applies only in cases where there is a threat to cross private property — property to which the plaintiff has the title or other exclusive right of possession. In this case it is not shown that the plaintiff has any title, or any further or greater right of possession, to the property than the defendant, and the court will be very slow to grant an injunction in a case of this kind.

[346]*346The principle involved in this case was before, this court in the case of Steele v. Tanana Mines Railway Co., 2 Alaska, 451, and it was there held:

“It is not shown that the railroad was being constructed across the slough, or that the ground which it crosses is mineral in character. There is a fair dispute as to the ownership of the ground at the point where the railroad crosses the slough. The defendant1 has a deed from both homesteaders for the opposite banks at that point, and probably, under the statute, to the thread of the steam. Thre is no evidence that the crossing at that point constitutes any damage whatever to the plaintiff’s property. His title is doubtful, ancl the rule in all such cases is that an injunction shall not issue until the title is established. The general rule is that an injunction will not issue to prevent a railroad company from taking possession of a i|ght of way and constructing its road over private property without first making payment to the owners for the property taken. * * * This case, however, is within the exception to the general rule: First. Both litigants claim title to the ground in question, and the plaintiff’s title is doubtful. 1 High on Injunctions, §§ 029, 651, 676, 698, 705, 728, 732. Second. The land is not shown to he mineral in character, nor is any damage shown to have resulted to the ifiaintiff by the construction of the bridge across the nonnavigable slough.”

The application for an injunction in that case was denied, on the ground that plaintiff’s title was doubtful — s© doubtful that injunction ought not to issue against another who claimed an equal right of title to the same property. Tljie Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the case. Steele v. Tanana Mines Ry. Co., 148 Fed. 678, 78 C. C. A. 412. So I take that rule as settled in this territory. !

The same rule was applied in the case of McFarland v. Alaska Perseverance Mining Co., 3 Alaska, 308, and! I held in that case'that the plaintiffs’ title to the property in controversy was doubtful; that it was not shown that any appreciable damage was being done thereto, and because it further appeared in that case from the evidence that if an injunction was issued a greater damage would be done to the defendant tl^an to the plaintiff by refusing it.

[347]*347In the case at bar there are oil and placer mineral locations covering the ground in controversy and now claimed by the plaintiff. These were made prior to the time when the plaintiff claims to have acquired any right to this property and are owned by the defendant. Whether these locations are void or not I am not at this time permitted to determine. I am constrained to follow the rule laid down in the case of Cosmos Exploration Co. v. Gray Eagle Oil Co., 190 U. S. 301, 23 Sup. Ct. 692, 47 L. Ed. 1064, and hold that, in that class of cases, whether or not such questions are valid is a question for the Eand Department to decide, and not for this court. It is undoubtedly the law, when a citizen of the United States has gon.e upon the public domain, and has marked the boundaries of a tract of land, not exceeding 20 acres in extent, so that the boundaries thereof can be readily traced, and has within the time limited by law filed his notice of location for record with the recorder, and has made a discovery of mineral — coal, oil, or gold — that the land so embraced within his mineral claim is segregated from the public domain.

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Related

Cosmos Exploration Co. v. Gray Eagle Oil Co.
190 U.S. 301 (Supreme Court, 1903)
Steele v. Tanana Mines Ry. Co.
2 Alaska 451 (D. Alaska, 1905)
McFarland v. Alaska Perseverance Mining Co.
3 Alaska 308 (D. Alaska, 1907)
Steele v. Tanana Mines R.
148 F. 678 (Ninth Circuit, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Alaska 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alaska-pacific-ry-terminal-co-v-copper-river-n-e-ry-co-akd-1907.