Bell v. Southern Pacific R.R. Co.

77 P. 1124, 144 Cal. 560, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 732
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 1904
DocketL.A. No. 1265.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 77 P. 1124 (Bell v. Southern Pacific R.R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell v. Southern Pacific R.R. Co., 77 P. 1124, 144 Cal. 560, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 732 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

As originally brought, this action was in ejectment to recover a tract of land in Santa Barbara County over which the railroad of the defendant is constructed and operated, and for damages for the alleged trespass committed in entering thereon, and for the value of the rents, issues, and profits.

Defendant answered denying the material allegations of the complaint, and set up, in justification of its entry, possession, and use, a written agreement on the part of the plaintiff to convey to it, as a right of way for its railroad, a part of the premises described in the complaint, and of which *562 alone it alleged it was in possession. At the same time, by cross-complaint (subsequently amended), defendant sought to have this agreement to convey specifically enforced, and upon the issues made by an answer of plaintiff thereto, denying, among other things, the identity of the land occupied by defendant with that mentioned in the agreement, accompanied by allegations of false representations inducing its execution, inadequacy of consideration, unreasonableness of its terms, failure to perform conditions precedent, and a plea of the statute of limitations, the court proceeded to try this equitable phase of the litigation, made findings in favor of the defendant and against plaintiff on all the issues, and awarded a decree to defendant for the affirmative relief prayed for, and directing the plaintiff to execute and deliver to defendant a deed to the premises described in its cross-complaint.

From the judgment entered against her, and from an order denying her motion for a new trial, she takes this appeal.

Under the appeal from the judgment plaintiff attacks the sufficiency of the cross-complaint- as stating a cause of action, likewise the validity of an order permitting it to be refiled, and insists, also, that certain of the findings are outside the issues, and that-the judgment is not supported by the findings.

As the record now stands, however, plaintiff cannot avail herself of these particular objections. The appeal from the judgment in this case was, on July 22, 1902, dismissed by order of this court (Bell v. Southern Pacific R. R. Co., 137 Cal. 77), leaving nothing for consideration on this appeal but the validity of the order denying the motion for a new trial, which motion was based upon errors of law and insufficiency of the evidence. As to the alleged error in allowing the cross-complaint to be filed, if any exception was taken to this by •the plaintiff; there is no bill of exceptions in the record saving and presenting the point. As to the other objections, they cannot be presented or considered on an appeal from the order denying a new trial. If they existed, they could only be ascertained from the face of the judgment-roll, and could only be availed of by an appeal from the judgment itself. As that appeal was dismissed, there is no record before us to support those objections. (Thompson v. City of Los An *563 geles, 125 Cal. 270; Reclamation Dist. v. Thisby, 131 Cal. 572; Moore v. Douglas, 132 Cal. 400; Morse v. Wilson, 138 Cal. 559; Swift v. Occidental etc. Co., 141 Cal. 165; and many other eases.)

This brings us to a consideration of the appeal from the order denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, which was based upon alleged erroneous rulings of the court in the admission and rejection of testimony, and the asserted insufficiency of the evidence to sustain certain findings.

The agreement set forth in the cross-complaint, and which the court decreed should be specifically performed, is conceded to have been made by the plaintiff with the defendant, and, as far as the purposes of this case are concerned, its important recitals are, “That I, Catherine M. Den Bell, ... in consideration of the benefits to be derived by me in the construction of the Southern Pacific Railroad Company’s railroad, and of the sum of one dollar to me in hand paid, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, do hereby grant and agree to and with the Southern Pacific Railroad Company, upon the payment to me or my legal representatives of the sum of one dollar, to sell and convey to said company all that certain piece or parcel of land, situated in the county of Santa Barbara, state of California, and the conveyance shall contain the following conditions: [Here follow a number of recitals that are not material to any point involved in the case], and being a portion of the Dos Pueblos Rancho bounded on the east by lands of Ellwood Cooper, and on the west by lands of The Tecolote Land and Water Company and more particularly described as follows, to.wit: Commencing for the same at a point on the center line of the surveyed route of the Southern Pacific Railroad where the line of the same as finally located may or shall intersect the eastern boundary-line of said party of the first part and running thence in a westerly direction along said center line and embracing a strip of land fifty (50) feet' wide on each side of said center line, to the western boundary of the land of the party of the first part and the eastern boundary of the lands of The Tecolote Land and Water Company together with all the appurtenances belonging. And the engineers, agents, employees, and contractors of said company are hereby author7 ized to enter upon said land for the purposes of the survey *564 and construction o£ said railroad. In case said railway shall not be located on said land, this agreement shall be null and void.”

This agreement was one of many obtained for the defendant in the counties of San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara, in order to provide a continuous right of way for the completion of its coast line by filling the gap intervening between Santa Margarita in San Luis Obispo County and Ellwood in Santa Barbara County. Construction between these two points had ceased in the early part of 1899, and nothing was done towards its resumption until some two years later, when committees of prominent citizens of San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties, anxious for the completion of the road between these terminal points, solicited and obtained from the principal stockholders of the defendant a written .agreement that the road would be completed between these points after such committees had furnished the defendant with the necessary continuous right of way for that purpose.

As far as a particular right of way from the plaintiff is concerned, one H. D. La Motte, the agent of the defendant, theretofore acting for it, in procuring rights of way between these points, had some time prior to the cessation of construction endeavored to obtain a deed therefor from her, but some disagreement arising between them about the consideration for the conveyance, the effort was abandoned.

Nothing further was done with that end in view until the Santa Barbara committee, under its agreement with the stockholders of defendant, took up the matter, and on September 20, 1890, procured from plaintiff the agreement above referred to. This was secured through the efforts of one Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
77 P. 1124, 144 Cal. 560, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-southern-pacific-rr-co-cal-1904.