Billups v. Colmer

244 P. 1093, 118 Or. 192, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 63
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 244 P. 1093 (Billups v. Colmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Billups v. Colmer, 244 P. 1093, 118 Or. 192, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 63 (Or. 1926).

Opinion

*196 BEAN, J.

A history of the transaction is about as follows:

The parties first met through an advertisement published by defendant. Mr. Billups called on Mr. Colmer in answer to the advertisement on July 24, 1921. A meeting was arranged on the next day, when Mr. and Mrs. Billups called upon the defendant, who was a photographer in Portland, Oregon. As to just what occurred, there is some conflict in the testimony. Mr. Colmer showed them photographs of the dwelling on the land and told them there were five acres of cleared land and an orchard on the place, and also a shingle-mill. The plaintiffs went to look at the place, going by train, there being no road to the land. They spent about two days there with their son, and examined the place. ¡

The property is located at a station called Maples,1 on the Southern Pacific line between Portland and Tillamook, in the Nehalem River canyon. The railroad runs through the property for a distance of approximately one-half mile. On the south side of the railroad right of way is the Nehalem River.

On the other side of the right of way, between the sidehill and the track, and within a few hundred yards of the house, is the cleared land in question and the dwelling-house and cottage, chicken-houses and other small outhouses. On the south side of the railroad and a few hundred yards from the house, there is a rough building on posts built of shakes, formerly used as a shingle-mill, and near the shingle-mill are a few shacks.

The plaintiffs base their contentions of a 200-foot right of way on the act of Congress of March 3, *197 1875, known as the Railroad Right of Way Act, which provides, among other things, as follows:

“Section 1. That the right of way through the public lands, of the United States is hereby granted to any railroad company duly organized under the laws of any State or Territory, except the District of Columbia, or by congress of the United States, which shall have filed with the secretary of the interior a copy of its articles of incorporation, and due proofs of its organization under the same, to the extent of one hundred feet on each side of the central line of said road * * See 8 Fed. Stats. Ann. 789.

Section 4 of the act of Congress requires the railroad company desiring to secure the benefit of the act, to file with the Register of the Land Office for the district where such lands are located a profile of its road within twelve months after the survey thereof, if the same be upon surveyed lands, or if it is upon unsurveyed lands, within twelve months after the survey thereof.

The defendant claims that the railroad company did not take the 200-foot right of way by virtue of this act, but took a right of way 100 feet wide.

It appears that Clarence Doughney, a homestead claimant who was on the land prior to the construction of the railway and had no title thereto, executed a deed to the railroad company of a hundred foot right of way, which deed is mentioned in the abstract of title furnished by defendant to plaintiffs. Afterward Doughney abandoned the land and relinquished the same on July 5, 1911. On the same day Sidney A. Smith made a homestead entry for the land and a patent was issued to him on January 13, 1913.

The railroad construction over the land was finished in May 1911, before the homestead entry of *198 Smith was made. Since that time they have run trains over the same. It appears from the record that the railroad company set posts on the premises in question, on a private crossing near the old mill, 50 feet on each side of the center line.

Mr. W. H. Lee, a clerk in the Eight of Way Department of the Southern Pacific Company, was called as a witness for plaintiff, and testified to the effect that the company claimed a right of way under the granting act of Congress of March 3, 1875. Articles of incorporation and proof of organization of the Pacific Eailway & Navigation Company were filed with the Department of the Interior. There had been no map filed in the local land office.

Mr. Billups testified, in substance, that in March, 1922, he applied to the Southern Pacific Company for a cultivation lease of the right of way, and learned that a lease had been issued by the railroad company to E. W. Morrison, who conveyed the land to Colmer soon after he purchased the same from Smith. The right of way lease was executed on November 24, 1919, for one year, and was extended until November 24, 1921, on the payment of $1, the annual rental. The lease from the Southern Pacific Company, the successor of interest of the Pacific Eailway & Navigation Company, to E. W. Morrison, the caretaker of defendant, had attached thereto a copy of a map, showing the right of way over the land in question to be 200 feet in width. Colmer, the defendant, witnessed Morrison’s signature to the lease.

The defendant Colmer sent the plaintiffs to examine the land and told them Mr. Morrison, his caretaker, would show them the place, and after their *199 return from the farm, as plaintiffs state, defendant assured them they could rely upon Mr. Morrison’s statement to them. Morrison called plaintiff’s attention to the right of way location near the mill building, and while conversing with the plaintiffs and their son was asked by Mr. Billups how much of a right of way the railroad company had and how far up the lawn, meaning in front of the house, it would come, to which he replied, he guessed about 100 feet, but when the plaintiffs exclaimed in surprise that that would bring the right of way up to the front steps of the bungalow, Mr. Morrison replied that he then remembered it was only 50 feet; that his lease of the right of way from the railroad company stated 50 feet, and he then pointed out a maple tree, about halfway between the bungalow and the railroad track, and approximately 50 feet from the railroad track, as marking the extent of the right of way.

The trial court saw and heard the witness when testifying, and found in effect that the contention of plaintiffs was true. Colmer and Morrison were good friends, and were both interested in the purchase of the land from Sidney A. Smith when it was conveyed to E. A. Morrison. Soon afterward the land was conveyed by Morrison to defendant Colmer, as Colmer had furnished the larger part of the money for the purchase thereof, Mr. Morrison stating that he did not desire to put any more money into the place and had no further interest therein. However, he resided on the place and cared for the same, and was the agent of Colmer in making the representations in regard to the land. At the time he informed plaintiffs the railroad right of way was 50 feet on each side of the center of the railroad *200 track lie had in his possession a valid existing lease from the Southern Pacific Company of the right of way over the land 200 feet in width, except 15 on each side of the railroad. Both Morrison and defendant Colmer admit that they knew about this lease and that the same described the railroad right of way as being 200 feet in width, or that the railroad company claimed a 200-foot right of way through the land.

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Bluebook (online)
244 P. 1093, 118 Or. 192, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/billups-v-colmer-or-1926.