Canon City & S. J. Ry. Co. v. Denver & R. G. Ry. Co.

5 F. Cas. 23, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 1639

This text of 5 F. Cas. 23 (Canon City & S. J. Ry. Co. v. Denver & R. G. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Canon City & S. J. Ry. Co. v. Denver & R. G. Ry. Co., 5 F. Cas. 23, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 1639 (circtdco 1878).

Opinion

HALLETT, District Judge.

Two companies claim the same right of way for a railroad through the Grand canon of the Arkansas river where there is room for only one road. That remarkable defile is in the public domain, and each company claims under an act of congress. The interpretation and application of these acts present a question under the laws of the L'nited States which may properly be considered in this court pursuant to the provisions of the act of 1875 (18 Stat. 470). The jurisdiction in equity to determine the right and restrain any disturbance of it is not doubted since there is no adequate remedy at law. The first of these suits was brought in the district court of Fremont county, and an injunction was there allowed restraining the defendant company from prosecuting work in the canon. After some days that suit was removed into this court on petition of the defendant therein under the authority of the act of 1875, and the defendant in that suit brought a new suit in this court against the corporators of the first named company and some others to enjoin them from disturbing its right to occupy the canon. The reason for bringing this last suit against the corporators of the San Juan Company and not against the company itself is an irregularity in the organization of the latter company on which the plaintiff relies to impeach its validity. Argument was heard in the last mentioned suit on a motion for injunction, and perceiving that the same matters were involved in both suits and that the right was somewhat doubtful, it was thought best to continue the injunction in the first suit and allow a like writ in the second; in effect to place both parties under restraint until mature consideration of the questions presented could be had. The bill in the first suit was something lame and impotent, and the plaintiff therein was allowed to file an amended bill upon which a writ was issued of the same scope and effect as that allowed in the second suit. As the controversy stands both parties are enjoined from prosecuting the work of a great public improvement where one must be entitled to go on, and therefore the court should not halt between opinions.

Both cases will be taken into view in this discussion and the allegations in each bill, so far as they are not in conflict, will be taken as true. It is believed that enough is admitted in the records of the two cases to determine the right to" a preliminary injunction. The Denver and Rio Grande Railway Company, defendant in the first suit and plaintiff in the second, has the senior claim, and in ascertaining its right we shall reach the principal question in the case. That corporation was organized in the year 1S70, under chapter IS of the Revised Statutes of the territory (Rev. St. p. 115). The object of the corporation, as expressed in the certificate, was to construct a number of railway and telegraph lines, or perhaps it would be more correct to say a trunk line with numerous branches. The principal line was to be extended from Denver through Colorado and New Mexico to El Paso in the state of Chihuahua. and there were to be seven branches, one of them extending to Salt Lake City in Utah, and the others to various points in Colorado and New Mexico. These lines were defined generally in the certificate as .extending from place to place, or lying in the valley of some stream or through some canon or pass in the mountains, but no attempt was made to give courses and distances, or to specify in any other way the exact location of the routes selected. Indeed it seems that the various lines had not been fixed except as to the general direction, and no survey had been made by which they could be definitely located. Referring to the principal line which was more particularly defined than any of the branches, the part which includes the disputed territory is as follows: “Commencing at Denver, Colorado Territory, thence running up the valley of the South Platte river, on the southeast side thereof to a point at or near the mouth of Plum creek; thence up the valley of Plum creek to a point at or near the forks of East Plum creek and West Plum creek; thence up the main east branch of Plum creek valley to the lake in township eleven (II), range sixty-seven (07) west, on the crest of the ridge dividing the waters of Plum creek and Monument creek; thence down the valley of the Monument creek to a point at or near the junction of the valleys of the Monument and Fountain qui Bouille, or to a point in the Fountain valley below the mouth of the Monument, if the detailed survey shall determine the latter to be the most eligible; thence by the valley of the Fountain or across its west tributaries to such a point on the Arkansas river, at or above Pueblo, as may be found upon a detailed survey to be the most eligible for intersecting the same; thence up the valley of the Arkansas river to a point at or near Canon City; thence continuing up the valley of the Arkansas through the Big canon of the same to a point at or near the mouth of the South Arkansas river; thence by the valleys or the adjoining slopes of the South Arkansas river and of the Poncho creek, to the summit of the divide between the waters of the Arkansas and the San Luis park (known as Poncho Pass); thence by the most eligible route in a general southerly direction down the San Luis valley to the valley of the Rio Grande del Norte.”

Everyone who is at all acquainted with the geography of the country, will know that the line between the mouth of Monument creek and Canon City, as thus described, embraces a strip of country more than forty miles wide, in which the road might have been located. If it was more restricted in the mountain region beyond Canon City, it was because the valley of the Arkansas was narrower there, and not from any effort of the corporation to [25]*25describe the line with accuracy. Further on in the San Luis valley, which is many miles wide, it takes the whole valley for its location, and so also down the Bio Grande river through New Mexico. It is to he observed, however, that the act under which the corporation was organized did not require any description of the lines of road to be constructed, or even that the termini of the roads should be stated. But it did require a statement of the objects of the company, and in the case of a railroad perhaps that would be most conveniently done by giving some general description of the road. That was a general act providing for many different corporations, which was probably intended to comply with the direction of congress in 1867, that territorial assemblies should not grant private charters, but could, by general acts, permit the incorporation of persons for mining, manufacturing and other industrial pursuits. 14 Stat. 420. It contained general provisions applicable to all corporations which should be organized under it, and special provisions which were applicable to some; only railroad companies were not of this latter class, but were left to the general provisions of the act, which required no designation of the route or termini of the road further than would be necessary in stating the objects of the company..

Without other authority than was given by this general act of the territory, the company built its road to Pueblo. On the 8th day of June, 1S72, congress passed an act granting to the company rigid of way over the public lands, and confirming the powers given to the company by the territorial law. The act requiring the company to build its main line as far south as Santa Fú, tvithin five years, which period is by a later act extended to ten years. 19 Stat. 405.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 F. Cas. 23, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 1639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/canon-city-s-j-ry-co-v-denver-r-g-ry-co-circtdco-1878.