Central Pac. R. v. Dyer

5 F. Cas. 364, 1 Sawy. 641
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Nevada
DecidedAugust 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 5 F. Cas. 364 (Central Pac. R. v. Dyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Pac. R. v. Dyer, 5 F. Cas. 364, 1 Sawy. 641 (circtdnv 1871).

Opinion

FIELD, Circuit Justice.

The plaintiff, the Central Pacific Railroad Company, a corporation created under the laws of California, brings the present suit against a large number of persons, who are citizens of the state of Nevada, to determine the estate and interest claimed by them in the land over which the line of the railroad constructed by the company runs, between the boundary of Nevada and the Big Bend of Truckee river in that state.

The plaintiff was incorporated in June, 18G1, for the purpose of constructing and maintaining a railroad from the city of Sacramento, in California, to the eastern line of the state, where that line crosses the 'Truckee river, and to form a continuous railroad connection between the navigable waters of the Sacramento river and the Missouri river, and for that purpose to construct and maintain a railroad through the then territory, now state of Nevada, and other territories lying between California and the Missouri river.

On the first of July, 18G2, congress passed .an act [12 Stat. 491] to aid in the construction of a railroad from the Missouri river to the Pacific ocean, and by its provisions the plaintiff was authorized, after completing its road across the state of California, to extend its construction through the territories of the United States eastwardly until it should •connectwith the road which the Union Pacific Railroad Company, a corporation created by the same act, was authorized to construct westwardly from a designated point in the territory of Nebraska.

By this act, the right of way was also granted the plaintiff through the public lands •of the United States for the construction of the road, to the extent of two hundred feet ■on each side of the track, with the right to take from the public lands adjacent all needed earth, stone, timber, and other materials. 'The right of way included all necessary ground for stations, buildings, work-shops, depots, machine-shops, switches, side-tracks, turn-tables and water-stations which the plaintiff might require for the use and maintenance of the road.

Under the right and authority thus conferred by the legislation of the state and of the United States, the plaintiff has not only laid out and constructed a railroad from the city of Sacramento to the eastern line of the state of California, but has extended the road through the state of Nevada and the territory of Utah to its connection with the road of the Union Pacific Railroad Company —thus forming a completed road between the navigable waters of the Sacramento river and the Missouri river. This we know as matter of history. The bill of complaint, however, only alleges, in addition to the construction of the road across the state of California, that the plaintiff has laid out and constructed the road from the eastern line of that state where it crosses the Truckee river, eastwardly, in the state of Nevada, along that river to what is known as the “Big Bend” thereof, a distance of forty-seven miles. VHth respect to this position of the road in the state of Nevada, the bill avers, in substance, that the plaintiff has expended in its construction more than two millions of dollars; that all the lands through which it passes were, at the time of the passage of the act of congress, and the location of the road, public lands of the United States, and subject to the grant of the government for the use of the railroad; that the plaintiff is in its possession, maintaining and using it in the transportation of passengers, freight and the mails of the United States; that the plaintiff has erected near the line of the road and within two hundred feet of the track on either side, at convenient places and points, divers work-shops, machine-shops, side-tracks, and turn-tables, water stations and depots; and has made various excavations and taken wood, stone, earth and other material, and has used the same in the construction of the road; that the defendants claim, and each of them claims, to own some estate or interest in the land over which the road passes and upon which the track is laid, and in the public lands adjacent thereto, and the portions upon which the work-shops, side-tracks, turn-tables and switches have been constructed ¿ind the stations and depots have been established, adverse to the interest and title of the plaintiff, which estate and interest they claim, and each of the defendants claims, to have acquired by i>urchase from the government of the United States, subsequent to the grant to the plaintiff.

The bill further avers, upon information and belief, that the defendants claim the land over which the road passes, and their estate and interest in the same, in distinct parcels or quantities, but that the particular quantities claimed by each are unknown to the plaintiff; that they threaten and intend to bring distinct actions at law. based solely upon such pretended purchases, to recover damages from the plaintiff, for alleged trespasses upon and injuries to the property, and thus to involve the plaintiff in a multitude of suits.

The bill further avers that the estate and interest claimed by the defendants and each of them are invalid and subordinate to the grant to the plaintiff, and the rights the grant conferred; and concludes with a prayer that the defendants may be required to set out the estate and interest claimed; that the same may be decreed invalid and subordi-[367]*367mte to the right and title of the plaintiff; and that the defendants may he enjoined from setting up or asserting any right, estate ■or interest in the said lands, and from bringing any action for damages by reason of the construction of the road and the excavations within two hundred feet of the track, and the construction of the buildings and other works of the company; and for such further and other relief as the nature of the case may require.

The suit is evidently founded upon a statute of the state of Nevada, which declares that "an action may be brought by any person in possession, by himself or tenant, of real property, against any person who claims an estate or interest therein adverse to him, for the purpose of determining such adverse claim, estate or interest.” Act March S, 1SG9 (regulating proceedings in civil cases), § 256. The term “action” in .that state includes not merely proceedings at law, but suits for equitable relief. It is for relief of that character that the present bill is filed.

The bill is in substance a bill of peace — its object being to quiet the title of the plaintiff, and to prevent harassing .and expensive litigation from a multiplicity of suits. The jurisdiction of equity to afford relief in such cases is undoubted. The statute, it is true, enlarges the classes of eases in which the jurisdiction was formerly exercised in quieting the title and possession of real property'. It dispenses with the necessity of the previous establishment of the right of the plaintiff. by repeated judgments in his favor in actions at law. Curtis v. Sutter, 15 Cal. 259; Stark v. Starrs. 6 Wall. [73 U. S.] 409. To that extent it confers upon the possessor of real property a new right, one which enables him, without the delay of previous proceedings at law, to draw to himself all outstanding inferior claims. That right the national courts will enforce in the same manner in which they will enforce other equitable rights of parties. This was held in Clark v. Smith. 13 Pet. [38 U.

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Bluebook (online)
5 F. Cas. 364, 1 Sawy. 641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-pac-r-v-dyer-circtdnv-1871.