Chlopeck Fish Co. v. City of Seattle

117 P. 232, 64 Wash. 315, 1911 Wash. LEXIS 826
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1911
DocketNo. 9217
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 117 P. 232 (Chlopeck Fish Co. v. City of Seattle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chlopeck Fish Co. v. City of Seattle, 117 P. 232, 64 Wash. 315, 1911 Wash. LEXIS 826 (Wash. 1911).

Opinions

Ellis, J.

The state’s first plat of the Seattle tide lands and water front was filed in February 1895'. It extended every alternate street of the city streets, originally running to the water front, in a direct line over the tide lands and harbor area to the outer harbor line. Among these streets was Vine street, [318]*318which was thus extended a little over 300 feet, practically at right angles to the upland. All of these extensions were 100 feet in width. ■

In 1897 the city of Seattle caused .to be prepared a correction or revision of the above mentioned plat and submitted the same to the state legislature for action thereon, and the legislature, by chapter 28, page 32, Laws of 1897, authorized and instructed the state land commissioners to correct and revise the original plat to conform thereto. By this replat the same streets were extended over the tide lands and across the harbor area to the outer harbor line, not in a direct line as before, but at an angle of about 45 degrees to the upland. The extension of Vine street was thus increased from about 300 feet to over 500 feet. On the revised plat the extensions are all 100 feet in width, excepting Vine street, Madison street and Harrison street the extensions of which are 150 feet in width. All of these extensions or prolongations are designated in large letters as streets, the name in each instance being the same as that of the corresponding upland street, thus “Battery street,” “Vine street,” etc.. In the case of Vine, street, underneath the street designation appears in small letters in parenthesis the words “city slip.” This is explained.by a witness, Mr. George F. Cotterill, who actually made the replat and presented it to the legislature on behalf of the city, as follows: Prior, to the adoption of the replat, and for some years thereafter; the city maintained on the site of the proposed present structure, hereinafter described, a .public slip or .landing place somewhat similar to the one now sought to be enj oined. ' A copy of this replat, so far as applicable to Vine street, is in the record and shows this old structure. Mr. Cotterill states that these, three streets, Vine, Madison and Harrison, spaced practically at uniform intervals along the city’s central water front, ■ were platted each 150 feet in width, and the words “city slip” in parenthesis were placed upon each of -them and the extra width given with the intention of perpetuating at Madison street and Vine [319]*319street the then existing municipal facilities for slips, public landings and general transition from water to land, and to provide that such could be done at Harrison street whenever the development of the city should demand it. He further says that he explained these things to the legislature as features of the replat and the necessity of these wider streets for the purpose of landings for municipal purposes. This witness also testified that the old structure in the Vine street extension was at a later date remodeled and used as a garbage scow wharf and a public landing generally.

The appellants, the Chlopeck Fish Company and Columbia & Puget Sound Railroad Company, are respectively the owners of the upland and tide land lots abutting the south and north sides of Vine street at its intersection with the waters of Elliott bay. They are also the lessees from the state of the harbor area in front of their respective tide lands. The tide lands on either side of Vine street are narrow, the inner harbor line lying about 20 to 25 feet westward from the westerly line of Railroad avenue, which crosses Vine street at the point here in question practically at right angles. The fish company has built a dock extending outward over the harbor area a distance of 175 feet into a depth of water at the outer end at low tide of about 25 feet. This dock has a frontage of 142 feet. It is of a value of $150,000. The railroad company has also built a dock on the north side of Vine street extending outward over the harbor area 190 feet. This dock is of a value of $100,000.

The respondent, the city of Seattle, is proposing to erect, between the inner and the outer harbor line and in the middle of the above described extension of Vine street, a structure which is termed in the record a gridiron. This will be, if constructed, a low wharf or cradle and roadway built on piling, submerged, except as to the roadway, three or four feet at ordinary high tide, so that scows, barges and water craft of like character can be floated over it and allowed to settle upon it for the purpose of unloading and transferring [320]*320their cargoes to vehicles which niay be dfivén from thé lateral roadway onto the vessels and off again, and likewise for loading. This gridiron wharf will occupy a space about 51 feet wide, including the roadway, and will be 220 feet in length. The southerly 20 feet will constitute the roadwáy. There will be approximately 50 feet of open water on each side of the structure.

The city has let a contract to its co-respondent for the erection of this structure. It will be for the use of the public and all persons desiring to load and unload thereat brick, sand, gravel, hay, oats, or any other thing or commodity for transportation by water craft óf the character above mentioned. The city is intending to establish a wharfage charge to persons using this wharf, to defray the reasonable cost of maintenance. That fact, however, would seem to be immaterial to any issue involved in this case.

The' evidence shows that if the appellants extend their docks to the outer harbor line, as they may do under their leases, there will still be 360 feet of open water 150 feet wide alongside the dock of appellant railroad' company and 260 feet along the dock of appellant fish company. The appellants brought this action to enjoin the construction of the proposed' gridiron wharf, challenging the right of the city to erect it in the place proposed, and claiming that it will injure them in the use of their wharves and will be a damaging of their property without just compensation. A temporary restraining order was granted by the trial court,' and upon final hearing this order was discharged, appellants’ bill dismissed, and judgment rendered against appellants for costs. From this final judgment, this áppeal was prosecuted.

The appellants contend, that the city has no right or authority to erect the proposed gridiron wharf or any other structure in the extension of Vine street between the inner and-the outer harbor lines, because, as they claim, that part' of this' extension is not a street but a part of the harbor area; that the city cannot extend its streets across the harbor area; [321]*321and that the constitution and legislative enactments show an intention to devote the harbor area to the purposes of navigation and commerce by means of “water crafts,” and negative any power in the state to extend streets as such over the harbor area.

The initial power of the state to extend streets across the reserved area to the outer harbor line, if it exists at all, must be sought in the state constitution. That document, in § 1, art. 15, provides as follows:

“The legislature shall provide for the appointment of a commission whose duty it shall be to locate and establish harbor lines in the navigable waters of all harbors, estuaries, bays, and inlets of this state, wherever such navigable waters lie within or in front of the corporate limits of any city, or within one mile thereof upon either side.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 P. 232, 64 Wash. 315, 1911 Wash. LEXIS 826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chlopeck-fish-co-v-city-of-seattle-wash-1911.