Churchill v. Choctaw Railway Co.

46 P. 503, 4 Okla. 462
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 4, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 46 P. 503 (Churchill v. Choctaw Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Churchill v. Choctaw Railway Co., 46 P. 503, 4 Okla. 462 (Okla. 1896).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Scott, J.:

On the 17th day of July, 1890, the plaintiff filed a petition before Hon. A. J. Seay, then judge of the Second judicial district of Oklahoma Territory, alleging that the defendant company, under and by virtue of an act of congress, approved February 18, 1888, and as amended February 13, 1889, was constructing a railroad across the southeast quarter of section eighteen, township twelve, north of range five, east of the Indian meridian, in Canadian county, Oklahoma Territory, which land the plaintiff had filed upon as a homestead on the 30th day of April, 1889, and was still occupying the same as a homestead. The petition further alleged that there was no statutory enactment, either Terriorial or federal, in force in Oklahoma Territory, by which the damages by said railroad could be ascertained or adjusted, and no law or procedure by which railroads could be made to pay for their right of way, and the plaintiff therefore prayed for an injunction restraining the defendant from constructing the railroad until just and full compensation could be made to the plaintiff for the right of way. The judge of the court, on the 21st day of July, 1890, granted an order of injunction until the further order of the court, or until the defendant company should deposit with the clerk of the court the sum *464 of $350. The order provided further that the plaintiff should, on or before the second regular term of court in said county after said date, bring his suit for damages against said railroad company, or the order of iujunction would become inoperative, and the defendant would be entitled to withdraw the deposit. On the 10th day of October, 1890, the defendant filed a motion to vacate the injunction for the following reasons:

1. That the petition did not state facts sufficient to authorize the issuing of the same.
2. The facts and allegations set forth in the petition upon which said injunction was granted, were untrue.
3. That since the granting of said injunction, the plaintiff had commenced proceedings to recover damages for the right of way in controversy in that case, under the provisions of ch. 16 of the Compiled Statutes of Nebraska in force in said state, November 1, 1889, entitled Corporations.”
4. That no bond or undertaking had been given in said case by the plaintiff.

On the 10th of November, 1892, the defendant company also demurred to the petition upon the ground that the petition did not state, facts, sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the defendant.

On the 13th day of December, 1892,.in open court, before the Hon. John H. Burford, as judge of the court, after full argument, the said motion of the defendant to dissolve the injunction, was sustained, and the demurrer to the petition was sustained, and the plaintiff refusing to amend his complaint or further plead, judgment was rendered for the defendant, from which judgment the plaintiff has appealed to this court.

By act of congress, approved February 18, 1888, the Choctaw Coal and Railway company, defendant in error, *465 was 'granted a right of way through the Choctaw Indian nation.

Section 1 of said act provided, that the Choctaw Coal and Railway company be and the same is hereby invested and empowered with the right of locating, constructing, owning, equipping, operating, using and maintaining a railway and telegraph and telephone line through the Indian Territory.

Section 2 of said act provided “ that said corporation is authorized to take and use for all purposes of a railroad, a right of way one hundred feet in width through said Indian Territory, and to take and use a strip of land two hundred feet in width, with a length of three thousand feet, in addition to right of way for stations, for every ten miles of road, with the right to use said additional ground, where there are heavy cuts or fills as may be necessary for the constructing and maintenance of the road-bed, not exceeding one hundred feet in width on each side of said right of way.”

By act of February 13, 1889, the first section of the aforesaid act was amended so as to make the provisions of said act, including the grant of the right of way, extend from a point in the Choctaw nation to a point on the Southern Kansas railway between the two Canadian rivers, in the northwestern part of what was then known as the Indian Territory.

This act, in §§ 3 and 5, contained certain provisions for compensation to the Indians for the right of way to their lands so taken, both as a nation and as individual occupants.

By the act of congress of March 2, 1889, a large portion of said Indian Territory- between the two Canadian rivers, hitherto occupied by the Seminóles, the Indian title having been ^extinguished, was made a part of the *466 public domain, subject to homestead entry by proclamation of the president. This act, however, expressly reserved rights of way and depot grounds, theretofore granted.to railway companies through said Territory.

In said Territory, thrown open to settlement by proclamation of the president under this act, is situated the land described in the petition of plaintiff in error, as plaintiff below, on which he made homestead entry, April 80, 1889.

Afterwards, on July 13, 1889, the defendant railway company filed with the secretary of the interior a map of its survey as required by the aforesaid act conferring its charter powers, showing its route over the homestead entry of plaintiff in error; which map or plat was approved by the secretary of the interior in tire following language:

“Approved as to that portion of the line of road hereon that passes over public land, and subject to the provision of the act of congress approved February 18, 1888.”

Plaintiff in error further claimed and alleged in liis petition below that the defendant company “was claiming and has commenced to appropriate a right of way over the tract in dispute, where the plaintiff has the following improvements, to-wit, a dwelling house, stable, hen-house, an earth-covered cave, shade, fruit and ornamental trees, and about sixty acres in corn, over the protest of plaintiff and without condemning or paying any compensation therefor.”

The only issue presented by the pleadings is, did the acts of congress aforesaid vest in the defendant company, absolutely in prcesenti, the right of way for railway purposes through the Territory mentioned, or did they merely authorize the said company to acquire a vested title to such right of way, on the performance of *467 certain conditions in said acts mentioned, one of which was the filing of its map or plat with the secretary of the interior?

If the former be the correct view, then plaintiff in error’s homestead entry, being subsequent to the said acts of congress, was subordinate to the rights conferred on said company thereby, and plaintiff in error could not legally deny to defendant company the right to locate its line over this land without compensation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 P. 503, 4 Okla. 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/churchill-v-choctaw-railway-co-okla-1896.