Collopy v. United Railroads

228 P. 59, 67 Cal. App. 716, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 402
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 19, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 4721.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 228 P. 59 (Collopy v. United Railroads) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collopy v. United Railroads, 228 P. 59, 67 Cal. App. 716, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 402 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

TYLER, P. J.

Action for damages to real property and for abatement of an alleged nuisance.

The complaint recites the corporate existence of defendant railway company and the operation and management by it of street railroads and suburban and interurban lines of electric roads in the counties of San Francisco and San Mateo. The facts upon which the complaint is based, chronologically stated, show that for a long period of time prior to October 6, 1890, plaintiffs were the owners of the parcel of land described in the complaint. On the date last mentioned the county of San Mateo by ordinance granted to the predecessors in interest of defendant company a franchise for the construction, maintenance, and operation of a street railroad, with all necessary side-tracks, over the main county road. This road passed through the town of Colma and along and adjacent to plaintiff’s property. The ordinance required that the grade of the railroad should conform: to the grade to be established or re-established by the board of supervisors of the county or their successors, and that the particular portion of the highway upon which the railroad was to be located or relocated should be designated by the county surveyor under the direction of the board. It also expressly provided *718 that the rights and privileges granted were to be held by the grantees 'and their successors subject to the general laws of the state, and also subject to such requirements and restrictions which might thereafter be imposed by the board.

The street railroad was thereafter constructed and operated under the ordinance, 'and some, nine years later appellants conveyed to the railroad company a small portion of their property for county road purposes, which was thereafter graded off so that it might be used for said purposes, the grading leaving an embankment some two feet high. The railroad as originally constructed was located in the center of the highway, and was some twenty-five or thirty feet distant from appellants’ property line. Some twenty-three years later, on March 24, 1913, and while the defendant company was thus maintaining and operating its railway, viewers were appointed by the board of supervisors of San Mateo County to survey and lay out a proposed new road from the San Franeiseo-San Mateo County line. The proposed route paralleled the county road upon which the tracks of defendant company were situated, but upon approaching one of the streets at Colma the route curved to the left and crossed a small portion of plaintiffs’ lands. The property being thus affected by the proposed improvement the California highway commission, which had through its engineering department inaugurated the change in the highway, addressed a letter to Mr. 'Collopy, advising him of the filing of the petition for the changed route, and also of an appointment of certain viewers, and requested that he meet them on the property to discuss the matter of acquiring that portion of plaintiffs’ property which was affected by the survey. The parties accordingly met, and the parcel which was required was staked off, and the question of the new grade and how it would affect plaintiffs’ other land was discussed, and an agreement between the parties was reached as to the amount of money plaintiffs should receive as damages by reason of the change. This agreement was in writing, and it recited, among other things, that “in consideration of the location of a public highway across said land and of the benefits to accrue to G. M. Collopy thereby, and the payment by county warrant of twelve hundred ($1,200) dollars, hereby agrees to grant by a proper deed of easement to the county of San Mateo, State of California, or to the State of *719 California, as hereinafter provided, for the purpose of said highway a strip of land across the above described land whereon to build said highway, as located by the department of engineering of the State of California . . . And G. M. Collopy hereby waives all claim and damages whatsoever for and on account of said location and construction of said highway as aforesaid.”

Pursuant to and in conformity with this agreement plaintiffs on May 5, 1913, executed and delivered to the county their deed of a right of way with incidents thereto for a public highway over and across the portion of the lands of plaintiffs so selected. After the execution of the deed the fence line of the property was moved back to the new line, and the land ‘between the old fence line and the new fence is the land described in the deed executed by plaintiffs to the county. It consists of a strip some forty feet at its widest point, and it .tapers off to a point at either end. At this time the tracks of the company ran in a curve around and in front of plaintiffs’ property, and bordered upon and ran parallel to and along its entire frontage on the highway, a distance of some 450 fget. The deed of conveyance contained certain recitals, which had been incorporated in the agreement, to the effect that in consideration of the benefits to accrue to plaintiffs by reason of the location of the highway and other considerations they consented to the location and waived all claim for damages or compensation on account of its re-establishment. It further expressly provided that the state of California should have the right to adopt and approve as a state highway the whole or any part of the right of way granted.

On November 7, 1913, the California highway commission notified the president of defendant corporation to relocate and reconstruct its tracks so as to place the center line thereof in a position twelve feet westerly from the established easterly curb line, and thirteen feet easterly from the established center of the state highway. Two weeks later the commission also wrote a letter to the board of supervisors of San Mateo County concerning the removal of the defendant company’s tracks, and inclosed a draft of an ordinance with reference thereto which the commission suggested the supervisors adopt. A like communication was sent to the supervisor for the district where plaintiffs’ land was situ *720 ated, asking that the board confirm the center line location, and requested that he assist in the passage of the proposed ordinance covering the matter. Pursuant to these various communications the board adopted an ordinance in conformity with the suggestions. The ordinance required that the defendant company relocate and reconstruct its tracks to conform to the change as outlined in the communication sent to its president by the state highway commission. In April, 1914, the company proceeded to make the directed change. In doing so it excavated the property conveyed by plaintiffs to the county to the established grade and removed its tracks thereto from the center of the highway, and it ever since has and is now maintaining and using them on the public highway. Some two years later and in 1916, just prior to the bar of the statute of limitations, appellants filed this action.

The complaint alleged the removal of the tracks from the center of the road without the consent of the plaintiffs. Damages were claimed in the sum of ten thousand dollars for the alleged wrongful taking of plaintiffs’ lands and the use thereof by defendant company. An additional sum of five thousand dollars was prayed for on account of the destruction of plaintiffs’ right of egress and ingress to the county road.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 P. 59, 67 Cal. App. 716, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collopy-v-united-railroads-calctapp-1924.