Dern v. Salt Lake City Railroad

56 P. 556, 19 Utah 46, 1899 Utah LEXIS 75
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 56 P. 556 (Dern v. Salt Lake City Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dern v. Salt Lake City Railroad, 56 P. 556, 19 Utah 46, 1899 Utah LEXIS 75 (Utah 1899).

Opinion

Baskin, J.

In this action the relief sought by plaintiffs is a decree perpetually enjoining the defendant railroad company from constructing or maintaining any street car line upon South Temple Street, in Salt Late City, east of E Street, and also compelling said company to remove all of the iron, ties, and other obstructions by it placed upon said portion of said street, and to restore said street to the condition it was in, when defendant company commenced to construct a street railway thereon.

Upon the trial, the lower court refused to grant an injunction, and adjudged and decreed that the defendant com[52]*52pany bad the right to construct, maintain, and operate a street railroad on that portion of South Temple Street east of E street, and that said company recover its costs from plaintiffs. Plaintiffs appeal from this final decree, to this court.

Plaintiffs claim that the defendant company has no right to construct or operate a street railroad on said portion of said street, and said defendant asserts that it has such right.

The complaint alleges “that the defendant company is a corporation organized under the laws of Utah, in the year 1872, for the purpose of constructing, owning, maintaining, and operating a street railroad for carrying passengers within the corporate limits of Salt Lake City. ’ ’

Plaintiffs’ counsel, in their brief, say, “In the case at bar the life of the corporation is not at stake. Only its right to build on a small portion of one street is at issue.”

On the 80th day of January, 1878, the defendant company amended its original articles of incorporation, by substituting instead of the route of the road, designated in the original articles, a route over certain designated streets, which did not include any portion of South Temple Street east of E Street. On the 20th day of February, 1889, it again amended its articles of incorporation so as to include each of all the streets in Salt Lake City to the full extent and within the terminal limits thereof. The articles thus amended include all of that portion of South Temple Street east of E Street.

The act under which said defendant company was incorporated, and which was in force when the first amendment of the articles of incorporation, • before referred to, was made, authorized any company organized under said act to amend its articles of association by altering the route or [53]*53changing the termini of its railroad. (See Comp. Laws 1876, p. 206, Sec. 9.)

At the time the second amendment of the articles of incorporation was made Sec. 2323, Comp. Laws of 1888, authorized such articles of association to be amended so as to include new lines of route, alter the route, and change the termini of the railroad.

Sec. 434 of the Rev. . Stat. provides that, ‘ ‘ Any amendment of the articles of incorporation adding new lines of route, altering the original route, or changing the termini, shall not be deemed unlawful as an alteration of the original purpose of the corporation.”

On April 26, 1873, the City Council, by resolution, granted to the defendant corporation the right to construct and 'operate a street railroad on certain streets in the city, in said resolution named. ’ On the 6th day of January, 1876, by resolution, the City Council granted to the defendant company the right to construct and operate a single- or double-track street railroad on certain streets therein named, and also on such other streets within the corporate limits as should thereafter need a street railroad. On Feb. 26, 1889, the City Council, by resolution, granted to said defendant company the right to construct and operate a branch line of street railroad over certain streets therein named, and among which was South Temple Street to the Fort Douglas reservation, which is a considerable distance east of E Street. Other franchises, which are mentioned in the section of the city ordinance, hereinafter set out, were by resolution granted to the defendant company.

O. P. Arnold was placed upon the witness stand by plaintiffs, and testified as follows: “I have been employed by the street-car company off and on for quite a number of years.; I date back to 1873; was.superintendent [54]*54for quite a number or years — as near as I can remember, until 1889, when I was displaced. The Salt Lake City Railroad Company constructed its first car line on Brigham Street up as far as E Street in 1874, as near as I can remember; that the road went north on E Street, or Fir Street, as it was then called, three squares north, and then turned east on the street known as Third Street — that was formerly Bluff Street. They built a little farther on so many times that I can not give you any dates. As early as 1874, it was built up to the 20th ward store, but I think it was the next year when we constructed again. In 1875 we constructed up E Street three blocks— short blocks — about twenty rods each, and went easterly, and from time to time that has been extended until it now runs out to what they call Q or S Street. The street-car line was first constructed on First South Street in 1873, nearly out to the military reservation. These lines that I have referred to have been maintained and operated ever since. No line has been constructed on -South Temple Street east of E Street up to the present time. ”

From this evidence, the allegations of the complaint, and the statement in plaintiffs’ brief that ‘ ‘ In the case at bar the life of the corporation is not at stake. Only its right to build on a small portion of one street is at issue, ’ ’ it appears, and is not questioned, that the defendant is, and has been ever since its incorporation in 1872, a corporation; that as early as 1873 it had constructed a streetcar line on First South Street nearly out to the military reservation, and that since then it constructed other streetcar lines, and that these lines have been maintained and operatéd by the defendant company ever since. Its-right to do so has never been called in question, either by the Territory, State, or city. In the light of these facts, the [55]*55following acts of tbe Territorial Legislature and the ordinance of the city council have an important bearing on the question under consideration :

Sec. 31, Chap. 4, Comp. Laws 1888, provided that the city council may permit, regulate, or prohibit any construction or laying of track of any railroad or tramway, in any, street, alley, or public place; but such permission shall not be for a longer time than twenty years. The act containing this provision was passed March 8, 1888. This section was amended March 10, 1892 (see Sess. Laws of that year, p. 72), by increasing the time to twenty-five years, and again on March 8, 1894, to fifty years (see Sess. Laws of that year, p. 60). In ten days after the last amendment, to wit, on the 18 th day of March,, under the authority conferred by said act, as amended, the city council passed an ordinance, containing among others, the following provisions:

W7iereas, The Salt Lake City Railroad Company is the owner of certain lines of street railway in the city of Salt Lake, and is and has been engaged in the operation of the same under and by virtue of certain resolutions and ordinances hereinafter more particularly described; and

Whereas,

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Bluebook (online)
56 P. 556, 19 Utah 46, 1899 Utah LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dern-v-salt-lake-city-railroad-utah-1899.