Douglas County Road Co. v. Canyonville & Galesville Road Co.

8 Or. 102
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 Or. 102 (Douglas County Road Co. v. Canyonville & Galesville Road Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Douglas County Road Co. v. Canyonville & Galesville Road Co., 8 Or. 102 (Or. 1879).

Opinions

[104]*104By tlie Court,

The subject matter of this controversy in one shape or another, has been several times before this court, and certain points of law and questions of fact have been settled by its decisions, which can not any longer be considered as open to controversy. These matters, so far as they are res judicata, will be referred to hereafter. The matter especially in contention between the parties is, as to which of the corporations, the respondent or the appellant, is entitled to establish a toll gate and collect tolls on the road running through what is known as the Big canyon in Canyonville and Cow creek precincts in Douglas county.

In 1853, a military road was laid out, under Major Alvord, by Jesse Applegate on substantially the same ground as that now occupied by the road in controversy; and on the sixteenth of January, 1854, the legislative assembly of Oregon territory, by an act passed that day, enacted “that the military road from Myrtle creek in Douglas county to Jacksonville, Jackson county, be and the same is hereby declared a territorial road.”

By an act of the legislative assembly, approved October 29, 1860, all territorial roads in this state were declared to be county roads, and by the act of January 17, 1861, were placed under the supervision of the county court. In the case of Douglas County Road Company v. Abraham et al. (5 Or. 319), this court decided that the same road referred to in this suit, having been used continuously for twenty-five years by the public, it became a public highway by continued aud uninterrupted use. There can, therefore, be no doubt that this road, in August, 1873, when the corporate appellant was organized, was a county road, and under the supervision of the county court of Douglas county. In September, 1873, soon after its incorporation, the appellant employed J. W. Webber to survey and locate its road through the Big canyon, and it is admitted that the line of survey was along and on the county road with some slight deviations, which are of no importance in the-consideration of this case. In December, 1873, the Douglas County Road [105]*105Company, the respondent, was duly incorporated to construct a plank and clay road through the Big canyon, commencing at the the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section 34, T. 30 S., R. 5 W., running thence in a southerly direction and terminating at a point where the military wagon road crossed the south line of section 2, in T. 32 S., R. 5 W.

It is admitted that the line of this road which passed through the Big canyon, is along and upon the county road and substantially over the same route as that surveyed in September, 1873, by the appellant, for its road. On the tenth of April, 1874, the respondent entered into an agreement with the county court for the appropriation, use, and occupation of the road in controversy. In this agreement it was stipulated that the respondent should have the right to collect certain tolls from persons traveling over the road; and in consideration of this privilege the respondent covenanted to bridge the streams, and to keep the highway in good condition for the public travel.

The following are the sections of the law under which the agreement was made: “Where it shall be necessary or convenient in the location of any road herein mentioned to appropriate any part of any public road, street, or alley, or public grounds, the county court of the county wherein such road, street, alley or public grounds may be, unless within the corporate limits of a municipal corporation, is authorized to agree with the corporation constructing the road, upon the extent, terms, and conditions upon which the same may be appropriated or used and occupied by such corporations, and if such parties shall be unable to agree thereon, such corporation may appropriate so much thereof as may be necessary and convenient in the location and construction of said road.” (Misc. Laws, 530, sec. 26.) “ Whenever such public highway or grounds is taken by a private corporation by agreement with the local authorities mentioned in section 26, such corporation may place such gates thereon, and charge and receive such tolls thereat, as such local authorities may consent to, by such agreement, and none other.” * * (Id. sec. 28.)

[106]*106The agreement between the county court and tbe respondent before referred to was filed in the office of the county clerk but was not entered in the journal of the court, and for this want of record, it is held by the majority of this court that it was ineffectual and inadmissible as evidence in other courts until it was entered upon the records of the county court. And it was only after protracted litigation and through the mandatory power of this court that it was finally, on the thirty-first day of May, 1870, entered upon the journal of the county court. It is unnecessary here to refer to the history of this litigation. It is fully set forth in the opinion of the supreme court in the case of The Douglas County Road Company v. The County of Douglas, 6 Or. 300. It must now be considered as conclusively settled, so far as this Qourt can settle anything by its adjudications, that the agreement entered into between the county court of Douglas county and. the respondent, on the tenth day of April, 1874, was a valid contract, binding and conclusive between the parties to it. This matter is no longer open to controversy. But the appellant claims that as it was not a party to any of the litigation heretofore had concerning this contract, it is not bound by the decision of the court in reference to it, and it asserts that so far as its rights are concerned, that contract was a nullity. The appellant claims that in the location of its road in September, 1873, it was necessary and convenient for it to appropriate a part of the public highway running through the canyon, and that having surveyed and located its line of road along the county road before the incorporation of the Douglas County Eoad Company, it had the exclusive right to appropriate the county road as a part of its own road, and that it alone had the right by virtue of its first survey and location to enter into an agreement with the county court for the purpose of making and keeping the road in repair, and charging toll to persons passing over it.

The appellant had a right under the law in relation to corporations, to enter upon any lands between the termini of its road for the purpose of examining, surveying, and locating the line of it, and to appropriate a strip of land not [107]*107exceeding sixty feet in width for its road where the lands belong to private individuals. And it had also the right, in case it could not agree with the owners thereof as to the compensation to be paid therefor, to maintain an action against such owner, to have the value assessed and the land condemned and appropriated to its own exclusive use. And we think that if the appellant entered upon, surveyed, and selected any land for its road, which belonged to private persons, it had the exclusive right from the time of such survey and selection to appropriate the same, and that the respondent could not in any way interfere with such right, nor construct its road upon any such lands.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Or. 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglas-county-road-co-v-canyonville-galesville-road-co-or-1879.