Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Co. v. State

163 S.W. 582, 106 Tex. 249, 1914 Tex. LEXIS 61
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1914
DocketNo. 2555.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 163 S.W. 582 (Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Co. v. State, 163 S.W. 582, 106 Tex. 249, 1914 Tex. LEXIS 61 (Tex. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice BBOWU

delivered the opinion of the court.

For statement of the case we copy from the carefully prepared opinion of Judge Bice as follows:

“This suit was brought by the State of Texas, through its Attorney General, in the District Court of Travis County, on the 7th of July, 1911, against appellant for a writ of mandamus or mandatory injunction to compel it to construct its line of railway through the town of Sherwood, the county seat of Irion County, and establish and maintain a depot therein, and for a penalty of $5000 for having wilfully failed and refused to do so, alleging that said company had constructed its road within less than three miles of said town (which is unincorporated, containing about 400 inhabitants) without passing through the same, and without establishing and maintaining a depot therein, as required by the Constitution and laws of this State, the citizens of said town having tendered to it, prior to the construction of its road, a practicable right of way through its limits and sufficient grounds for ordinary depot purposes therein; further alleging that there were no natural obstacles to prevent said railroad from passing through same, such as streams, hills or mountains, and that the State of Texas and the people thereof have an interest in and right to have said company obey and comply with the provisions of the Constitution and laws of this State, and that they have an interest in having a depot located and maintained in said town" for the convenience and transaction of their business with the county officials of said county, and in attending to and transacting business in and with the various courts in and for said county, and for receiving and delivering passengers and freight thereat. And that such *255 failure on the part of appellant to comply with the Constitution and laws of the State in this respect will subject the people of the State to great inconvenience and expense, that they would not otherwise have been subjected to, if appellant should construct a railway through said town and establish and maintain a depot therein.

Prior to the institution of this suit certain of the citizens of Irion County, residents of Sherwood, instituted a suit in the District Court of Tom Green County against appellant, which is still pending therein, to compel it to construct its roadway through said town of Sherwood, and establish and maintain, a depot therein, the allegations of the petition in which case are, in many respects, similar to those in the instant case, and the pendency of which suit is plead in abatement hereof. See Felton v. Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Ry. Co., 143 S. W., 650.

Subject to said plea, and after general denial and special exceptions and specific denial of material allegations in the petition, appellant relied upon and plead a number of affirmative defenses, summarized in its brief as follows:

(a) The'four years statute of limitation:
(b) FTatural obstacles preventive of the construction of the road nearer to the town of Sherwood.
(c) That the matter of the location of the road had been settled between the railway company and the citizens of Sherwood by virtue of the contract hereinbefore referred to,, and specially pleading such contract in bar of this action, and that the citizens of Sherwood, and the town of Sherwood, and the State through them, was estopped to maintain this suit by virtue of said contract, and of the fact that the railway company had acted thereon and had expended large sums of money in the construction of its road, which would have been lost if the route had been changed when it first had any intimation that the route as located was not satisfactory to some of the citizens of Sherwood.
(d) That the railroad company had complied with all of its legal and constitutional obligations by securing a right of way through the corporate limits of the town of Sherwood while it was incorporated, and were engaged in the construction of its railroad when the corporation was abolished, and that its legal status had already been fixed and could not be changed by the ex parte action of such town and its citizens in abolishing its corporation.
(e) That the citizens of the town of Sherwood and such town having for a long time known tire location of the line of the road and that the road was being constructed thereon, and having procured and tendered to the railroad company the identical right of way upon which the road was constructed, and knowing that the railroad company was relying on this contract, and was expending large sums of money in the construction of its railroad on this located line, had been guilty of laches in asserting any right, and were each and all estopped to demand the construction of the road at any other place, and that the State being in this case merely a formal party, and having instituted this suit for the benefit of Sherwood and its citizens, was also estopped.
*256 (f) That no tender of right of way or depot grounds had ever been made to the railroad company prior to the institution of this suit.
(g) That at the time of the institution of this suit the railroad had already been constructed past the town of Sherwood, and that the suit came too late, and that to build an additional line to Sherwood would not be justified by the traffic to be obtained therefrom, and the cost of construction and maintenance thereof would be burdensome and an improper interference with the carriage of interstate commerce, in which the road was engaged.

The case was tried before the court without a jury, and during the progress thereof appellant company was placed in the hands of receivers by an order of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas, made on the 9th day of March, 1913; and before the trial of the case had concluded, appellant filed its motion to dismiss this suit, or to suspend it in order to make the receivers parties, which motion was overruled by the court. And the trial of the case proceeded, which resulted in the court’s overruling all the contentions of appellant, and rendering judgment in favor of the State for the sum of $3500 penalty, and further ordering that a permanent and final writ of mandatory injunction should issue, compelling appellant, within thirty days from the date of such order, to survey, locate and establish a reasonable, feasible and practicable route for its right of way into and through said town; and to survey and locate a reasonable and practicable depot site for ordinary depot purposes within said town, and as soon as the same •should have been done to give notice in writing to the Attorney General of the State of that fact, and of the completion of the said survey, location and establishment of said right of way and depot site in said town.”

It is unnecessary to notice matters which were adjudicated by the court, the judgment made all proper and necessary provisions to protect the railroad company.

The Court of Civil Appeals found and filed this statement of the facts:

"Conclusions of Fact.
"The court finds and concludes from the evidence that the following facts were established, viz:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 S.W. 582, 106 Tex. 249, 1914 Tex. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-city-mexico-orient-railway-co-v-state-tex-1914.