Kaw Valley Drainage District v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

207 P. 218, 111 Kan. 183, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 199
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 6, 1922
DocketNo. 19,115
StatusPublished

This text of 207 P. 218 (Kaw Valley Drainage District v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaw Valley Drainage District v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co., 207 P. 218, 111 Kan. 183, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 199 (kan 1922).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

We have here to consider an unusual motion presented by the Kaw Valley Drainage District. The motion is for an injunction to prevent the defendants from obeying an order of this court entered June 15, 1917.

It may be remembered that the plaintiff filed an action in this court on May 3, 1913, to require the defendants to remove an interstate railway bridge near the junction of the Kaw and Missouri rivers on the alleged ground that it was an obstruction to the flow of water and tended to increase the hazard of floods at Kansas City. After four years’ time -was consumed in preparing this case for trial, a large trunkful of evidence and a mass of other documentary and probative matter was gathered by the litigants, at much needless cost to 'the taxpayers of the drainage district as well as to the defendants. This court found that plaintiff’s demand for the total destruction of the bridge was unreasonable (99 Kan. 188), and that the obstructive defects could be corrected as suggested by the evidence of competent engineering experts, as follows:

“By raising the entire bridge two and seven-tenths feet and removing the southeast approach within the harbor line, and removing the piling, the southeast cylinder piers, the girder span thereat, and the riprap down to fifteen feet under low water level, and by substituting steel sheet piling to protect the southeast concrete pier in lieu of the present riprap protection and by removing the latter, and' by removing all the present bridge structure extending from the southeast concrete pier to the southeastern shore and substituting therefor a new steel truss span approximately two hundred and fifty feet in length to rest upon the southeastern concrete pier and stretching without obstruction over a free waterway to the harbor line on the south[184]*184eastern shore and to rest, there upon a suitable and durable abutment conforming to the plaintiff’s dike.”

It was therefore ordered—

“That the defendant owner of this bridge and L. S. Cass, Receiver, proceed forthwith to prepare plans for the reconstruction of the bridge in substantial conformity with the foregoing finding, and' when so prepared that the defendants submit the plans to the plaintiff board for its approval, and that thereafter upon the approval or disapproval of the plaintiff board the said plans be submitted to this court for approval, and that upon the approval of this court, the said plans shall be filed with the United States Secretary of War and the proper application be made for the requisite federal sanction to reconstruct the bridge, all of which the defendants are ordered to do, with diligence and good faith; and when the proper federal sanction is obtained, the defendants shall proceed with all convenient speed to reconstruct the bridge and to prosecute the work diligently until its completion. Reasonable allowance of time will be made, as may be necessary, for delays occasioned' without fault of defendants. . . .
“It is further ordered that the costs of this action be divided, plaintiff to pay half and defendants to pay half.
“It is further ordered that the jurisdiction of the cause be retained.”

Waiving a review by the United States supreme court of the federal questions involved, and which in a similar case had led to the defeat of the plaintiff in its attempts to enforce its similar order for the destruction of another interstate bridge less than a mile away (Kansas Southern Ry. v. Kaw Valley Dist., 233 U. S. 75), the defendants proceeded at once in good faith to comply with the order of this court. Their engineering plans, being prepared in accordance with the order of this court, were submitted to the plaintiff board for approval. That approval was denied. Defendants were compelled to return to this court for instructions. We' held that the plaintiff’s refusal was arbitrary and unreasonable and should be held for naught.

The defendants then submitted the plans to the War Department. The plaintiff made an ineffectual attempt before that department to prevent their approval. Consideration of the matter was necessarily deferred by the World War, but on April 6, 1920, the plans were approved by the proper officials of the War Department. Meantime the defendants were involved in financial troubles, partly owing to the greatly increased cost of labor and materials, and the War Department extended the time in which to commence the work of reconstruction.

On January 16, 1922, the plaintiff applied to the Secretary of War for the revocation of its former approval of the plans for the [185]*185reconstruction of the bridge, and the whole matter was again patiently reviewed (see appendix to this opinion) and the revocation denied.

Now the plaintiff asks this court to enjoin the defendants from obeying our own order. Indeed, it goes further and asks us to order the total demolition of the bridge. We shall certainly grant nothing of the sort.

Moreover, these interminable maneuvers which only hinder and delay the reconstruction of the bridge to correct its interference with flood waters ought to have stopped long ago. They must stop now. If the defendants had been permitted to correct the defects of this bridge, without this persistent and protracted course of obstruction on the part of plaintiff, the flood menace of this bridge would have been, eliminated years ago. It could have been done at a cost of $80,000. Now, it is shown that it will cost $225,000.

This motion in all its phases is denied; the defendants are admonished to proceed with diligence to discharge their duty under the order of'this court issued June 15, 1917, and in the event that defendants are further hindered or delayed in the performance thereof, they may resort to this court for relief. Jurisdiction of the cause is retained.

APPENDIX.

WAR DEPARTMENT.

OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL.

WASHINGTON.

J. A. G. 823. February 18, 1922.

MEMORANDUM for the Secretary of War.

Subject: Application of the Kaw Valley Drainage District for revocation of approval of plans for bridge over the Kansas River, Kansas City, Kansas.

The history of this case may be briefly stated as follows: The predecessor of the Kansas City Northwestern Railway Company constructed in 1903-1904 a bridge over the Kansas River, a navigable stream wholly within the boundaries of the State of Kansas, without having the plans of the bridge approved by the Secretary of War and the Chief of Engineers. The Kaw Valley Drainage Commission, incorporated under the laws of Kansas (General Statutes of Kansas, Ann., 1915, p. 7^3 et seq.), instituted suit in the courts of the State of Kansas to compel removal of the bridge as being a flood menace. The matter was decided by the Supreme Court of Kansas (99 Kans. 188, 161 Pac. 937). The court refused to order the removal of the bridge, but in an order entered June 15, 1917, directed its modification according to plans to be submitted for the approval of the Drainage District and the Supreme Court of Kansas, and thereafter to be filed with the Secre[186]

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Bluebook (online)
207 P. 218, 111 Kan. 183, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaw-valley-drainage-district-v-missouri-pacific-railway-co-kan-1922.