Lane v. Pacific & Idaho Northern Railway Co.

67 P. 656, 8 Idaho 230, 1902 Ida. LEXIS 8
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 67 P. 656 (Lane v. Pacific & Idaho Northern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lane v. Pacific & Idaho Northern Railway Co., 67 P. 656, 8 Idaho 230, 1902 Ida. LEXIS 8 (Idaho 1902).

Opinion

QUAELES, C. J.

— This action was commenced in the court below to obtain a decree for the specific performance of those covenants in the contract hereinafter set forth, relating to the construction of a siding, and the place where the fence of the defendant corporation shall be erected upon its line of way. Said contract is set forth, in effect, in the complaint, and attached to said complaint as a part thereof, and is in words and figures as follows, to wit:

“May 11, 1899.

“This agreement, made and entered into by and between J. W. Lane and Victoria Lane, his wife, of Weiser river, Washington count}^ Idaho, the parties of the first part, and the Pacific and Idaho Northern Eailway Company, a corporation of Idaho, the party of the second part, witnesseth, that the said parties of the first part, for and in consideration of the sum of three hundred and seventy-five dollars, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, do hereby agree to sell and quitclaim, and do hereby sell and quitclaim, forever, all our right, title, and interest to second party herein in a strip or piece of land one hundred feet wide, and being fifty feet wide on each side of the center line of the survey now made and staked through all of our land (being unsurveyed government land) lying and being on the Weiser river, and being part of the premises on-which we now, live, and upon which we have lived for the last eight years, and hereby give said second party, its agents and [234]*234employees, the right to enter upon said land at any time for the purpose of building, constructing, and operating its said railway upon, through, and across said premises where said survey is now made. Said second party further agrees to make for first parties an underground crossing fourteen feet wide, and as high as the grade of said road will permit. Said culvert or crossing is to be made where first parties desire, at or near where first parties cross the Weiser river with wagons, buggies, etc., and near their present dwelling-house, and on bank of said river. Said second party further agrees to-put up, build, and construct for first parties' another underground crossing eight feet wide, and as high as the grade of the road will permit, at another place upon said ranch where first parties may desire. Also to put in a wooden culvert or box at least three feet square at any place where the first parties may desire, under and across the breem of said road, for first parties’ hogs to cross under and through to the river and back to the pasture. ■ Also, second party agrees to build a switch or sidetrack on said ranch at or near the dwelling of said first parties, and agree to build sufficient sized wooden flumes under their said track to carry the water used for irrigation purposes at and where all laterals cross second party’s right of way on said ranch. First party is to have the right to farm and use any and all of said second party’s right of way not fenced and actually in use by second party, and second party is to build its fence on the edge of the pit ground through said ranch, and, in fencing, to fence no more of said right of way than is absolutely necessary to protect its road and the banks and fills made in constructing same; and first parties are to have the use of all of the lands of second party not so fenced, for his' crops, etc., free of charge, until such times as it is necessary for second party to fence and use same. The agreements and stipulations herein are to be no way construed as to give second party any rights, claims, or possession of any irrigation ditches or ditches northerly or outside of any inclosure; and if any flitch or ditches, flumes or laterals, are crossed or in any manner interfered with, outside of any inclosure, then any and all damages sustained 'by first parties is to be settled and paid for [235]*235by second parties entirely outside of this contract, the same as if no contract of any kind had ever been made. First party further agrees to give second party all ground necessary for switch purposes, if said switch is located at or near his dwelling, and on his house place. “J. W. LANE,

“VICTOBIA LANE,

“JNO. W. AYEES,

“Witness.”

The complaint alleges that the plaintiffs have resided upon said land ever since May, 1890; that plaintiffs are citizens of the United States, and that they have so lived upon said lands with the intent and purpose of entering the same under the homestead and desert land laws of the general government; that said contract was accepted by the defendant company, and that said defendant has entered upon said lands, constructed its railway across and over same, and has ever since used and enjoyed said right of way and privileges granted to it by the terms of said contract; that the plaintiffs have done and performed on their part all and every of the obligations and stipulations of said contract' by them agreed to be done and performed, and that said plaintiffs did tender to said defendant on the ninth day of May, 1901, a good and sufficient quitclaim deed, duly executed and acknowledged by plaintiffs, which deed the said defendant refused to accept; that the defendant -has failed to comply with the covenants and stipulations of said contract in the following particulars, to wit: It has failed and refused to build a switch or sidetrack on the said lands of the plaintiffs, although requested by plaintiffs so to do, and has failed and refused to place its fences on the. edge of the pit ground through the edge of said lands, and has failed and refused to give plaintiffs the use of said right of way outside of said pit ground, although requested so to do, but has, over the objections and protests of the plaintiffs, constructed its fences on each side of the track fifty feet from the center of its track, and thirteen feet farther from the center of said track than- the edge of the pit ground, and that much farther than is necessary to- protect said track, roadbed, banks, and fills made in constructing the same, and so maintains said fences, depriving plaintiffs of a strip of land on each side of the track thirteen [236]*236feet wide and one mile long; and that said land is valuable for the growing of crops. The complaint also alleges that, after the delivery of said contract to the defendant, the words “if convenient” were interpolated into same after the words “and second party is to build its fence on the edge of the pit ground through said ranch,” without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiffs'. The prayer is that the words “if convenient” be stricken from said contract, and that defendant be required by decree of the court to place its fences along the edge of its pit ground, and to construct and build a switch or sidetrack on the said lands of plaintiffs, and for general relief. To the said complaint the defendant filed the following demurrer, to wit: “Comes now the above-named defendant by its attorney, J. H. Richards, and demurs to the third amended complaint of plaintiffs filed herein, and for cause of such demurrer says: 1. That said complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; 2. That said complaint does not state facts sufficient to entitle the plaintiffs to the relief demanded in said complaint, or any relief; 3. That said complaint does not state facts sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to the reformation of the alleged contract; 4. That said complaint does not state facts sufficient to the relief demanded in said complaint, in this: That defendant be required to build a switch or sidetrack to the alleged railway on the land described in said complaint, at or near the dwelling-house of plaintiffs or elsewhere; 5.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 P. 656, 8 Idaho 230, 1902 Ida. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-pacific-idaho-northern-railway-co-idaho-1902.