Maier v. the Dalles Southern R.R. Co.

90 P.2d 782, 161 Or. 567, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 66
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1939
StatusPublished

This text of 90 P.2d 782 (Maier v. the Dalles Southern R.R. 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
Maier v. the Dalles Southern R.R. Co., 90 P.2d 782, 161 Or. 567, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 66 (Or. 1939).

Opinion

KELLY, J.

On the 23d day of February, 1907, the Eastern Oregon Brewing Company, an Oregon corporation, then being the owner of the premises in suit, the same being a portion of block 25, in Laughlin’s Addition to The Dalles City, Oregon, made, executed and delivered to the Great Southern Railroad Company, a Washington corporation, á deed granting to said railroad company, its successors and assigns, the right to construct and operate a standard gauge railroad over a prescribed course in said block 25, which deed is recorded at page 597 of volume 43, record of deeds in and for Wasco county, Oregon. In said deed the center line of said right of way is particularly described.

The right of way involved in this case was used in the operation of an industrial spur track thereon and not as a part of the main line of railroad operated by the grantee and its successor in interest.

Said above mentioned deed contains the following provision:

“The right of way hereby granted is given upon the condition's, that, in case the said right of way shall be vacated or abandoned by the grantee, its successors or assigns, or in case it or they shall cease to operate said railroad or it shall ever become impossible for the grantee, its successors or assigns, to operate its cars or locomotives over said right of way on account of being unable to lay its tracks or operate its cars across any of the streets of Dalles City, then and ( — ) either of said events, the right of way hereby granted shall revert to and revest in the grantor herein, its successors or as *569 signs, and the grantee will thereupon remove all of its property therefrom.”

Plaintiff, as assignee and successor in interest of said brewing company, contends that the successors and assigns of said grantee, G-reat Southern Railroad Company, abandoned said right of way and ceased to operate said railroad; and therefore said right of way has reverted to and revested in plaintiff.

The title to the servient estate in suit passed by foreclosure proceedings to P. J. Stadelman, trustee, and from him through mesne conveyances to plaintiff. Some time prior to obtaining title to said estate, that is during the year 1928, plaintiff leased said property and held the same under said lease until title thereto vested in plaintiff. On or about December 13, 1933, all of the properties and franchises of said Great Southern Railroad Company were sold to defendant, The Dalles & Southern Railroad Company.

During the spring of 1934, the State Highway Commission desired to relocate the east approach of the state highway to The Dalles, and, at that time, proposed to lower the grade of the highway which would have necessitated lowering the grade of said spur track. At that time pursuant to an oral agreement between The Dalles & Southern Railroad Company, P. J. Stadelman, the State Highway Commission and plaintiff, said spur track was moved off of its original location to a location approximately 19 feet further south.

Taxes against said railroad properties became delinquent; and on August 20, 1935, Wasco county filed a suit in the circuit court of Wasco county against the Great Southern Railroad Company, The Dalles & Southern Railroad Company and others to foreclose tax liens upon the railroad company’s property for the *570 years 1926 and 1930, inclusive, evidenced by a certificate of delinquency for tbe sum of $40,334.37.

On or about April 1, 1936, such proceedings were had in the circuit court of Wasco county, that a decision was rendered in said delinquent tax foreclosure case in favor of Wasco county and against defendant The Dalles & Southern Railroad Company. After the rendition of this decision, and after petition by the railroad company for rehearing and denial thereof, representatives of The Dalles & Southern Railroad Company opened negotiations with the county court of Wasco county for a compromise and settlement of the tax lien upon the railroad property, and in May or June of that year submitted to the county a compromise offer. This offer was in excess of $35,000.

On April 28, 1936, an informal meeting was held in the county courthouse at Dalles City, presided over by former Public Utilities Commissioner Frank C. McColloch and attended by the county judge and commissioners of Wasco county, John W. Kaste, attorney for The Dalles & Southern Railroad Company, representatives of The Dalles Chamber of Commerce, the Union Pacific Railroad and of the several industries served by The Dalles industrial track, and by Roscoe Krier, one of plaintiff’s counsel. At this meeting Mr. Kaste stated that The Dalles & Southern would discontinue switching service on the industrial track May 1, 1936, unless revenue of $200 a month was assured, but offered to lease to the interested shippers or any one concerned, a locomotive with which to perform such switching. Mr. Kaste further offered to trade with Wasco County some untaxed trackage near the southerly terminus of The Dalles & Southern main line near Friend, in exchange for The Dalles switching *571 track. At the same meeting, County Judge Phipps “emphatically brought out that in the event the railroad line was acquired by Wasco County, it would not be turned over to junk dealers”. While this meeting resulted in no immediate solution of the problem, the industries did not lose interest in the subject and negotiations were continued during the summer.

Referring to this meeting, President Hull of The Dalles & Southern testified that he did not authorize attorney Kaste to commit the railroad company to the abandonment of this industrial trackage at any time.

On or about May 1,1936, switching operations were suspended by The Dalles & Southern, but negotiations for acquisition of the track by the industries served thereby continued, resulting in ultimate acquisition by Kerr-Gifford Company one of the industries.

On May 7,1936, plaintiff and his attorneys Messrs. Galloway & Krier, wrote a joint letter to Dalles & Southern Railroad Company and to Wasco County, asserting that the railroad company had abandoned operation, and that plaintiff had taken possession and control of the right of way across block 25, Laughlin’s Addition, giving notice to remove the railroad track from the property and threatening to accomplish such removal himself if not done before May 18.

On May 13, 1936, John W. Kaste as attorney for The Dalles & Southern Railroad Company, answered by letter the plaintiff’s notice of May 7, stating, among other things, that the railroad property was subject to lien in favor of Wasco County for taxes in the sum of $52,000; that at the meeting of April 28, 1936, “Judge Phipps stated that under no circumstances would Wasco County sell the rails and ties and junk of the railroad to any person unless such person would posi *572

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Bluebook (online)
90 P.2d 782, 161 Or. 567, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maier-v-the-dalles-southern-rr-co-or-1939.