McManus v. Duluth, Crookston & Northern R.

52 N.W. 980, 51 Minn. 30, 1892 Minn. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 17, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 52 N.W. 980 (McManus v. Duluth, Crookston & Northern R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McManus v. Duluth, Crookston & Northern R., 52 N.W. 980, 51 Minn. 30, 1892 Minn. LEXIS 7 (Mich. 1892).

Opinion

Dickinson, J.

In the year 1889, pursuant to the provisions of Bp. Laws 1889, ch. 205, bonds of the city of Crookston were executed and delivered to certain commissioners named in said act (who are defendants in this action) to aid in the construction of a line of railroad from a point on the line of the Duluth & Manitoba Bailroad into the city of Crookston. This action was prosecuted to restrain the commissioners from delivering the bonds to the defendant railroad company, on the ground that the conditions upon which such bonds were to be delivered had not been complied with. The court, having tried the cause, and having found that the conditions had not been complied with, directed judgment for the plaintiff as prayed. The defendants, other than the city of Crookston, appeal from the judgment.

For the purposes of this appeal, the case to be considered is presented in the pleadings and the findings of the court.

We will here refer briefly to those provisions of the special law which bear particularly upon the principal point to be decided.

The first section empowers the city to issue bonds for the purpose of aiding in the construction of any railroad thereafter to be built into the city.

The third section provides that proceedings for the issuance of bonds shall be commenced by a petition of at least one hundred resident freeholders, addressed to the city council, for the calling of an election to vote upon the question of the issuance of such bonds. The petition is evidently intended to embody the proposition upon which the vote is to be taken. It is required to designate the company or corporation and the line of railroad in aid of which it is proposed to issue bonds; the amount of bonds to be issued, with other particulars; “and also the period ivithin which said road must he built into said Crookston, in order to entitle said railroad to the benefit of said bonds.” The act further provides for the appointment, upon such petition, of a day for election, when a vote is to be taken on the question of issuing such bonds. In case the majority vote is in favor of the bonds, they are to be prepared “and issued and delivered in escrow” to the persons named, who by the act are appointed commissioners to receive, hold, and “deliver such bonds to the railroad [36]*36entitled thereto upon full and complete compliance with the terms of this act.” It is declared that the commissioner shall not deliver such bonds “until the line of railroad for which such bonds have been issued shall have been built into said city of Crookston, and until the same shall have been made ready for complete operation;” and, further, that “if such company or corporation shall fail to comply with such conditions, upon such failure it shall be the duty of such commissioners to forthwith return, and they shall return, such bonds to the city council of said city.

In the latter part of April, 1889, this appellant, the Duluth, Crookston & Northern Railroad Company, made a formal proposal in writing to the city, to the effect that if the city would, pursuant to the special law, vote and agree to issue, and should issue, its bonds in a specified amount to aid the railroad in the construction of its tracks, “said railroad company hereby agrees to build and complete ready for operation, by or before November 1, 1889, a standard gauge railroad from some point on the line of the Duluth & Manitoba Railroad between [places here specified,] to and into the city of Crookston.” Thereupon a petition was presented to the city council, signed by the requisite number of freeholders, embodying this proposal of the railroad company, and requesting the appointment of a day for an election for the purpose of voting upon the same. This was done, and the bonds voted and placed in the hands of the commissioners, as before stated.

The railroad, by the construction of which the bonds are claimed to have been earned, is twenty-three miles in length, extending from a place called Fertile, on the line of the Northern Pacific Railroad, northward to the city of Crookston. In its course from Fertile towards the city of Crookston, and at a point about two and a half miles southeast of that city, it crosses the line of a branch of the St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Railway Company. The latter corporation owns in fee the land over which this branch road is located, the width of the track so owned being, at the place of crossing, one hundred and ninety-one feet. It does not appear when the work of construction by*the defendant was commenced. But on the 23d of October, 1889, the St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Railway [37]*37Company commenced an action to enjoin the crossing over its branch road, and procured a temporary injunction, which was afterwards dissolved; but from the order of dissolution an appeal was taken, a bond being given to stay proceedings.

Not until the 2d day of November, 1889, did this defendant railroad company institute proceedings by petition to the district court to secure the right to cross with its track the right of way and railroad of the other company, nor did it acquire any right to cross until the 13th of that month, when hearing was had on the petition, and commissioners were appointed to assess damages. The road was not constructed across the other road until on or about the 15th of November. From that time on the road was successfully and safely operated, and has since that time been fully completed.

The court found that the appellant company did not build and complete its road by November 1, 1889, as required by the provisions of the special law and the proposition and petition upon which the bonds were voted, and specifies the following, among other particulars, (aside from the neglect already referred to as to the crossing of the other railroad,) in respect to which it failed to do what was required :

It is necessary to the completion of a railroad, and for its safe operation, that it be surfaced, filling in and tamping the dirt between the ties, leveling the ties; that the track be “linedup,” ties spiked,and fish plates (connecting the rails) bolted. This is a part of the construction, and is usually done as part of the track laying. Prior to November 1 the track was all laid south of the railroad crossing, but for several miles it was not surfaced at all, many ties were unspiked, and fish plates not bolted. The road was in a similar condition between the railroad crossing and the city, there being some other defects also, which need not be particularly referred to. In brief it may be said, from the findings of the court, that the road was not substantially completed by the 1st of November, nor was it so far completed that it could be used until the 15th of that month.

What was the effect, as respects the right of the railroad company to receive the bonds, of its neglect to construct and complete the [38]*38road by November 1, the time specified within which it was to be done?

This is a question as to the construction and import of the special law and of the contract into which it entered. It cannot be doubted that if the language employed is to be construed as expressing the-intention that the right to the bonds should depend upon the construction of the road by the time indicated, that being made a condition precedent, the railroad company never earned or became entitled to the bonds, because it failed to comply with that requirement. We entertain no doubt that such a construction must be given to the law and contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 N.W. 980, 51 Minn. 30, 1892 Minn. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmanus-v-duluth-crookston-northern-r-minn-1892.