Milhollan v. Great Northern Railway Co.

204 N.W. 994, 53 N.D. 73, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 58
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 4, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 204 N.W. 994 (Milhollan v. Great Northern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milhollan v. Great Northern Railway Co., 204 N.W. 994, 53 N.D. 73, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 58 (N.D. 1925).

Opinion

Bubke, J.

On November 17, 1922, the residents of the towns of *75 Ambrose, Fortuna and Colgan, all in the county of Divide, in the State of North Dakota, petitioned the Board of Railroad Commission' ers to take immediate steps to have the Great Northern Railway, and the Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie, hereinafter called the Soo Railway, make physical connections at Crosby, North Dakota, the said railroads being less than a half mile apart at the city of Crosby, and alleging as a reason for such connection that the people living in the said towns were unable to get a supply of North Dakota lignite coal, and that all of the lignite coal mines are located on the Great Northern branch from Berthold to Crosby; that winter was approaching and the situation would be remedied by having the connection of the two roads effected at the town of Crosby. The Great Northern answered the petition, denying it would be any saving or advantage to the people of the communities, or any public advantage, and alleged that the Great Northern and the Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railway Companies already had transfer tracks and connections sufficient and adequate for all needs; that there would be little, if any, traffic transferred, and the revenue on the traffic would not be sufficient to justify construction of a transfer track. The Great Northern further alleges that the Board of Railroad Commissioners is without jurisdiction to hear the petition or enter the order requiring the construction of such track transfer. The Soo Railway answered that the lignite shortage was quite general over the state due to eastern coal shortage, and that under normal conditions the petitioners were adequately served and that the expense of constructing the connection track sought would be wholly disproportionate to any public benefit that might be derived therefrom.

On the 24th day of April, 1923, a hearing was had at which all parties were present and the testimony for, and on behalf, of the petitioners, and for, and on behalf, of the railroad companies was duly taken, transcribed, and upon which the Board of Railroad Commissioners made findings of fact and conclusions, in effect that the transfer facilities at Crosby, prayed for in the petition are necessary and expedient and duly ordered the building of such transfer track as prayed for.

The matter was taken by stipulation, on appeal, to the district court of Burleigh county, and the judge of said court, upon the hearing of *76 isfaid,! .appeal" sustained tbe findings and conclusions and order of tbe ■ Railroad. Commissioners, and ordered judgment in accordance tbere- : with. . Judgment was duly entered and tbe. defendant railroad com- • ■p'ani.es have- appealed to tliis court.

■ ';Appellants.are engaged in interstate and intrastate commerce in tbe state of North Dakota. Their main lines cross at tbe city of Minot ¡where they have transfer connections, one hundred and thirteen miles -from '.Crosby, -by way of tbe Soo line, and one hundred and eleven miles „by the Great Northern. The main line of the Soo runs in a northwest.erly; direction from Minot, to the town of Flaxton, from which the Soo ;has a branch line extending west, 41 miles, to Crosby, and thence ¡through" the towns of Ambrose, Fortuna, Colgan, and Alkabo, and thence into. Montana. The Great Northern runs west from Minot, and :at the town of Berthold on the main line, there is a branch line extending to Crosby, 89.miles. Lignite coal is extensively mined in the territory immediately south of the Great Northern Railway track near .Lignite, .'Noonan, Larson, Kinkade arid Stampede, all towns on the Great Northern branch and naturally the coal is loaded on the Great .Northern' .cars, a goodly portion at the mines. The Great Northern branch line ends at Crosby, while the road on the Soo branch extends to. Ambrose, Fortuna, Colgan, and Alkabo, and on into Montana. Between Flaxton and Crosby, the two branch lines run parallel and are not more than two miles apart the most of the way. South of the Great Northern track there are large mines known as the Truax and Whittier .Cjrockett .mines, which have their own spurs which connect with the Great Northern branch, and the coal is loaded on the car at the mine and-then run out over the Great Northern Railway, and if the connection is made at Crosby, as prayed for, the towns west of Crosby can be supplied with coal clear to Montana.

The Great Northern Railroad from Lignite to Crosby is on the south edge of a gumbo flat. The Soo road runs through the middle of the flat and during the wet season the roads from the coal mines south of the Great Northern, across the Great Northern and the gumbo flat, are impossible.' The 'county of Divide, of which Crosby is the county seat, is well settled and is a fine farming country, especially adapted to the ■growing of wheat,1 and the small grains, potatoes, and general diversified'. farming. Being a prairie country, there is no wood and no fuel, except as it is shipped in from the coal fields along the Gi-eat Northern, *77 oi' from Duluth or Superior. It is not so much a qriestion of tbe .cost of the fuel as it is the absolute necessity for it. It is a matter of common knowledge, of which this court takes judicial notice, that the county of Divide, in the northwest corner of North Dakota, has no timber. The evidence shows that there never has been a time since the opening up of the country that they have had enough coal. Farmers have come to town in the winter for coal and have gone home without it. Around Ambrose they have gone to Crosby, a distance of 12 miles; west they have gone into Montana, as far as 25 miles to get their fuel. There are millions of tons of coal in close proximity which could be had if this connection is made, as prayed for. Ambrose is 12 miles west of Crosby; Oolgan, I miles west of Ambrose; Fortuna, 10 miles west of Oolgan, and Alkabo, 10 miles west of Fortuna. The county adjacent is all settled up by farmers and they have no way of getting in fuel except as it is shipped in, over the Soo line of railroad, as that is the only line west of Crosby. ,

Appellants claim that the connection at Minot is sufficient. The distance by Minot is 216 miles, and by the proposed connection is 18.5 miles, a saving of 197.5 miles, and 97 cents per ton. ,

Appel! ants .specify as error the insufficiency of the evidence and findings to support the order of the commission and the judgment of the court. First: The commission erred in each and all of its findings and conclusions and its order because they 'are not supported by the evidence; Second: In addition to the foregoing, that the judgment of the court is erroneous in the same particulars; Third: That the findings, conclusions and order of the commission are against the law in that the Nailroad Commissioners are without jurisdiction to hear the petition and to make final findings, conclusions, and order; that the said law violates the Constitution of the United States, Art. 14, being ■the due process of law clause; that it violates the constitution which provides that no state shall pass or enforce a law which denies to any person the equal protection of the law. That it violates § 13 of the Constitution of the State of North Dakota, that being the due process of law clause. That it violates § 14, which provides that property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation. This necessitates an examination of the law under which the railroad companies operate.

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Bluebook (online)
204 N.W. 994, 53 N.D. 73, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milhollan-v-great-northern-railway-co-nd-1925.