Netherlands American Mortgage Bank v. Eastern Railway & Lumber Co.

252 P. 916, 142 Wash. 204, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1057
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1927
DocketNo. 20326. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 252 P. 916 (Netherlands American Mortgage Bank v. Eastern Railway & Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Netherlands American Mortgage Bank v. Eastern Railway & Lumber Co., 252 P. 916, 142 Wash. 204, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1057 (Wash. 1927).

Opinions

Tolman, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a decree dismissing its suit to quiet title to a farm in Lewis county and affirmatively establishing a right of *205 way through the premises for a private logging railroad.

Appellant’s title to the eighty acres affected by the right of way is deraigned from the estate of Charlemagne Tower through a deed containing no reservation with respect to the right of way, dated November 12, 1902, while respondent bases its claim to the right of way upon a deed from Charlemagne Tower and his wife, dated May 14,1889, which grants to respondent’s predecessor in interest

“All those four (4) several certain strips of land between parallel lines one hundred feet apart being fifty (50) feet on each side of the center line of the Tacoma, Olympia and Chehalis Valley Railroad Company’s railroad as the same may be laid out and built on and across sections numbers seven (7) seventeen (17) twenty-one (21) and twenty-three (23) all in township number fourteen (14) north of range one (1) west of the Willamette Meridian, to be used by the said Railroad Company for railroad right of way or other railroad purposes only and to become and be the property of said parties of the first part hereto their heirs and assigns, whenever and as soon as the railroad to be built and operated over and upon the said right of way, shall be discontinued and abandoned by said Railroad Company or its successors or assigns;

Appellant’s immediate predecessor in title went into possession as beneficial owner under the deed of November 12,1902, and at about the time that the deed bears date, and has ever since lived on the property, now being a tenant of the appellant. He began improving the property as soon as he took possession. In the fall of 1902, or in the year 1903, he entirely enclosed the eighty acres with a fence sufficient to turn cattle, which remained in effective use until destroyed by fire a year before this action was tried. In the years immediately *206 following, he slashed and burned much of the, brush and timber, sowed grass seed and used the enclosure for pasture. This was followed by the clearing of the bottom lands suitable for meadow, which clearing was completed in 1914 and the meadow enclosed with a post and wire fence, and since has been kept up and used as such at all times. Appellant and its predecessor have paid taxes assessed against the land continuously from the year 1902 down to the time of the bringing of this action.

Respondent and its predecessors have never, built a line of railroad upon the eighty acres or taken any physical possession of any part thereof, save and except that, in the year 1909 or 1910, it caused to be made what is called the Berry survey across a portion of the eighty, but no stakes were set and no markings of any kind were made upon the ground. This paper survey did not cross what is now the cleared portion of the ground, barely touching it, if at all, and ran. across the land up the hill on a higher level, affecting only a portion of the eighty which was of little value, and cutting off and isolating only a small piece of no practical value for farm purposes. A year or more before this action was brought, respondent surveyed a line for its logging road several hundred feet down the hill from the Berry survey, which crossed the meadow and, besides cutting therefrom the one hundred foot strip, segregated the remainder into separate parts lying on either side. Respondent contends that this later survey is upon the only practical route for a railroad across the land. Other facts will appear as we proceed.

The appellant assigns error upon the trial court’s findings of fact as well as its conclusions of law, but we think it unnecessary to treat these assignments separately. Appellant’s general contentions are (1) that *207 it and its predecessors have been in open, notorious and adverse possession for a sufficient time to cause the statute of limitations to run in their favor, (2) that the condition subsequent contained in the right of way deed has been broken by the failure to construct a railroad within a reasonable time, and (3) that the easement deed is void for indefiniteness and uncertainty of description.

Adverse title can be gained to land granted and conveyed as a railroad right of way, but the adverse possession must be such as is inconsistent with the exercise of the right of way easement. Northern Pacific R. Co. v. Spokane, 45 Wash. 229, 88 Pac. 135.

“It is more difficult to satisfy the requisites of adverse possession in case of such property than in case of other kinds of property. Possession to be adverse must be hostile. It must also, of course, be nonpermissive. And to be hostile the acts of possession relied upon must be inconsistent with the right of the party performing them and also with the right or title of the other party. ’ ’ (Note on Adverse Possession of Railroad Right of Way, L. R. A. 1916B, 661.)

That rule when applied to the facts in this case at once demonstrates that adverse title was not here acquired. Every use the party in possession made of the land was perfectly consistent with his own actual rights and perfectly consistent with respondent’s granted rights. There is nothing in clearing, fencing, cultivating and cropping of the land which gives notice of an intent to deny to the respondent the right to extend its logging road across the land whenever its needs call for such action, and the presumption will be that these things were done by permission until the contrary appears. Northern Counties Inv. Trust v. Enyard, 24 Wash. 366, 64 Pac. 516. When there is added to this the testimony offered in this case of two *208 reputable witnesses to the effect that appellant’s predecessor in 1913 stated that he recognized respondent’s right to the right of way and offered to make a deed therefor, it becomes apparent that the trial court was right in finding against title by adverse possession.

The cases of Grays Harbor Commercial Co. v. McCulloch, 113 Wash. 203, 193 Pac. 709, and Metropolitan Building Co. v. Fitzgerald, 122 Wash. 514, 210 Pac. 770, upon which appellant relies to support this phase of its case do not touch upon right of way easements, nor consider the requirements necessary to establish adverse possession in such cases, and so are of no help to us here.

The condition subsequent is to the effect that the right of way granted by the deed shall revert to the grantor, his heirs or assigns, as soon as the railroad built or operated thereon shall be discontinued or abandoned by the railroad company. Of course, no railroad was ever built and no definite route was selected, for a period of over thirty years. It seems to be the general rule that mere non-user for no matter how long a period will not of itself extinguish such an easement. Tiedeman on Beal Property, § 605. And here the record shows that respondent was .using its logging road to reach its timber and as it consumed its timber the road was from time to time extended, and only now has it become necessary for it to extend the road through appellant’s property in order to reach and remove its timber lying beyond.

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Bluebook (online)
252 P. 916, 142 Wash. 204, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1057, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/netherlands-american-mortgage-bank-v-eastern-railway-lumber-co-wash-1927.