Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Abner Townsend

86 N.W. 1007, 84 Minn. 152, 1901 Minn. LEXIS 883
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 12, 1901
DocketNos. 12,645—(173)
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 86 N.W. 1007 (Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Abner Townsend) 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
Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Abner Townsend, 86 N.W. 1007, 84 Minn. 152, 1901 Minn. LEXIS 883 (Mich. 1901).

Opinion

COLLINS, J.

Ejectment brought to recover possession of two strips of land situate on either side of plaintiff’s rajlway track, where the same crosses three forties of the northwest \ of section 24, township 134, range 35.

[153]*153It is conceded that, under the land grant act of July 2, 1864, the filing of a map of definite location in 1871, and by the construction of its railway, the Northern Pacific Railroad Company, plaintiff’s predecessor, acquired a right of way four hundred feet in width where the road ran through and over what was then public domain, which included the quarter section in question. These strips were originally part of this way. The defendant Minerva Townsend is the grantee of two persons who entered these forties under the United States homestead act subsequent to 1871, and to whom they were duly patented. She admits that the right of possession and possession, constructively, at least, were originally in the plaintiff’s predecessor, but claims that possession and the right thereto have been wholly lost by reason of the fact that her grantors and herself have been in actual, open, notorious, and adverse possession of these strips, and cultivating the same, continuously for more than fifteen years before the commencement of this action. The court below so found, and that this had been with the knowledge of the officers and agents of plaintiff company, and of its predecessor, the original beneficiary of the act of congress by which the right of way was granted and its width fixed; but held that plaintiff was entitled to recover, because the right of way, as the same was fixed by the act of congress, was charged with a public use to its full width, and because, as a part of the railroad property, the way was inseparable from the franchise, and was not the subject of alienation. Therefore no part of it could be lost by adverse possession. Because of this peculiar public use to which the four hundred-foot strip had been devoted by the grant, it was held that the land in dispute was not subject to the operation of our statute of limitations as to adverse possession. On appeal the question is whether any part of the right of way, as fixed and granted by the act of congress, can be lost by adverse occupation for a period of fifteen years.

The argument of counsel for the railway company is that, as the right of way was granted by congress to the company to enable it to perform the duties which it owed to the public under its charter, and as the whole thereof was charged with a public [154]*154use, and as it is clear, upon principle and authority, that the company is without power to convey any portion thereof as granted, it inevitably follows that no part of this four hundred-foot strip is subject to any statute which would reduce its width, or prevent the plaintiff company from using it, as a whole, for railway purposes, and to its full width. The decisions, urge counsel, are conclusive on the proposition that a railway corporation owing duties to the public in the exercise of its corporate functions cannot, by voluntary conveyance or otherwise, part with any of its property necessary for a proper discharge of these duties.

A number of cases are cited in support of this statement. We see no reason to question the rules of law laid down in these cases, but, in our opinion, they are not in point here. One of them — Thomas v. Railroad Co., 101 U. S. 71 — was where the defendant railway company undertook to lease all of its road, rolling stock, and its franchise, for which leasing no special authority had been conferred by its charter. The court held that such a contract was invalid. Another — East Alabama Ry. Co. v. Doe, 114 U. S. 340, 5 Sup. Ct. 869 — was where a railroad corporation having a franchise to own and operate a road acquired an easement for its right of way through certain lands partly by grant and partly by condemnation. After a part of its line was graded, a- judgment creditor levied an execution on the right of way, and it was sold and conveyed to him by the sheriff. The court held that, by itself and separately, the right of way could not be sold on execution, and that the creditor had obtained no title.

In both these cases the acts complained of (a lease in one case, and a forced sale of the right of way in the other — an- actual dismemberment of this right from the franchise) were of such a nature that the corporations could not perform the functions for which they were created, or the duties which they owed to the public, should the acts be upheld. In the Thomas case the act of the company was clearly ultra vires, for it had no authority to lease, and in attempting so to do was disabling itself from performing its corporate functions. In the Doe case the control[155]*155ling idea was that the right of way, being a mere easement in the land, was indissolubly linked, so long as they should exist, to the franchise, to the purpose of the existence of the corporation, and to its public functions, and that they could not be separated by a sale of the right of way.

The present case is not parallel to either of these. Here the company built its road more than twenty years ago, fenced a strip one hundred feet in width, — fifty feet on each side of its track center, — has used that strip, and no more, and has acquiesced in the use and cultivation by defendants and their predecessors of all of its original grant lying outside of its fences for more than fifteen years, under a claim of right. It has not attempted to lease its entire property, nor has there been a proceeding in invitum whereby it could be prevented, by an actual dismemberment of its right of way from its franchise, from properly exercising its corporate functions, or from performing its duties to the public. But in this connection we call attention to Crolley v. Minneapolis & St. L. Ry. Co., 30 Minn. 541, 16 N. W. 422, wherein it was said, when considering a conveyance by a railway corporation, that no one whose interests are not affected, except the' state, can call in question the capacity of the corporation to sell or hold property.

But counsel point with emphasis to the case of Northern Pac. R. Co. (the predecessor of this plaintiff) v. Smith, 171 U. S. 260, 18 Sup. Ct. 794, as being conclusive here. We take their statement of the facts in issue as correct. Smith brought an action in ejectment against the company to recover possession of certain premises situated within two hundred feet of its track center as built'within the limits of the town of Bismarck, North Dakota. It appeared that the company had originally located its line some distance south of the present site of that town, and had filed its map of definite location in the office of the commissioner of the general land office. Thereafter, in 1873, and without filing any new map, the company changed its location, and constructed its road just where it has since remained. Afterwards — in 1879— the town site of Bismarck, including the tract sued for, was patented to the mayor, and the same year a deed of conveyance [156]*156covering the premises in question was executed to Smith by the town authorities.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 N.W. 1007, 84 Minn. 152, 1901 Minn. LEXIS 883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-pacific-railway-co-v-abner-townsend-minn-1901.