Northwestern Pac. R.R. Co. v. Lambert

137 P. 1116, 166 Cal. 749, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 378
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1913
DocketS.F. No. 6514.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 137 P. 1116 (Northwestern Pac. R.R. Co. v. Lambert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwestern Pac. R.R. Co. v. Lambert, 137 P. 1116, 166 Cal. 749, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 378 (Cal. 1913).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The appeal herein was taken to the district court of appeal of the third appellate district, it being a proceeding in eminent domain. A decision was there rendered upon an opinion by Mr. Justice Hart of that court, affirming the judgment of the superior court. Upon application of the appellant to this court the decision of the district court was vacated and the cause transferred to this court for rehearing. Upon further consideration we are satisfied with the conclusion of the district court that the judgment appealed from should be affirmed. The determination that no cause of forfeiture existed makes it unnecessary, in our opinion, to decide whether or not the statutory forfeiture declared m section 468 of the Civil Code is self-executing. The following passages from the opinion of Justice Hart clearly state the case and the main reasons showing that no cause of forfeiture existed:

“This is an action brought by the plaintiff to condemn a certain strip of land belonging to the defendant for the right *751 of way for the railroad of the former: Judgment, upon the verdict of the jury, passed to the plaintiff, and this appeal is prosecuted by the defendant from said judgment upon a bill of exceptions.
“It appears that the plaintiff, in the year 1906, duly incorporated for the purpose of constructing and operating a railroad for the carriage of passengers and freight; that its main line or track, as located by it, extends from the city of San Francisco to the city of Eureka, in Humboldt County; that at the time of such incorporation it acquired and became the owner of all the railroad properties, stocks, equipments, franchises, contracts, etc., etc., of the following corporations: The Northwestern Railway Company, the Eureka and Klamath River Railroad Company, North Shore Railroad Company, the San Francisco and North Pacific Railway Company, California Northwestern Railway Company, Fort Bragg and Southeastern Railroad Company, and San Francisco and Northwestern Railway Company; that the first named company, at the time of said consolidation, was the owner of all the capital stock of the other corporations; that the main line or track of the plaintiff begins at the city of San Francisco and ends at the city of Eureka, in Humboldt County; that most of the lines of railroad thus acquired by the plaintiff were branches of its main line, and that among these is the line which constitutes the particular subject of this litigation and Which commences at a place called Albion, in the county of Mendocino, and runs to and connects with the main line of the plaintiff’s railroad at a point at or near the town of Healdsburg, in Sonoma County. The land which the plaintiff seeks to condemn for the purpose of constructing its railroad is situated on the line last referred to.
“The answer of the defendant, besides certain denials, sets up as a special defense the failure of the plaintiff to comply with the requirements of section 468 of the Civil Code, which, among other things provides: ‘Every railroad corporation must, within two years after filing its original articles of incorporation, begin the construction of its road, and must every year thereafter complete and put in full operation at least five miles of its road, until the same is fully completed; and upon its failure so to do. for the period of one year, its *752 right to extend its road beyond the point then completed is forfeited.’
“It was stipulated by the plaintiff and the defendant, at the trial, ‘that since the said filing of plaintiff’s original articles of incorporation, on December 31, 1906, plaintiff had constructed 'and completed that part of said line of railroad between Wendling and Christine, a distance of 2.90 miles; that the part of said railroad between Albion- 'and Wendling, a distance of 22.85 miles, had been constructed, completed and was in full operation at the time plaintiff acquired it, on December 31, 1906; that no other part of said line of railroad than above mentioned, and no part thereof southerly from Christine to the southerly terminus at or near Healdsburg, has ever been in full or any operation, or completed, or -constructed, nor has the construction thereof ever been begun. That the right-of-way over defendant’s lands which it is sought to condemn in this proceeding is for a use as a part of said line of railroad and between said Albion and Healdsburg and southerly of said Christine. That the length of said part of said lines of railroad southerly from said Christine to its southerly terminus at or near Healdsburg is 44.25 miles, and is all of said line of railroad other than said portion between said Albion 'and said Christine. ’
“One C. W. Edes, for many years the plaintiff’s chief engineer, testified that he was familiar with the work done on the lines of railroad mentioned in the complaint, and that ‘said' plaintiff bad every year since the filing of its original articles of incorporation constructed, completed, and put in full operation, .at least five miles of the railroad firstly described in paragraph 2 of plaintiff’s complaint (referring to the main line), and, also that the line of railroad secondly described in paragraph 2 of plaintiff’s complaint (referring to the line here involved) was -a branch of the railroad firstly described in said paragraph 2 of said complaint.
“The foregoing, with the plaintiff’s articles of incorporation, constituted all the evidence offered and received upon the special defense interposed by the defendant. The latter thereupon moved for an abatement of the action and also for a nonsuit, which motions were denied.
“The court found that, as to the line of road from Albion to Healdsburg and the branch therefrom referred to, the *753 plaintiff did not comply with section 468 of the Civil Code, but that said line of road ‘is, and at all times in defendant’s amended answer mentioned was, a branch of plaintiff’s other line of railroad firstly described in p-aragraph 2 of plaintiff’s complaint,’ referring to the plaintiff’s main road. The court further found: ‘That said plaintiff has each year since the filing of said original articles of incorporation constructed and completed and put in full operation at least five ¡miles of said railroad so firstly described in paragraph 2 of plaintiff’s complaint, and by reason thereof plaintiff’s right to extend said line of railroad southerly from said Christine to said point at or near Healdlsburg has not been forfeited.’
“The contention of the defendant is, as is evident from its special defense, that the line of railroad running from Albion to a point near Healdsburg and there intersecting the plaintiff’s main line, is an independent line of railroad—that is, independent of its main line—in so far as the provisions of section 468 of the Civil Code are concerned. In other words, the -claim is that, although the Albion - line is owned by the plaintiff -and connects with its main line, it was nevertheless necessary for plaintiff, in order to have avoided the forfeiture of its right to construct or extend the first mentioned line, to have completed and put in full operation every year after the commencement of the construction of said road at least five miles of road -on that particular line.

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Bluebook (online)
137 P. 1116, 166 Cal. 749, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-pac-rr-co-v-lambert-cal-1913.