Omaha, Lincoln & Beatrice Railway Co. v. City of Lincoln

149 N.W. 319, 97 Neb. 122, 1914 Neb. LEXIS 322
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1914
DocketNo. 18,255
StatusPublished

This text of 149 N.W. 319 (Omaha, Lincoln & Beatrice Railway Co. v. City of Lincoln) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Omaha, Lincoln & Beatrice Railway Co. v. City of Lincoln, 149 N.W. 319, 97 Neb. 122, 1914 Neb. LEXIS 322 (Neb. 1914).

Opinions

Sedgwick, J.

In March, 1904, the city of Lincoln enacted an ordinance granting to this plaintiff, the Omaha, Lincoln & Beatrice Railway Company, the right to nse Y street in the city of Lincoln for its tracks. The ordinance required the plaintiff to pay an annual occupation tax, and to conform its tracks to the grades which were then established or which might thereafter be established, and to accept in writing the ordinance as a contract, and give bond in the sum of $10,000, guaranteeing a compliance with the terms of the ordinance. The ordinance was duly accepted by the plaintiff and the bond given. At that time no grade had been established on Y street between Eighteenth and Twenty-seventh streets, .and the maps and profiles filed by the plaintiff with the city authorities showed an elevation of its tracks at Twenty-first and Y streets of 1 7/10 feet above the natural grade. The plaintiff then filled the right of way at Twenty-first and Y streets about 16 inches above the natural grade and constructed its road accordingly. In August, 1911, the city council enacted an ordinance which provided for the paving of Y street from Twenty-first to Twenty-seventh streets and by ordinance established the grade thereon. The grade so established was about an inch above the natural grade of the street, but the ordinance contained no provision requiring the plaintiff to lower its tracks to conform with the grade so established. Afterwards, in May, 1912, the council ordered the street paved, and the contract for paving the street was entered into by the city with the Ford Paving Company on August 19, 1912. Pursuant to the contract the contractor began the work of paving the street and paved Twenty-first street from the south to the south side of Y street. On the 21st of October, 1912, the plaintiff filed a petition in the district court for Lancaster county against [124]*124the city and the contractor, asking for an injunction restraining the defendants “from interfering with the rails, ties, or grade of plaintiff’s said railway on said Y street,” and from interfering with the operation of the plaintiff’s railway over and upon said Y street. Summons thereon was served on the 23d day of October. No temporary injunction was allowed or asked for. A motion was filed by the defendant on the last day of December, 1912, to require the plaintiff to attach to its petition a copy of the alleged agreement between the plaintiff and the city. There was no ruling upon the motion, and, the attorneys who had begun the action for the plaintiff having withdrawn from the case, other attorneys filed an amended petition in April, 1913. This petition asked for a temporary injunction against the defendant, but it does not appear that the same was allowed or that any hearing was had upon the application. A general demurrer, was filed to this amended petition, which' was overruled, and the city filed an answer immediately. Thereupon still another attorney, who had been employed by the plaintiff, filed a second amended petition, which also asked for a temporary injunction, but the case immediately proceeded to trial and no temporary injunction was allowed. On the 26th day of May, 1913, the district court made special findings and entered a decree enjoining the defendant, the city of Lincoln, substantially as prayed, and the defendant has appealed.

The court found that Y street from Eighteenth to Twenty-third street is low ground and subject to overflows from flood-waters, and especially from back-waters from the Antelope creek, and that the plaintiff’s tracks have been interfered with at times thereby; that the plaintiff, relying upon the profile and its right to maintain the elevation as shown therein, constructed its road and tracks, and has been operating the road and serving a portion of the city and the outlying districts, carrying 1,100 passengers a day, and that the track is in the “low pocket in the Antelope valley between Twenty-second and Twenty-third streets, west to beyond Twenty-first street, is boggy and [125]*125marshy,” and that plaintiff’s track is some 18 inches above the natural surface of the' ground, and the plaintiff has placed cinders and other material under the ties in the embankment and roadway, and that the street has been little used for travel except on plaintiff’s trains; that the track of the Missouri Pacific Railway crosses Eighteenth street, and that the elevation of their tracks has not been fixed or established by any ordinance,' and they have not been required by ordinance to conform to the established grade, and their tracks are several feet above the natural surface and the established grade of the street; that the ordinance, enacted in March, 1910, would require the lowering of plaintiff’s tracks in the intersection of Twenty-first and Twenty-second streets with Y street about 18 inches, “to the natural surface of Y street at said intersection;” that the ordinance establishing the grade of Y street will make that street the lowest street “from Dudley on the north and X street on the south, and will cause the surface waters to flow into said Y street,” and that to compel the plaintiff to bring its track down to the proposed grade “will remove and destroy the foundation for its embankment,” and that a large proportion of the property owners, some 40 in number, abutting on or adjacent to said street have protested against the lowering or fixing of the grade below the profile and elevation of plaintiff’s tracks.

Of course, if the plaintiff constructs the paving between its rails as the law requires it will first, lay a concrete foundation therefor, and so will not be damaged 'by substituting this foundation for the cinder foundation it now has. . If the city can in ordinary cases only require a railway company to conform its tracks to grade by ordinance duly enacted, and if, after an ordinance is duly enacted, as in this case, fixing the grade and requiring the streets to be paved, a second ordinance is necessary to require the railway company to place its paving upon the grade, we have that second ordinance in this case, since the original franchise ordinance under which the plaintiff laid its tracks provides that the plaintiff shall conform its tracks [126]*126to the grades then existing or to be established, and there is a general ordinance of the city requiring this to be done. It would seem that no further ordinance of the city could possibly be necessary for that purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 N.W. 319, 97 Neb. 122, 1914 Neb. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/omaha-lincoln-beatrice-railway-co-v-city-of-lincoln-neb-1914.