Pyle v. Woods

111 P. 746, 18 Idaho 674, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 70
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 111 P. 746 (Pyle v. Woods) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pyle v. Woods, 111 P. 746, 18 Idaho 674, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 70 (Idaho 1910).

Opinion

AILSHIE, J.

This is an application for a writ of prohibition against the judge of the district court of the first judicial district to restrain and prohibit him trying a case pending in his court entitled Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. Co. of Idaho, a corporation, plaintiff, vs. E. E. Pyle and Aletha Pyle, his wife, and the Northern Pacific Ry. Co., a corporation, defendants. The various pleadings, proceedings and orders had and made in the case are set out in full in plaintiff’s [677]*677petition, and tbe questions of law are presented to us on motion by the defendants to quash the writ.

It appears that on the 9th day of March, 1908, the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. Co. of Idaho, a corporation — which for convenience we will hereafter designate as the Milwaukee Co. — instituted an action in the district court in and for Shoshone county against the plaintiffs herein and the Northern Pacific Ry. Co., as defendants, whereby the plaintiff sought to condemn a strip of land 200 feet wide across certain lots and fractional lots situated in Shoshone county and occupied and claimed by the defendants Pyle, and to which the Northern Pacific Ry. Co. also claimed the title. Summons appears to have been issued and served in conformity with the provisions of sec. 5217, Rev. Codes, and within the time prescribed by the summons the defendants Pyle appeared and demurred. The Northern Pacific Co. did not appear. The demurrer by the Pyles was sustained and an amended complaint was filed and the Pyles thereupon answered. By their answer they claimed the fee simple title to the land and the exclusive possession and right of possession thereof, and denied that the use to which the Milwaukee Co. desired to condemn the property was a public use, and, further, set up the value of the property sought to be taken and the damage that the owners would sustain by reason of condemnation. The Milwaukee Co. thereafter made application under the provisions of sec. 5226 for the appointment of commissioners to assess and determine the damages that the defendants would sustain by reason of the condemnation. After a hearing on the objections and protest made by the defendants Pyle, and in due course of proceedings, the objections were overruled and commissioners were appointed. Subsequent to the appointment of the commissioners, and after giving due notice to all the parties defendant, as required by the provisions of sec. 5226, the commissioners met for the purpose of hearing the evidence and taking proofs and assessing the damages, and the Milwaukee Co. was represented by its counsel, Cullen & Dudley, and the defendants Pyle were represented by C. W. Beale and James A. Wayne; the Northern Pacific, which had never [678]*678appeared in the ease, did not appear, and submitted no proofs whatever. After hearing all the proofs, the commissioners made and filed their findings as follows:

“1. That the value of the separate estate and interest of defendants E. E. Pyle and Aletha J. Pyle in and to the land sought to be condemned and appropriated by plaintiff herein for its right of way, situated in Lot 10 of Section 5, Township 45 North, Eange 3 East, B. M., being 5.3 acres, with the improvements thereon, is $3,300.00.
“2. That the value of the separate estate and interest of defendants E. E. Pyle and Aletha J. Pyle in and to the land sought to be condemned and appropriated by plaintiff herein for its right of way, situated in Lot 1 of Section 8 of said township and range aforesaid, being one (1) acre of land, is $150.00.
“3. That the damages which the said defendants E. E. Pyle and Aletha J. Pyle will suffer by reason of such condemnation, aside from the value of the land and improvements aforesaid, is $5,000.00.
“4. That the damages which will accrue to the portion of land in lot 10 of section 5 aforesaid, which is not sought to be condemned, by reason of its severance from the portion sought to be condemned, is $100.00, and that the damages sustained by defendants E. E. Pyle and Aletha J. Pyle thereby is $100.00.
“5. That the damages which will accrue to the portion of land in Lot 1 of Section 8 aforesaid, which is not sought to be condemned, by reason of its severance from the portion sought to be condemned, is $150.00, and that the damages sustained by defendants E. E. Pyle and Aletha J. Pyle thereby, is $150.00.
“6. That the defendants E. E. Pyle and Aletha J. Pyle, by reason of the condemnation and appropriation of said land will sustain damages by loss of their spring and domestic water supply, in the sum of $500.00.
“7. That the defendants E. E. Pyle and Aletha J. Pyle, by reason of the condemnation and appropriation of said land will sustain damages by being cut off from the waters of the [679]*679St. Joe river, for tbe purpose of watering their stock and horses, in the sum of $150.00.
‘ ‘ 8. That by reason of the condemnation and appropriation of said lands that the timber standing and growing on the remaining portions of said land not sought to be condemned, will be endangered and decreased in value on account of the increased danger of loss of said timber by fires that may be ignited by the operation and maintenance of said railroad over said strip of land and that the defendants E. É. Pyle and Aletha J. Pyle will thereby suffer damages in the sum of $150.00.
“9. That the cost of a good and sufficient fence along the line of said railway is $120.00, and the cost of cattle guards where fences may cross the line of said railroad is $40.00.
“10. That the portion of said land above described not sought to be condemned will be specially and directly benefited by the construction of said line of railway as proposed by the plaintiff in the sum of $-.
“11. That the Northern Pacific Railway Company, code-fendant herein having been duly and regularly served with notice thereof, appeared not and no evidence, either oral or documentary, was introduced on its behalf.
‘ ‘ WHEREFORE, we, the undersigned commissioners, find from the foregoing that the damages which will be sustained by the defendants E. E. Pyle and Aletha J. Pyle, by reason of the condemnation and appropriation of said lands by the plaintiff herein as described in the amended complaint, are $9,500.00.
“And we further find that the damages which will be sustained by the codefendant, Northern Pacific Railway Company, by reason of the condemnation and appropriation of said lands as aforesaid will be in no sum whatever.”

After the filing of the report of the commissioners, and on the first of May, 1908, the Northern Pacific Co. made an ex parte application to the judge of the district court for an order prohibiting and restraining the clerk from paying to the defendants Pyle the sum of $9,200 of the award- made by the commissioners until such time as the respective rights of the defendants Pyle and the Northern Pacific'Ry. Co. in [680]*680and to lot- 10 of the land sought to be condemned should be finally determined and adjudicated. The court made and entered the order as prayed for by the Northern Pacific Co., and on the following day the Milwaukee Co. paid the award made' by the commissioners over to the clerk of the district court. The Milwaukee Co.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 P. 746, 18 Idaho 674, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pyle-v-woods-idaho-1910.