Santa Rosa City R. Co. v. Central St. Ry. Co.

38 P. 986, 4 Cal. Unrep. 950, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 1189
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1895
DocketNo. 15,202
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 38 P. 986 (Santa Rosa City R. Co. v. Central St. Ry. Co.) 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
Santa Rosa City R. Co. v. Central St. Ry. Co., 38 P. 986, 4 Cal. Unrep. 950, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 1189 (Cal. 1895).

Opinion

VAN FLEET, J.

This is an action for an injunction to restrain defendant from tearing up the track of plaintiff’s railroad, and from interfering with the running of plaintiff’s ears, and for damages for acts of interference already committed. A preliminary injunction was granted; but, on the hearing, the injunction was dissolved, and judgment rendered for defendant. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment and an order denying its motion for a new trial.

On the trial the following facts were proved without any substantial conflict: On October 3, 1876, Mark L. McDonald and Jackson R. Meyers petitioned the common council of the city of Santa Rosa to grant to them and their assigns the privilege of constructing and operating a street railroad on certain streets of said city. On the same day the common council passed a resolution granting to the petitioners and their associates the privilege requested. On May 11, 1877, the petitioners and certain other persons incorporated the corporation plaintiff, for the express purpose of constructing and operating said street railroad, and it was so stated in the articles of incorporation. On June 5, 1877, the city council passed an ordinance, numbered 16, granting to said McDonald and Meyers, “their associates, successors, or assigns,” authority to construct said railroad, and to maintain the same and propel cars thereon for the term of fifty years. This ordinance, among other things, provided that the tracks should be kept “flush and even with the street,” and that the holders of the franchise should “plank, pave, or macadamize the entire length of the street used by the track, between the rails and for two feet on each side thereof.” This ordinance is found, in regular order, in the official book of ordinances of the city, with the signatures of the mayor and clerk, but without the certificate required by section 19 of the act incorporating the city (Stats. 1875-76, p. 251); and there was no direct evidence of the publication or posting of said ordinance, as required by section 22 of that act. Plain[953]*953tiff immediately commenced the construction of said road, and during the year 1877 completed the portion in controversy in this action, and has ever since continued to operate that portion; but on certain portions of the route named in the application and ordinance no railroad has ever been constructed or operated. In 1884 the city council undertook a revision of all the ordinances of the city then in force, and for that purpose, on July 15, 1884, passed an ordinance, numbered 59, which, among other things, contains the whole of said ordinance 16. Ordinance 59 is found duly recorded in the book of ordinances, with the certificate of the clerk required by the charter. On January 6, 1886, the council adopted a resolution directing the street commissioner to notify McDonald “to place the street railroad on the proper grade, and have the same macadamized in accordance with the ordinance.” On January 19, 1886, the council adopted a resolution authorizing the city engineer to furnish plaintiff with the grade “of the railroad track on Fourth street,” which is the street now in controversy. On September 14, 1886, the council adopted a resolution requiring the plaintiff “to pave the space between the rails of its road, and for two feet on each side, with bituminous blocks” of a certain kind, and to substitute flat rails for “the rails now used,” and to put and keep the track flush with the street; and directing the city attorney, in case of a failure of the plaintiff to comply with said requirements, to commence an action “to have said track declared a nuisance and removed, and the right to maintain a street railroad annulled and revoked.” On September 21, 1886, the council directed the city attorney at once to commence the action provided for in the previous resolution. On December 27, 1886, the city attorney commenced said action in the name of the city, and filed a complaint in which, among other things, it was alleged that the plaintiff here (defendant in that action) was organized for the purpose of building, equipping, and operating said railroad, and had built and equipped the same about June 7, 1877, and had ever since operated the same; and that, before commencing said road, it had applied for and obtained from the city permission to lay down and operate said railroad for fifty years. A demurrer was interposed to that complaint, and sustained; and on November 16, 1888, the city [954]*954attorney reported that fact to the council, and also reported that plaintiff had commenced the work of paving as required by the resolution, and was putting the road into excellent condition, and recommended the dismissal of the action. Pending that action, on May 4, 1888, the council passed a resolution granting to plaintiff the right to establish a certain switch. On March 3, 1891, the council passed a resolution declaring plaintiff’s railway on Fourth street to be a nuisance, “except that portion of said railway already in repair, flush and even with the street, and with good crossings.” Thereupon plaintiff proceeded to and did put said track in good repair, and so as to cover the objections made. From 1877 down to the commission, in 1891, of the acts complained of in this action, the plaintiff has been in the actual, continuous, and notorious occupation of this railroad, has operated the same, and collected fares thereon, and regularly paid taxes thereon, and neither its possession nor its right to operate its road was ever disputed by anyone. On September 2, 1891, the city council passed an ordinance, numbered 132, granting to defendant the right to construct and operate a street railroad on certain streets in said city, including a portion of Fourth street, on which plaintiff’s track was laid. Under authority of this ordinance defendant commenced the construction of its road, and, as a part of that work, commenced to tear up and remove plaintiff’s track; whereupon this action was commenced. Defendant undertakes to justify its acts on the grounds that plaintiff never obtained any franchise whatever, or, if it did, that that franchise was forfeited by the failure of plaintiff to complete the whole of its road within the time prescribed by section 502 of the Civil Code; and that its track was therefore a public nuisance, which defendant could lawfully abate in the exercise of its own franchise. We think that under the evidence in the case plaintiff did obtain a valid franchise to construct and operate its road on Fourth street; that that franchise was never forfeited; and that plaintiff is therefore entitled to an injunction, and'such damages as it has suffered by reason of the acts complained of.

1. Defendant contends that ordinance 16, the original ordinance under which plaintiff claims, was never approved by the mayor, nor published or posted as required by law, and [955]*955that it therefore never took effect. Section 22 of the city charter provides that “all ordinances shall be signed as nearly as may be in the following form: Approved this-day of -,-, Mayor of the City of Santa Rosa.” The ordinance in question is signed by the mayor, but without any words of approval. Section 46 requires the mayor to sign such ordinances as he approves, and there was some parol evidence tending to show that the mayor did approve this ordinance, and signed his name with that intention. We are inclined to hold that that provision of section 22 is merely directory, and that the signature of the mayor, under the circumstances of the case, is sufficient evidence of his approval; but it is not necessary to decide that question.

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Bluebook (online)
38 P. 986, 4 Cal. Unrep. 950, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 1189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/santa-rosa-city-r-co-v-central-st-ry-co-cal-1895.