Seattle, Port Angeles & Lake Crescent Railway v. Land

142 P. 680, 81 Wash. 206
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 13, 1914
DocketNo. 11760
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 142 P. 680 (Seattle, Port Angeles & Lake Crescent Railway v. Land) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seattle, Port Angeles & Lake Crescent Railway v. Land, 142 P. 680, 81 Wash. 206 (Wash. 1914).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

— This is an appeal by the landowners from an award in condemnation. To avoid confusion, the parties will be designated throughout the condemnees as appellants and the condemner as respondent. The respondent sought to take a strip, of land one hundred feet wide, containing 2.79 acres, for a railroad right of way through forty acres of land, in Clallam county, belonging to the appellants. The land was practically unimproved. Topographically, it is divided into two parts wholly unlike in character. Approximately, the east half is low bottom land cut up by overflow channels of Morse’s creek. The west half, or a little more, rises in an abrupt bluff, at an angle of thirty-five degrees to forty degrees, to a height of about two hundred feet above the base of the bluff, where the right of way sought runs. The easterly low part is of little value except for use in connection with the west part, which is chiefly valuable for its gravel deposits, estimated to be about fifty feet deep on the top of the bluff, and supposed to cover the entire west part of the forty, or about twenty-five acres. The right of way enters the forty-acre tract at a point fifty or sixty feet east of the base of the bluff, extends in a southerly direction, touching, and necessitating a cut in the base of the bluff for a distance of something over two hundred feet, beginning at a point about two hundred feet from the north line of the forty-acre tract. Erom the cut, the [208]*208right of way runs near the base of the bluff to the south line of the tract, which it crosses at a point about one hundred and fifty feet east of the base of the bluff.

A preliminary finding of the corporate character of the respondent; that it sought the land for a public use; that the public interest required the prosecution of the enterprise, and directing that a jury be empaneled to determine the compensation, was regularly entered. On the trial of the issue of compensation and damages, a jury was waived, and the cause was tried to the court. The court awarded the appellants $250 as compensation for the land taken, but found no damages to the balance of the land by reason of the taking. The court incorporated in the judgment, with the consent of both parties, the following provisions:

“There is reserved to the respondents [appellants here], their heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, perpetual easements, rights and privileges (a) to construct and maintain and use over said lands chutes, sluice boxes and other necessary means of conveying sand and gravel from the hillside on the west side to the east side of the lands appropriated in this action; (b) to construct, maintain and operate such bunkers upon the westerly thirty-six (36) feet of the land appropriated in this action, as may by them be deemed needful in developing and working any sand and gravel pit or pits that may be developed and worked on land adjoining the west side of said land; (c) to construct, operate and maintain under said land such underground water pipes as may, by the respondents, their heirs, executors and assigns, be deemed needful in developing and working any such gravel pit aforesaid; provided, always, however, that the uses herein mentioned shall not interfere with the safety and practical operation of the petitioner’s proposed line of railroad.”

I. The first objection raised by appellants is that there is no proof that the respondent is a corporation, or that it is authorized to condemn the land, or that it in good faith contemplates building a railroad, or that it has paid its last annual corporate license.

[209]*209The proceedings for condemnation by public service corporations are clearly defined by statute and well settled in practice. Upon petition and notice, a hearing is first had upon the questions of public use and necessity. This hearing necessarily involves the corporate capacity and the right to maintain the proceedings on the part of the petitioner as a public service corporation, the purpose for which the land is sought and its necessity for that purpose. Rem. & Bal. Code, § 925 (P. C. 171 § 176). These are questions for the court. From its decision thereon there is no appeal. Western American, Co. v. St. Arm. Co., 22 Wash. 158, 60 Pac. 158. A review of these questions can only be obtained by certiorari. North, Coast R. Co. v. Gentry, 58 Wash. 80, 107 Pac. 1059; Whatcom County v. Yellowkanim, 48 Wash. 90, 92 Pac. 892. The only question reviewable on appeal is “the propriety and justness of the amount of damages.” Rem. & Bal. Code, § 931 (P. C. 171 § 180a) ; Fruitland Irr. Co. v. Smith, 54 Wash. 185, 102 Pac. 1031; State ex rel. Port Townsend Southern R. Co. v. Superior Court, 44 Wash. 554, 87 Pac. 814. Having taken no action to review the preliminary order of the trial court by certiorari, the appellants here are foreclosed by the preliminary order as to all of the objections above mentioned.

II. The appellants offered to prove by the appellant Paul Land a scheme or plan for the development commercially of the sand land gravel bank located to the west of the proposed railroad. It is claimed that the court should have admitted this evidence. The offer was as follows:

“We admit that there is no sand or gravel pit there now in operation, but offer to show by this witness that this is a sand and gravel bearing property and that it contains sand and gravel of commercial quality; that it is a quarter of a mile, approximately, from tide water, and that Mr. Land has prepared 'and had prior to this condemnation proceedings, a comprehensive scheme and plan for the development of this property — that he intended to construct a railroad at the foot [210]*210of the hill out to tide water, and there erect bunkers and shipping facilities, and that he had arranged for a right of way through the adjoining property for that purpose.”

The court said:

“You may show the difference in value between the property as it now is and as it will be when this right of way has been taken and the railroad constructed by the petitioner. Mr. Land is an experienced sand and gravel man and should know the difference between the Value of the land as it now is and as it will be after the railroad is constructed, and' he should be able to explain this difference. The court will permit you to show the difference in value, if any, by the taking of this strip, to the balance of the forty.”

Thereafter, the court permitted the appellant Land to testify as follows:

“I have computed the damage that will be sustained by the property not taken by virtue of the construction of this proposed railroad, and estimate the damage at not less than $4,000. . . . Prior to the time this suit was commenced, I took steps looking to the development of this particular property. I estimate the damage at four thousand dollars by the extra expense that I would be to, also the amount of gravel that I perhaps never could reach. They cut into the bank here and I could not get that out at all, except by crossing the railroad track, which would be a great big expense to me to develop that gravel property, to go across the track and put my bunkers on the east side of the track. It would be a big drawback all the way through. The proposed right of way goes so close to the foot of the hill that I would have no room for bunkers or switching facilities. I estimate it at about two and one-half million yards.”

On cross-examination, he said:

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Bluebook (online)
142 P. 680, 81 Wash. 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seattle-port-angeles-lake-crescent-railway-v-land-wash-1914.