Southern Kansas Railway Co. v. City of Oklahoma

1902 OK 63, 69 P. 1050, 12 Okla. 82, 1902 Okla. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 18, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 1902 OK 63 (Southern Kansas Railway Co. v. City of Oklahoma) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Kansas Railway Co. v. City of Oklahoma, 1902 OK 63, 69 P. 1050, 12 Okla. 82, 1902 Okla. LEXIS 60 (Okla. 1902).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Hainer J.:

The Fifth article of the amendment to the *92 constitution of the United States or,dains among other things, that:

“No person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use without just compensation.”

Section 37, article 3, chapter 14, Statutes of Oklahoma of 1893, provides that:

“Private property may be taken for public use, or for the purpose of giving the right of way, or other privileges, to any railway company, * * * ‘or for any other necessary purpose; but in every case, the city shall make the person or persons, whose property shall be taken, or injured therby, adequate compensation thenefor, to be determined by the assessment of five disinterested householders of the city who shall be selected and compensated as may be prescribed by ordinance, and who shall in the discharge of their duties act under, oath * * * and in determining the same, said householders shall consider the benefit resulting to, as well as the damages sustained by, the owner of the property so taken. *'**”. ’

Section 1 of the act of congress approved July 4, 18.84, (23 U. S. Stats at Large 73,) provides:

“That the Southern Kansas railway company, a corporation created under and by virtue of the laws of the state of Kansas, he; and the same is hereby, invested and empowered with the right of locating, constructing, owning, equipping, operating, using, and maintaining a railway and telegraph and telephone line through the Indian Territory, beginning at a point on the northern line of said territory where an extension of the Southern Kansas railway from Winfield in a southerly direction would strike said line, running thence south in the direction of Dennison, in the state of Texas, on the most practicable route, to a point at or near where the *93 Washita river empties into the Red river, with a branch constructed from a point at or near where said main line crosses the northern line of said territory, westwardly along or near the northern line of said territory, to a point at or near where Medicine Lodge creek crosses the northern line of said territory,-and from that point in a southwesterly direction, crossing Beaver creek at or near Camp Supply, and reaching the west line of said Indian Territory at or near where Wolf creek crosses the same, with the right to construct, use and maintain such tracks, turnouts and sidings as said company may deem it to their interest to construct along and upon their right of way and depot grounds hereby granted.”

Section 2 of said act contains the following provision:

“That a right of way one hundred feet in width through said Indian Territory is hereby granted for said main line and branch to the Southern Kansas railway company, and a strip of land two hundred feet in width with a length of three thousand feet in addition to right of way is granted for-stations for every ten miles of road, no portion of which shall be sold or leased by the company, with the right to use such additional ground where there are heavy cuts or fills as may be necessary for the construction and maintenance of the roadbed not exceeding one hundred feet in width on each side of said right of way, or so much thereof, as may be included in said cut or fill; Pro.vided: That no more than said addition of land shall be taken for any one station. * * * ”

Section 9 of said act reads as follows:

“That said railway company shall build at least one hundred miles of its railway in said territory within three years after the passage of this act, or this grant shall be forfeited as to that portion not built; that said railroad company shall construct and maintain continually all road and highway crossings^ and necessary bridges, over said railway, wherever said roads and highways do now or may hereafter cross said *94 railway’s right of way, or may be by the proper authorities laid out across the same.”

It will thus be seen that the railway company accepted the charter from the federal government subject to the limitations expressly contained in section 9 of said act above quoted. The acceptance by the railroad company of this charter and the subsequent location, construction and operation of the railroad, in accordance with the grant, constitutes an irrevocable contract, which cannot be modified or impaired. And the railroad company having accepted such charter is bound-by all the conditions and limitations contained therein. The power for the proper authorities to lay out and extend roads and highways over and across the right of way of said railroad is expressly conferred by section 9 of said act. But it is contended by the plaintiffs in error that the language of this provision in the charter does not include streets in cities and towns. We do not think so. We think that the term “roads and highways” as used in said act includes streets. It would indeed be a narrow and unreasonable construction to be placed upon the language of said act to hold that “roads and highways” do not include streets in cities, towns and villages. Judge Elliott, in his work on Roads and Streets, page 1, in defining what constitutes ^highway, uses the following language:

“The term ‘highway’ is a generic name for all kinds of public ways, including county and township roads, streets and alleys, turnpikes- and plank roads, railroads and tramways, bridges and ferries, canals- and navigable rivers. In short, every public thoroughfare is a highway.”

And on page 12 the same author says:

“A street is a'road or public way in a city, town or village.”

*95 We think that section 9 of the act above quoted imposes a condition upon the, general grant, and the railway company accepted its grant subject to such conditions, and it is the duty of such company and it may be required by the proper authorities to open, construct and maintain, at its own expense, any highway or street crossings without condemnation proceedings, and without compensation or claims for damages whenever the same may be done without destroying or materially impairing the use for which congress granted their right of way. The right of the public to cross over the right of way, roadbed, tracks, sidings or other surface improvements, is not so inconsistent with the use granted to the railway company at points beyond the station limits, as to entitle the company to compensation or damages; such inconveniences or burdens as are incident to the use of such crossings by the public, the company voluntarily assumed by the acceptance of the grant, and with the express condition and limitation imposed bj section 9 of said act. In this connection it must be remembered that the right of way in question was granted across the public domain prior to the opening of public lands in Oklahoma to settlement or occupancy by white persons.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1902 OK 63, 69 P. 1050, 12 Okla. 82, 1902 Okla. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-kansas-railway-co-v-city-of-oklahoma-okla-1902.