State Ex Rel. O.W.R. N. Co. v. Sup'r Ct.

286 P. 33, 155 Wash. 651
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1930
DocketNo. 22191. Department One.
StatusPublished

This text of 286 P. 33 (State Ex Rel. O.W.R. N. Co. v. Sup'r Ct.) 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
State Ex Rel. O.W.R. N. Co. v. Sup'r Ct., 286 P. 33, 155 Wash. 651 (Wash. 1930).

Opinion

This is a certiorari proceeding in this court wherein the relators, Oregon-Washington Railroad Navigation Company and Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul Pacific Railroad Company, seek review and reversal of an adjudication of public use and necessity rendered by the superior court for Grays Harbor county awarding to the Grays Harbor Pacific Railway Company the right to acquire, by eminent domain proceedings in that court, two overhead crossing rights over the tracks jointly owned by the relators in that county, upon payment of compensation therefor to be determined as the law directs.

Relators own and operate, and have for several years past owned and operated, an ordinary common carrier railroad, a portion of the main line of which runs easterly from the town of Cosmopolis, in Grays Harbor county, and a branch of which runs southeasterly from a point on the main line a short distance east of Cosmopolis, some twelve miles to its terminus, at a station called Vesta. This is called the North River branch. In May, 1929, there was organized, under the toll logging railroad law of this state, Rem. Comp. Stat., (§§ 8395-8398), the Grays Harbor Pacific *Page 653 Railway Company; its principal object being specified in its articles of incorporation, as follows:

"To construct, acquire, own, hold, maintain and operate within the counties of Grays Harbor and Pacific, in the state of Washington, a common carrier, toll logging railroad or railroads for the transportation of logs and any and all timber and forest products and commodities incidental to logging operations and the getting out of timber and forest products, and to construct, maintain and operate all necessary yarding grounds, railroads and landings, and to transport any and all timber and forest products offered to it for carriage and to charge reasonable tolls or rates therefor, and for these purposes to acquire by purchase, lease, condemnation or otherwise rights-of-way, and to acquire, own, hold, use and enjoy all such real and personal property as may be necessary for its corporate purposes as a common carrier, or toll logging railroad corporation, and to do any and all things incidental to the foregoing objects."

Soon thereafter it duly adopted a plan for the acquiring of a right-of-way and for the acquiring and construction thereon of a toll logging railroad, to extend from Preacher's slough, a navigable inlet of Grays Harbor north of relators' main line and some three miles east of where the North River branch leaves the main line, southerly some sixteen miles, to a station called Brooklyn. The location of the proposed toll logging railroad, by reason of the topography of the country, necessarily crosses relators' main line at a point near Preacher's slough; and also necessarily crosses relators' North River branch line at a point some two miles from where that branch leaves the main line, then, somewhat closely paralleling relators' North River branch line for a distance of some ten miles, proceeds to Vesta, and thence proceeds some five miles farther to Brooklyn.

Relators' North River branch line, while an ordinary *Page 654 common carrier railroad, has been engaged principally in the transportation of logs to market from logging operations carried on upon the adjacent timber lands. A large portion of the timber along and adjacent to relators' North River branch line has been logged off, though there is considerable timber left adjacent thereto so situated as to efficiently reach market over that branch line.

Beyond Vesta, the terminus of the North River branch, there is a vast quantity of standing timber capable of being logged and sent to market over the proposed toll logging railroad more efficiently than over the North River branch. Other facts will be noticed as may appear necessary in our discussion of the contentions here made in behalf of relators.

[1] It is contended in behalf of relators that the use for which the Grays Harbor Pacific Railway Company seeks to acquire these two crossing rights is not really a public use, and that the public interest does not require the prosecution of the enterprise; that is, does not require the construction and operation of the proposed toll logging railroad. Our eminent domain statute (Rem. Comp. Stat., § 925) prescribes these three prerequisites to an adjudication of public use and necessity: That the trial court shall be

". . . satisfied by competent proof that the contemplated use for which the land, real estate, premises or other property sought to be appropriated is really a public use, . . . and that the public interest requires the prosecution of such enterprise,. . . and that the real estate, premises or other property sought to be appropriated are required and necessary for the purposes of such enterprise."

Our decisions in State ex rel. Weyerhaeuser Timber Co. v.Superior Court, 71 Wn. 84, 127 P. 591, and State ex rel.Puget Sound Power Light Co. v. Superior *Page 655 Court, 133 Wn. 308, 233 P. 651, notice and recognize that each of these three conditions is for judicial determination preliminary to rendering an adjudication of public use and necessity, to be followed by a determination of compensation for the taking, by the court or a jury, as the owner may elect.

There seems to us to be but little ground for arguing — indeed we do not understand counsel for relators to seriously contend — that the acquisition of these two crossing rights is not necessary "for the purposes of the enterprise." The evidence abundantly shows that the acquisition of the proposed crossings of relators' lines of railroad is absolutely necessary for the purpose of the enterprise; that is, for the purpose of efficient construction and operation of the proposed toll logging railroad, if it is to be constructed and operated at all.

[2] There also seems to us to be but little ground for arguing — indeed we do not understand counsel for relators to seriously contend — that a toll logging railroad company incorporated under Rem. Comp. Stat., §§ 8395-8398, is not a public service common carrier and as such has the right of eminent domain to acquire in good faith, by the due exercise of that right, rights-of-way, including such crossing rights as are here in question for the purpose of its enterprise, as a public use.

[3] The contention that the use for which the Grays Harbor Pacific Railway Company seeks to acquire these crossing rights over relators' lines is not really a public use, is rested upon the theory that the contemplated use is private, in that the proposed logging railroad will necessarily be almost wholly used for the purpose of transporting to market logs of its stockholders who were its promoters and organizers, and that such stockholders, very few in number, are in fact *Page 656 intending to construct and put into operation the proposed logging railroad for the purpose of transporting their own logs to market and not in good faith to make of the proposed logging railroad a public service toll logging railroad. The evidence shows a considerable number of timber ownerships capable of being served by shipping of logs therefrom to market over the proposed logging railroad, though it may be conceded for present purposes that the total of such ownerships, in quantity of log productions, will be very small as compared with the total of the ownership log productions of the stockholders of the Grays Harbor Pacific Railway Company.

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Related

State Ex Rel. McPherson Bros. v. Superior Court
252 P. 906 (Washington Supreme Court, 1927)
State v. Superior Court
105 P. 637 (Washington Supreme Court, 1909)
State ex rel. Clark v. Superior Court
114 P. 444 (Washington Supreme Court, 1911)
State ex rel. Weyerhaeuser Timber Co. v. Superior Court
127 P. 591 (Washington Supreme Court, 1912)
State v. Public Service Commission
137 P. 1057 (Washington Supreme Court, 1914)
State ex rel. Puget Sound Power & Light Co. v. Superior Court
233 P. 651 (Washington Supreme Court, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
286 P. 33, 155 Wash. 651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-owr-n-co-v-supr-ct-wash-1930.