State ex rel. Tacoma Eastern Railroad v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.

104 Wash. 405
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1918
DocketNo. 14781
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 104 Wash. 405 (State ex rel. Tacoma Eastern Railroad v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.) 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. Tacoma Eastern Railroad v. Northern Pacific Railway Co., 104 Wash. 405 (Wash. 1918).

Opinion

Chadwick, J.

This proceeding is brought to review an order of the public service commission fixing the duties and obligations of the petitioner and the respondent with reference to the installation and maintenance of an interlocking device at a grade crossing near the town of Roy. Petitioner is a subsidiary of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company, which, like the respondent, is a transcontinental railway.

The respondent is-the senior company and has, for more than forty years, maintained and operated, as part of its main line, its tracks running between Taco[407]*407ma, in this state, and Portland, in the state of Oregon. It serves the army cantonment at Camp Lewis by a branch line which leaves the main line at the station of Lakeview, a few miles north of Roy. By agreement, the Great Northern Railway operates its trains over the tracks of the respondent company and likewise serves the cantonment.

At some time subsequent to the establishment of the cantonment, the war department invited the petitioner to extend a branch line into the camp. To do this it was necessary to cross the main line of the respondent company. The matter coming on formally before the commission upon the petition of the petitioner to install a grade crossing, that body found, inter alia, that a necessity existed for the construction of the branch line into the army post “in order that large bodies of troops might he moved at one time; ’ ’ that it was impracticable to cross the tracks of respondent’s railway either above or below grade; that the track to he constructed would be used for the purpose of serving the army post; that petitioner would operate two trains each way daily, and that respondent would operate four passenger trains and two freight trains each way daily; that the installation of and maintenance of an interlocking device was necessary for the protection of the traveling public, the railroad companies and their employees.

“That the petitioner and respondent are unable to agree upon an apportionment of the cost of installation and maintenance of said interlocking plant.
“That the cost of the grade preparation, the cost of the frogs, and the preparation for and installation of the frogs should he borne entirely by the Tacoma Eastern Railway Company.
“That the cost of installation of a proper interlocking plant will approximate $12,000, and that the same should he so installed that the trains of the Northern [408]*408Pacific Railway Company shall have priority and right of way over said crossing over the trains of the Tacoma Eastern Railway Company. The Tacoma Eastern Railway Company to operate the interlocking plant in such manner as to warn the approaching trains of the Northern Pacific Railway Company of the condition of the crossing when used by the trains of the Tacoma Eastern Railway Company; and that the cost of and installation of said interlocking plant should be borne, one-third thereof by the Northern Pacific Railway Company, and two-thirds thereof by the Tacoma Eastern Railway Company, and all maintenance thereof should be borne in like proportions by such companies.”

Whereupon the commission made and entered the following order:

“We have investigated the statute relative to the apportionment of costs and also the opinion of our supreme court in the case of State ex rel. Puget Sound & Willapa Harbor Railway Company v. Public Service Commission of Washington, 94 Wash. 10 [161 Pac. 850]. There appears little, if anything, in either the law or the opinion of the supreme court to guide us in apportioning the cost. We have, however, based it upon such reasoning as would appeal to us in granting or withholding a certificate of necessity, had we jurisdiction over such matters. Under our statute, in apportioning costs we would be loath to burden the pioneer company with any considerable part of the expense of making a crossing or protection thereof, where the new company was only seeking to serve an industry already being served by the pioneer company. In cases, however, where the new road will serve a large district not served by the pioneer road or only partially served by the latter, then, in that event, there should be a substantial portion of the cost of the crossing and its protection borne by the pioneer company. In every event, before a crossing should be granted, a necessity should exist therefor. This necessity may be of high or low degree, depending upon the purpose [409]*409to be accomplished by the road seeking the crossing. In other words, the merit of the new road’s purpose may be inquired into, and its magnitude. In the case at bar, the government has 'asked the Tacoma Eastern Eailway Company, which is a subsidiary of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Eailway Company, to build to the army post. We cannot question the wisdom of the government in making this request. We must presume it is highly meritorious and that the Milwaukee system is warranted in seeking to comply with the wishes of the government. The army post, however, is now served by three other roads operating over roadbeds and rails of very costly construction, while the Tacoma Eastern Eailway Company will build into the army post on a cheap roadbed and with light rails.
“Wherefore it is ordered; That the Tacoma Eastern Eailroad Company be and is hereby permitted to construct and maintain its railway line at grade over and across the track of the Northern Pacific Eailway Company at the location referred to in Finding III herein, and that said crossing be protected by what is known as the ‘ Cabin device of interlocking plant. ’
“That the cost of the grade preparation, the cost of the frogs and the preparation for and the installation of the frogs shall be borne entirely by the Tacoma Eastern Eailway Company. That the cost of said interlocking plant and the installation thereof shall be borne, one-third thereof by the Northern Pacific Railway Company, and two-thirds thereof by the Tacoma Eastern Eailway Company, and that all maintenance thereof and of the frogs shall be borne in like proportions by said two companies. That said Tacoma Eastern Eailway Company shall operate said interlocking plant in such manner as to warn the approaching trains of the Northern Pacific Eailway Company of the condition of the crossing when used by the trains of the Tacoma Eastern Eailway Company. That the trains of the Northern Pacific Eailway Company shall have.priority and right of way over the trains of the Tacoma Eastern Eailway Company at such crossing. ’ ’

[410]*410Petitioner complains that the commission gave controlling weight to the following factors:

“(a) Priority of construction, they being clearly of the opinion that the existing road possessed an equity which should receive consideration in apportioning the costs growing out of the mere fact that it was the prior constructed road.
“ (b) The nature of the public service which it was contemplated the junior road would perform.
“(c) The degree of public benefit involved in the construction of the junior road; and held in that connection that the commission would properly inquire into and consider the merit and magnitude of the new road’s purpose.
“(d) The costliness of the new road.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 Wash. 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-tacoma-eastern-railroad-v-northern-pacific-railway-co-wash-1918.