State Ex Rel. Wabash Railway Co. v. Public Service Commission

267 S.W. 102, 306 Mo. 149, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 482
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 19, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 267 S.W. 102 (State Ex Rel. Wabash Railway Co. v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Wabash Railway Co. v. Public Service Commission, 267 S.W. 102, 306 Mo. 149, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 482 (Mo. 1924).

Opinions

This is an appeal by Henry W. Kiel, Mayor of the City of St. Louis, and by said city and certain intervening property owners, from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Cole County, setting aside an order of the Public Service Commission, abolishing the grade crossing of the Wabash Railroad over Delmar Boulevard, in said city. *Page 157

The order set aside was made by a majority of the commission and required a viaduct, according to the City Plan, to be constructed in Delmar Boulevard, carrying said boulevard over the tracks of the railroad at said crossing. There was a dissenting opinion by Commissioner McIndoe, holding that the "Wabash Plan" of elevating the tracks of the railroad over the street at this crossing should be adopted. The majority opinion and order required the city of St. Louis to pay forty per cent, and the Wabash Railroad Company sixty per cent, of the cost of constructing said viaduct, and the street railway and other public utilities using said crossing to pay the expense of adjusting their facilities to the changed conditions. The order suggested by the dissenting commissioner and adopted by the circuit court was, that the city should pay twenty per cent of the cost of separating the grades according to the "Wabash Plan," and the street railway to pay five per cent of the cost of the subway at Delmar Boulevard — all other public utilities and industries affected to pay the cost of adjusting their facilities to the new conditions, and the Wabash Railroad Company to pay the balance of the expense.

The Wabash Railroad enters the city of St. Louis from the north and crosses the westerly line of the city limits at Maple Avenue. It then runs south and southeasterly in a somewhat irregular course to Kingshighway, a distance along the railroad of about three miles. Kingshighway runs north and south along the eastern line of Forest Park. In its course from Maple Avenue, an east and west street, which it crosses on grade, to Kingshighway, the railroad crosses, successively, on grade, Olive Street Road, Delmar Boulevard, Hamilton Avenue, Waterman Avenue, then De Baliviere Boulevard, where it crosses the tracks of the Rock Island Railway Company, which comes into St. Louis from the west. From De Baliviere Boulevard both roads adjoining each other run east approximately one-half mile, *Page 158 where they cross Belt Avenue (or what was formerly Belt Avenue) and then continuing southeasterly nearly a quarter of a mile they cross Union Avenue near its junction with Lindell Boulevard, crossing Lindell Boulevard about fifty or one hundred feet southeast of Union Avenue. Lindell Boulevard runs east and west along the north boundary of Forest Park. All the other streets crossed run practically east and west at their intersection with the railroad tracks. Up to this point all said crossings are grade crossings. Leaving Lindell and proceeding southeasterly, the Rock Island uses the Wabash tracks through Forest Park into St. Louis Union Station. The Wabash tracks enter Forest Park where they cross Lindall Boulevard and run on an embankment and pass over Grand Drive in the Park on a bridge, about twenty feet above the roadway. They then run in a southeasterly direction through the Park, crossing a way for pedestrians on grade, to the east line of Forest Park, where they strike Kingshighway, which they pass under through a tunnel, having a clearance for trains of seventeen feet and three inches. The distance along the railroad through the Park is about three-quarters of a mile, and the bridge over the Grand Drive is about midway between Lindell Boulevard and Kingshighway. The Park itself is one of the principal — the largest and perhaps the most highly improved — park in the city. The whole district between Lindell and Delmar Boulevard through which the railroad runs — a distance of nearly a mile and a half — is a highly improved and beautiful residential district containing many very costly homes. North of Delmar Boulevard for perhaps two blocks on the east side of the tracks is also an attractive residence district, but north of these two blocks and on the west side of the tracks the railroad runs through an industrial district to the city limits. The entire section north of Forest Park to Delmar Boulevard, extending several miles east and west into University City, is thickly populated and is a most attractive residential part of the city. *Page 159

The complainant alleged that on account of the heavy travel on Delmar Boulevard, which is one of the main thoroughfares running through the center of the city of St. Louis from east to west, and the number of trains operated over said crossing by the Wabash Railway Company, said grade crossing had become exceedingly dangerous for all travelers on the street, and praying that the grades should be separated by the construction of a substantial viaduct in said Boulevard over said tracks, the expense to be borne by all parties affected thereby, in such proportion as the commissioner should prescribe.

The answer of the Wabash denied that public travel was such as to require any separation of grades at said crossing, averred that the construction of a viaduct in said avenue as requested by this proceeding was but a part of the "complete plan" of the city of St. Louis, already prepared, and would require numerous other grade crossings south of Delmar Boulevard to be abolished by requiring the railroads to depress their tracks under the streets, which would be wholly unreasonable and impracticable, and prevent the abolishing of such grade crossings in the future by an elevation of the tracks over the streets. That requiring the railroads to so depress their tracks as contemplated by the "complete plan" of the city, would violate the contract entered into between the Forest Park Commissioners and the Wabash Railroad's predecessor in title, by which, under authority of an Act of the Legislature of Missouri approved March 25, 1874, said railroad right of way was located and the grade thereof established through Forest Park in said city as it now exists; that said contract provided it should not be changed without the consent of all parties interested and that to do so would take and damage the railroad's property, without compensation and without due process of law, and violate the obligation of contracts contrary to the provisions of the State and Federal constitutions, and also abrogate the Wabash contract with the Rock Island for the use of its *Page 160 tracks through Forest Park, from which the Wabash receives a rental of $2500 per month.

The answer of the Rock Island substantially agreed with that of the Wabash, setting up that the larger, or "complete plan" of the city, of which the present proceeding for a viaduct on Delmar Boulevard over the Wabash tracks was but a part, would necessitate the lowering of the Rock Island tracks from its connection with the Wabash tracks at Lindell Boulevard, and for some distance west thereof beyond De Baliviere Boulevard, and would be wholly unreasonable and impracticable.

The answer of the city of St. Louis admitted the allegations of the complaint and joined in the prayer thereof.

Certain property owners also intervened and supported the city in its contentions.

At the hearing, the Wabash Company presented a plan for raising the grade of its tracks at Delmar Boulevard and proposed that any separation of grades at grade crossings throughout the entire district should be by raising the railroad embankments and crossing over the streets, leaving the streets as they are, instead of as proposed by the plans of the city — that of depressing the tracks under the streets and constructing viaducts in the streets over the tracks.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
267 S.W. 102, 306 Mo. 149, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-wabash-railway-co-v-public-service-commission-mo-1924.