Texarkana & Ft. S. Ry. Co. v. Miller-Vidor Lumber Co.

288 S.W. 498
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 28, 1926
DocketNo. 1356.
StatusPublished

This text of 288 S.W. 498 (Texarkana & Ft. S. Ry. Co. v. Miller-Vidor Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texarkana & Ft. S. Ry. Co. v. Miller-Vidor Lumber Co., 288 S.W. 498 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

This is an appeal from an order granting appellee a temporary injunction against appellant. The nature* of the case, the issues involved, and the judgment of the trial court on a 'hearing to dissolve the .injunction are thus stated by appellant.

“This case originated in the district court of Jefferson county, Tex., by petition filed by appellant, Texarkana & Ft. Smith Railway Company, against the defendant, Miller & Vidor ' Lumber Company, wherein the railway company alleged that it was the owner of an easement on and over certain tracts of land in said petition described, which easement was conveyed to it by deed of the Miller & Vidor Lumber Company of date March 31, 1906. Said petition further alleged that there was upon this strip of land a railroad switch track owned and operated by the railway company, and that the defendant, Miller & Vidor Lumber Company, its servants, and agents were entering upon said property contrary to the rights of the railway company and were tearing up and removing therefrom the rails and ties thereon. Petition prayed for an injunction. The judge of the Sixtieth district court on the 22d day of June, 1925, granted a temporary writ as prayed for in said petition. The plaintiff railway company filed its bond as provided in the court’s order, and writ of injunction was issued and served upon defendant.
“Upon the 2d day of July, 1925, the defendant, through its ' attorneys, filed a motion to dissolve said injunction, and by way of cross-action prayed for an injunction against the plaintiff from operating its trains on said track. As a reason therefor, defendants alleged that the deed of date March 31,1906, as set up by plaintiff railway company, executed by the Beaumont Sawmill Company, was invalid and without effect, for the following reasons:
“(a) That there was no consideration paid therefor.
“(b) That, the purported easement granted, being a mere gratuity, was an easement merely for the purpose of serving defendant’s industry and for none other.
“(c) That while said instrument purports to have been executed by the vice president of the Beaumont Sawmill Company, that if it purports to convey a right of way for purposes of serving industries other than the defendant, then the vice president of said company, who made said conveyance on behalf of the company, was without any authority whatsoever from the company to make the donation.
“(d) That by the terms of said purported agreement set up by plaintiff, it was provided that said easement should continue only so long as plaintiff-should operate said spur track upon said property.
“(e) That so much of said track as extended from the ends of the planer siding as originally construed and running along the side of the sawmill and skidway of said company down to the bank of the Neches river, it was contemplated by said agreement that the track should be used by the plaintiff railway company only for the purpose of delivering logs to the defendant, Miller-Vidor Lumber Company.
“Defendant further alleged that shortly after the date of said deed, the railway company ceased to use the track across said property leading to said skidway, but, on the contrary, entered into a trackage agreement with a subsidiary corporation organized for the purpose of hauling logs, said corporation being known as.the Beaumont & Northern Railway Company, and since the year 1906 so much of said track as extends from the defendant’s mill and planer *499 to and down the Neches river had been wholly abandoned by the railway company, and no attempt made to use the same, and by the terms of said alleged contract set up by said plaintiff, the said alleged easement wholly terminated about the year 1906, and that since said time the defendant had been in peaceable, continuous, and adverse possession of said land, using and enjoying the same, and claiming absolute rights therein, and recognizing no rights in the plaintiff, having notified the plaintiff railway company that they recognized no rights in said railway company to said land, and that the railway company has in writing wholly disclaimed any interest in said land and has agreed to recognize and has recognized the claim of the defendant thereto.
“Defendant further alleged in that connection that in November, 1918, plaintiff company, through A. Leekie, division engineer of plaintiff company, wrote the defendant, E. H. Green, handing him a plat showing the ownership of tracks on defendant’s property which showed that the track from the west line of said property down to and alongside defendant’s sawmill was a track owned by the Beaumont. Sawmill Company and maintained by the plaintiff company at the expense of the Beaumont Sawmill Company, and also showed a parallel track taking off from said main track at a point between the office and the lumber shed of said lumber company, and extending eastward beyond the planing mill and boiler room was also the track of the defendant company, and showing said track to extend from said point beyond the skid-way on the Neches river to be tracks claimed by the railway company, but maintained at the expense of the lumber company, and further showing a track 527 feet beyond that point running down to the Neches river to be owned and maintained by the lumber company.
“Defendants further alleged that the said Leekie, acting for the railway company, and E. H. Green, acting for the Miller & Vidor Lumber Company, agreed that the steel in said tracks was owned as above set forth and the land was owned by defendant company. Upfend-ant Lumber Company further alleged that the railway company had never had any just or equitable claim to said tracks, and had never made any assertion to £he title of the land upon which they were located, and that the easement set up in its petition was a voluntary easement merely for the purpose of access to defendant’s plant, and for no other purpose, and also authorized only for such purpose, and executed for such purpose only, and if construed for any other purpose, the Beaumont Sawmill Company did not authorize the .same, and that the greater part of the track in question claimed by the defendant had not been used by the railway company for more than 18 years, is not now being used by it. the action of the plaintiff as set up in its petition is a pretended claim to property it had never bought.
“Defendant further alleged that the strip of land as claimed by the plaintiff would include much of its planing mill, sawmill, dolly ways, boiler houses, skids, and other properties necessary for the operation of its sawmill plant, and would greatly harass, embarrass, and injure the defendant in the conduct of its business, doing irreparable injury therefrom.

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texarkana-ft-s-ry-co-v-miller-vidor-lumber-co-texapp-1926.