Town of Glenrock v. Chicago & North Western Railway Co.

279 P.2d 894, 73 Wyo. 385, 1955 Wyo. LEXIS 5
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1955
DocketNos. 2636 and 2637
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 279 P.2d 894 (Town of Glenrock v. Chicago & North Western Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Glenrock v. Chicago & North Western Railway Co., 279 P.2d 894, 73 Wyo. 385, 1955 Wyo. LEXIS 5 (Wyo. 1955).

Opinions

[389]*389OPINION

Harnsberger, Justice

The Town of Glenrock brought action against several hundred defendants seeking to quiet its title to certain lots, streets, alleys and various other strips and parcels of land lying within its dedicated borders. Included were the lands comprising the right of way of the Chicago & North Western Railway Company, a Wisconsin corporation authorized to do business in this state, and consequently this company was also named as one of the defendants. The area of this right of way is a part of the lands which the plaintiff had assumed to lease to an oil company for oil and gas purposes, and the obvious purpose of the action against the defendant railroad company was to establish in the town a title to the mineral rights underlying the right of way. The petition alleged the plaintiff to be the owner in possession of the lands and claimed for the town a title in fee simple, praying that such fee simple title be adjudged [390]*390it; that the defendant railway company be held to have no interest or estate, and that it be enjoined and debarred from asserting any claim, right, title or interest whatsoever in the lands involved. The railway company denied these allegations, and by cross-petition pleaded that it was in the actual possession of the lands and that it had title in fee thereto which it had acquired by an adverse possession of more than ten years. The court found the plaintiff had no title whatsoever; that the defendant had the exclusive right of possession by virtue of an easement granted it by the government, for railroad right of way purposes and all other purposes incident thereto, but that the defendant railway company does not have a fee simple estate in the land. The court’s judgment decreed that the plaintiff take nothing by its action, and that the railway company has the easement indicated by the finding, which was declared to be superior and paramount in every way to all claims of the plaintiff. Both parties appealed.

Plaintiff’s entire evidence consisted of (1) a stipulation that the street on each- side of the right of way was dedicated by the original patentee or those who derived their right and title by mesne or direct conveyance from such patentee and that such dedicatory plats might be received in evidence as conclusive proof of the right of the dedicators to execute and record the same, and (2) dedicatory plats numbered 2 through 7, some showing streets on either side and paralleling the right of way where the plat was traversed by it and the others where not so traversed showing the street paralleling and adjoining the right of way. It might also be noted that in at least one instance the platting showed a street to overlap the right of way by some 30 feet.

The evidence of the defendant and cross-petitioning railway company, consisted of a stipulation which in [391]*391substance recited, that the railway company’s predecessors in interest had made the necessary map filing to obtain the benefits of the March 3, 1875 Act of Congress, 43 USCA. Secs. 934-939; that the railroad to Glenrock was completed in 1887 and on to Casper in 1888, and has been in continual operation ever since; that the filings were approved February 6, 1886 and November 29, 1886; that the right of way covered by the map filings includes land laying within the city limits of the plaintiff town; that it succeeded to the interest of the original holder of the right of way; that on March 20, 1889, there was issued a coal certificate patent to one Dorsey for a tract of land (which included the disputed right of way) ; that the railway has paid all taxes on the right of way from the commencement of the railroad operation, and gave an accurate description of the right of way. Additionally the railway company placed in evidence photostat copies of records showing the filing to which reference has been made; a copy of the Dorsey patent; a blueprint prepared by its engineer, showing the right of way within the town limits; another blueprint similarly prepared, showing the right of way inside the town limits together with building and other improvements indicated thereon. Further evidence in behalf of the railroad company consisted of the testimonies of several witnesses, tending to show that located upon the right of way there were loading docks, a water well, several underground pipe line crossings laid pursuant to license from the railway company; signs carrying the words “C. & N. W. Property”; a coal tipple and possibly some other improvements, as well as there being granted by the railway company a number of leases for use of parts of the right of way by various concerns in their businesses of lumber, mining, milling, etc., and that there had been mining, rodeos, horse [392]*392breaking and livestock branding conducted on the premises.

Although each of the stipulations here mentioned purport to be the stipulation of “all other parties claiming title to the railroad right of way”, these were, of course, only binding upon the parties signing the same, which are the plaintiff and the defendant railway- company.

It is also noted that there is no evidence to show when the buildings and improvements were placed on the right of way; when the several activities took place or the date of the leases or licenses mentioned, except possibly in a couple of instances where dates in 1917 and 1920 for town water mains and sewer are specified.

The historical facts disclosed by this evidence are simple.

The relevant substance of the March 3, 1875 Act of Congress, granted to a railroad company a right of way of 100 feet on either side of the center line of a route established over land of the public domain upon the filing of profile maps therefor with, and receiving the approval of, the Secretary of the Interior. The predecessors in interest of the defendant railway company complied with those requirements and received the necessary approvals of the secretary on February 6, 1886 and November 29, 1886.

On March 20, 1889 the United States government issued to one Dorsey a patent called a “coal certificate”, to certain lands which were traversed by the right of way. This patentee and his grantees thereafter subdivided portions of these lands which were traversed in part by the right of way, and caused plats to be made of the subdivisions and recorded them in accordance with the provisions of Sections 29-1101, 29-1102, 29-1103, Wyoming Compiled Statutes, 1945.

[393]*393The defendant railway company, however, does not base its claim of title to the lands within the right of way upon the grant thus secured from the United States, nor by its having possessed, used and occupied such lands thereunder. It claims a title in fee acquired by an adverse possession occurring through its use of the lands for purposes, which it asserts, are other than purposes incident to the operation of a railroad.

The plaintiff town claims it acquired title in fee simple to the lands in dispute by virtue of the coal certificate patent and the dedicatory proceedings, and that such title is superior to that of the railway company. The town, however, professes no purpose to disturb the physical enjoyment of the railway company’s easement. We can only interpret this as meaning that the town asserts no present right to possession and occupancy of the right of way surface, except possibly for the use of such portions of the surface as may be required for the enjoyment of subsurface values.

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Bluebook (online)
279 P.2d 894, 73 Wyo. 385, 1955 Wyo. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-glenrock-v-chicago-north-western-railway-co-wyo-1955.