Tremont & Gulf Ry. Co. v. Louisiana & A. Ry. Co.

54 So. 826, 128 La. 299, 1911 La. LEXIS 560
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 27, 1911
DocketNo. 18,302
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 54 So. 826 (Tremont & Gulf Ry. Co. v. Louisiana & A. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tremont & Gulf Ry. Co. v. Louisiana & A. Ry. Co., 54 So. 826, 128 La. 299, 1911 La. LEXIS 560 (La. 1911).

Opinion

BREAUX, C. J.

This is a petitory action. Plaintiff and defendant are public carriers of freight and passengers.

Plaintiff claims: The ownership of a strip of land described in its petition, and avers that'it needs it for railway purposes. That defendant had unlawfully and without its consent taken possession of this strip of land and constructed thereon what is known as a stub track. Trespass is charged by plaintiff.

It claims the right to have the defendant company ousted from its possession, as it needs the land to extend its own railway thereon.

Plaintiff alleges that it is entitled to damages for the full value of the land, together with damages, prayed for in the alternative, fixed by it at $10,000.

Defendant denies that it took any unlawful possession of plaintiff’s land or that it is a trespasser.

Defendant avers that over two years before this suit was instituted and long before plaintiff became the owner of the land it, defendant, built its track on it under a contract, dated April 1, 1907, entered into with [301]*301Selden & Wright, owners of a planing mill •at Winnfield, and that in accordance with that contract the firm of Selden & Wright was to furnish the right of way, and guarantee to defendant other rights in connection with the said right of way in order, as we understand, to induce the defendant to extend its road for the benefit of the planing mill.

Defendant further substantially states that 'it has been using this track since as a public service corporation; that it went into possession with plaintiff’s knowledge and assent, and that not the least complaint was heard from plaintiff before this suit was brought; that it is now bound to continue in operating its road over this spur track, and that it can'not remove the spur without special order from the Railroad Commission.

Defendant pleads estoppel by reason of the fact that it is in possession under circumstances before mentioned, and that now plaintiff has no right to compel it to demolish its road over the spur.

Defendant pleaded the prescription of one •and two years.

The whole area in question is worth a very •small amount.

It is admitted by all parties to the suit that the Winn Parish Lumber Company, the first buyer to whom the title is traced, pur■chased the property from the Bodcaw Lumber Company, and that by mesne conveyance it became the property of defendant •over two years before this suit was brought.

Defendant’s road over this spur was completed in 1907.

The president of the plaintiff road testified that plaintiff’s officers did not know of •defendant’s spur track at the time, and that, if they had known it, they would have objected.

The fact is that no survey had been made, •and plaintiff did not know that it was the •owner of the land until a survey was made •some time after defendant had built its road.

Plaintiff alleges that possession of this track is worth over $2,000.

It is admitted that the property in dispute was taken possession of and occupied by defendant company under an agreement, as before mentioned, with Selden & Wright; that the last-mentioned firm bound itself to furnish defendant all the lands necessary for the right of way.

1. The district court rendered judgment in favor of defendant, dismissing the suit.

The court reserved to plaintiff the right to sue for the value of the property and damages.

On this appeal plaintiff asks us to annul the judgment; that it be decreed the owner of the land, and, in addition, entitled to possession.

It follows that there are no other issues presented.

The demand for damages and for value of the land has been abandoned.

The land in controversy was owned by plaintiff.

The first contention of plaintiff is that the property was not taken possession of by defendant for public use,, but that it was taken possession of for the private use and benefit of Selden & Wright, owners of the planing mill reached by the spur track; that the purpose is to handle the products of that mill for defendant.

From this plaintiff argues that the railroad company has no authority to go into possession of or to have lands condemned for a spur track to a private enterprise.

Plaintiff cites a number of authorities, among them, Kansas City, S. & G. Ry. Co. v. Louisiana W. R. Co., 116 La. 178, 40 South. 627, 5 L. R. A. (N. S.) 512.

The question is one of fact; that is, whether this enterprise was conducted exclusively in the interest of a private venture, and not at all for the public.

And, again, the plaintiff states in the brief that the defendant handles shipments over [303]*303the track in question for an ice plant in addition to the planing mill and for the planing mill as well.

Perhaps this would not be very conclusive evidence if it were not for the following admission of record, made by plaintiff, to wit:

That since the date of the completion of said spur defendant has used it and operated its train thereon as a public service corporation, and that it is used in serving the ice plant and the planing mill.

This is certainly a direct admission that the defendant is using it for the public service.

[3] Although it may require a little exaggeration to think that an ice plant and a planing mill are engaged in serving the public, they certainly are to a certain extent.

But on this point the admission of plaintiff is too direct to admit of a construction that the defendant is not engaged a.s a public service corporation in operating this spur.

2. Extent of Defendant’s Possession.

[1] Before plaintiff became the owner of the land, defendant was in possession. Plaintiff’s author urged no objection.

[4] It is now well settled in jurisprudence that the owner of land entered upon and taken possession of by a public service railroad company must timely object in order to sustain its title to the land and to have the railroad demolished and the company ousted from possession.

<- This question has been very much litigated, and has given rise to suits.

By degrees, in order that the public might have the services of these corporations, and to put an end to the possibility of interrupting travel and interrupting the transportation of freight, it was decided the complaining owner who had acquiesced and assented would have the right exclusively to the value of land and to damages.

After the leading cases upon the subject had been rendered in the St. Julien Cases, 85 La. Ann. 924, and 39 La. Ann. 1063, 3 South. 280, the Legislature provided for a short term of prescription, two years. Rev. Civ. Code, art. 2630; Rev.'St. § 1479; Rev. Civ. Code, art. 3536 (notes).

In this instance plaintiff’s claim is barred by the prescription.

Plaintiff urges that the plea of prescription cannot be sustained because the officers of plaintiff’s road did not know that defendant was running on its lands.

We have noted before that defendant’s possession dated from a time before the plaintiff became the owner.

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Bluebook (online)
54 So. 826, 128 La. 299, 1911 La. LEXIS 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tremont-gulf-ry-co-v-louisiana-a-ry-co-la-1911.