Wabash Railway Co. v. Chauvin

144 S.W.2d 110, 346 Mo. 950, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 583
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 31, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 144 S.W.2d 110 (Wabash Railway Co. v. Chauvin) 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
Wabash Railway Co. v. Chauvin, 144 S.W.2d 110, 346 Mo. 950, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 583 (Mo. 1940).

Opinions

This in an action to try and determine title. Plaintiff claims fee simple title under condemnation prior to the adoption of our Constitution of 1875. Defendant State Highway Commission answered claiming title to part of the land and affirmatively seeking determination of title. Defendant Emmons (one of the heirs of the original owners Chauvin and Ham) answered by general denial. The court adjudged that title to the land claimed by the Commission was vested in it as "an easement for state highway purposes;" that the other defendants (Chauvin and Ham heirs) were "vested with fee simple title" in all the land "subject to the easement for state highway purposes" in the part used therefor; and that "plaintiff had no right, claim or interest . . . in any of the real estate." Plaintiff has appealed from this judgment.

The whole tract in question was used by plaintiff as a part of its right of way for many years prior to 1936. Thereafter, all tracks were removed from it, and it was abandoned for railroad right of way purposes, when plaintiff built a new bridge over the Missouri River at another location. Plaintiff's predecessor, The North Missouri Railroad Company, began a condemnation suit against Pelagie Chauvin et al. in 1857, for a strip of land 300 feet wide and about two miles long. The company obtained a decree which required the payment of $6400, "as the amount of damages which will be done to the land of defendants and the improvements thereon, after taking into consideration the value of said landand the advantages and disadvantages of the railroad to the tractor lot of which the same forms a part." (This amount was fixed by agreement.) The judgment further recited "that fee simple title be vested in The North Missouri Railroad Company aforesaid to the land described." The rest of the land involved herein, a triangular tract of 15.96 acres north of the first strip, was condemned by suit in 1870 against Joseph Ham et al. for approaches to the original railroad bridge over the Missouri River. The decree in that case required payment of damages of $1436.40 to Ham and *Page 952 $899.60 to others. The petition in that case alleged the incorporation of the company by the act of 1851, also stated that this act had been amended by later acts of January 7, 1853, and December 12, 1855, and prayed proceedings "in pursuance of theabove recited acts, and of the general act of 1855 entitled anact to authorize the formation of Railroad Associations and toregulate the same." This decree also recited "that fee simple title to the land condemned for the use of said Railroad . . . be and the same is hereby vested in said Railroad forever." In September, 1937, after its abandonment by plaintiff, the State Highway Commission obtained judgment in its condemnation suit against the Chauvin and Ham heirs (it had right of way quitclaim deeds from many of them) for the use of part of both tracts for use for state highway purposes. Plaintiff was not a party to that suit. Thereafter, in December, 1937, plaintiff commenced this suit claiming the title in fee simple to all of both tracts.

The question for decision is whether plaintiff's predecessor acquired the title absolutely in fee simple, by these condemnation proceedings, so that there would be no reverter to the heirs of the original owners by abandonment of the tract for railroad purposes. It is not contended that this tract ever had or could have any use for such purposes other than for right of way. It is, of course, no longer possible for a railroad to acquire such a fee title by condemnation. [Constitution of Missouri, Art. 2, Sec. 21; see also Art. 12, Sec. 14; Coates Hopkins Realty Co. v. Kansas City Terminal Ry. Co., 328 Mo. 1118,43 S.W.2d 817; State ex rel. State Highway Comm. v. Griffith,342 Mo. 229, 114 S.W.2d 976.] It is conceded, however, that plaintiff has whatever title its predecessor had. This question must, of course, be determined by the statutes then in force because there was then no constitutional prohibition against the enactment of condemnation statutes which would authorize the vesting of fee simple title.

The North Missouri Railroad Company was incorporated by a special act of the Legislature in 1851. (Laws of Mo. 1850-51, p. 483.) There was in effect at that time a statute (R.S. Mo. 1845, p. 232, sec. 7, chap. 34) providing: "The charter of every corporation that shall hereafter be granted by the Legislature, shall be subject to alteration, suspension, and repeal, in the discretion of the Legislature." The Act of 1851 (sec. 1) authorized the company to "take, hold, use, possess and enjoy the fee simple or other title in and to any real estate" and to "sell, convey, pledge, mortgage or dispose of the same." The company was authorized (sec. 7) to "construct a railroad from the City of St. Charles, . . . passing up the divide between the tributaries of the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers . . . in the direction of Fort Des Moines (Iowa);" and "for that purpose may hold a strip of land not exceeding one hundred feet in width." (Wider "in passing hills and valleys, etc.") The company was also *Page 953 authorized (sec. 8) "to take voluntary relinquishments of right of way for said road;" and where this could not be done to commence condemnation (sec. 9) in circuit court. In fixing the damages in such proceedings, the court's appraisers were required (sec. 9) to "take into consideration the value of the land and the advantages and disadvantages of the road to the same." It was also provided (sec. 10) that "the Court shall enter judgment in favor of such owner, against such company, for the amount of damages assessed, and shall make an order vesting in said company the fee simple title of the land." Because of this latter provision, plaintiff claims to still be the owner of the absolute title in fee simple even after complete abandonment of the land in controversy for railroad purposes. This court held against this contention in Kellogg v. Malin, 50 Mo. 496, in a case involving the same language (authorizing "an order vesting in the company the fee simple title") as to right of way condemnation in the act chartering the Platte County Railroad Company. This court held that "notwithstanding the language used, nothing more than an easement passed to the road, giving it perpetual and continuous title so long as it used the land for the purpose for which it was taken, but, when that use was abandoned; then it would revert back to the owner." The court's reason for its ruling was that the Platte County Railroad Company act further provided that "in determining the consideration to be paid . . . the benefits and advantages accruing to the owner are taken into calculation;" and that "if the road should . . . be abandoned, the owner would be deprived of his estate without any compensation" (unless there was reverter) where he was given only nominal damages because of excess benefits, and also likewise in any case of benefits being considered he would never receive full compensation if the right of way was later abandoned. This decision was reaffirmed in Allen v. Beasley, 297 Mo. 544,249 S.W. 387, where subsequent cases were reviewed. Likewise, in Venable v. Wabash Western Railway Co., 112 Mo. 103, 20 S.W.

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Bluebook (online)
144 S.W.2d 110, 346 Mo. 950, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wabash-railway-co-v-chauvin-mo-1940.