Wright v. St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co.

175 F. 845, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5238
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 7, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 175 F. 845 (Wright v. St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co., 175 F. 845, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5238 (W.D. Ark. 1910).

Opinion

ROGERS, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). To a cross-bill which so flagrantly disregards the established procedure on the equity side of the federal court, a demurrer is an improper remedy. A motion to strike should have been filed; and the court will treat the demurrer in this case as a motion to strike, and will order the cross-bill stricken from the files. In the case of Washington Railroad v. Bradley, 10 Wall. 299, 19 L. Ed. 894, the synopsis of the opinion is as follows:

“A petition by way of cross-bill which makes nobody defendant, which prays for no process, and under which no process is issued, is a nullity. A decree on such a bill, praying the reverse of what the original bill prayed, is fatally erroneous. Nor will the fact that objection was not made cure a combination of errors so large and so' grave as above indicated.”

That case is on all fours with the case at bar. This will leave the case to be determined upon the bill, answer, replication, and the evidence.

I assume that very few cases so important and involving such far-reaching consequences are submitted to a court of equity on pleadings so indefinite, vague, and unintelligible as those in this case. This is especially true of the bill, which must have been drawn in great haste and without the pleader being in possession of the necessary facts. The land through which the railroad embankment and the levees in controversy run is not even described, except as the “Falls plantation in Miller county, Arkansas.” The deeds, for instance, under which the parties held, admitted without objection, do not even refer to the Falls plantation; but, the parties having treated the deeds as properly [847]*847describing' the land, and having made no controversy about the identity, I shall, accordingly, so treat them. The pleader should have redrafted the bill, and the court should have required it; but, the defendant took no exceptions to it, and, having answered, the issues were made up, the proof taken, and the case submitted before the attention of the court was called to the skeleton character of the bill. From the whole record the following ultimate facts may be finally adduced: The defendant acquired its right of way through the land in controversy, called in the bill the Falls plantation, by deed anterior in time to their purchase by complainants. It is conceded, however, that such title as the parties have emanates from the same source; the complainants holding the fee and the defendant the easement. The easement acquired by the defendant gave it the same right, as if it had acquired the easement by the exercise of the right of eminent domain under the statutes of ¿Arkansas, and no more. At the Falls plantation the railroad runs in an easterly and westerly direction, and, for convenience, it may be said to run east and west, though the defendant’s witnesses (railroad men) constantly speak of it as running north and south, because the schedules of the road so designate it, thus confusing the record. On the north side of the railroad, Red river makes a long sharp bend, and approaches from the north within about 600 yards of the railroad, and then turns in a northeasterly direction for a long sweep, and then again turns sharply back south, making a bend in all of about 8 miles, to Garland City, where the railroad crosses the river. At the first bend referred to a levee had been built along the south bank of the river about 2 feet higher than the railroad track which is near thereto and on the same side of the river. The levee in controversy runs north and south, and connects the Red river levee with the railroad dump, and is now about as high as the railroad dump at the point of junction, and higher than the railroad dump east toward Garland City. That levee is known and will hereafter be spoken of as the Wrjglit & Wilson levee. It was constructed across the land of Wright and Wilson, and up to and across the railroad right of way, and joined on to the railroad dump or embankment over the protest of the railroad. From the junction of the Wright & Wilson levee with the Red river levee the latter extends a considerable distance up the river, but it extends only a short distance from said junction down the river. Overflows have occurred in the past by the Red river levee breaking, up the river from the point of the junction of the two levees, and also by overflowing the bank cast of and near to the point of junction of the two levees. West, and up the river from the Wriglit & Wilson levee, the Falls plantation lies, a part of it on each side of the railroad, and easterly and down the river in the river bend is found a large scope of country, about 1,500 acres, a part in cultivation and a part in a state of nature, all subject to overflow, and on the southeast edge of which, and on rising ground and adjacent to the railroad, is Garland City. On the other or south side of the railroad, the high ground, not subject to overflow, at a point some 600 feet east of the junction of the Wright & Wilson levee with the railroad dump, runs down within 105 yards of the railroad, and Wright and Wilson built another levee on that side, connecting the point of high ground near[848]*848est to the railroad with the railroad dump. There is a cypress swamp —a sort of lake—-lying east of the Wright & Wilson levee and between the levee and Garland City, the end of which extends to the south side of the railroad. Where the railroad crosses it, a trestle is provided, for the overflow water when the lake rises to pass through to the south side and run off by natural courses. West of both levees about 1,300 feet there is another trestle, and further west two others, provided for the same purpose. Before the AVright & Wilson levees were constructed, if a break occurred in the Red river levee above the point of junction where the Wrigh’t & Wilson levee is now located, the overflow water would pass through towards Garland City and go back into Red river, and also go through the west railroad trestles, and find its way to and over the low land, and thence, by natural courses, run off. This was always the result to a greater or less extent, depending on the condition of the water. The same results followed, if the Red River levee above the junction of the Wright & AVilson levee withstood the high water, and the overflow from Red river occurred east of the point of junction of the AVright & AVilson levee; so that the Wright & Wilson levees and the railroad embankment to which they were joined form a dam, and backs water up as high as the levees against the defendants’ railroad dump. At present, if the Red river levee breaks west of the Wright & Wilson levee, the overflow is forced to go through the west trestles and on the low land, but cannot get into Red river in the direction of Garland City, and as long- as the water is up must stand against both the Wright & AVilson levees and the railroad dump. If the overflow comes from a point east of the junction of the Wright & AVilson levee, it banks up against the railroad dump and the Wright & Wilson levees, and, if the overflow should be high enough, will back up as high as the bottom of the railroad ties at the point of junction, and run over a large part of the railroad track lying between the Wright & Wilson levees and Garland City, and cannot get through and run out over the low lands west as was the case before the Wright & Wilson levees were constructed.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Midland Valley R. Co. v. Sutter
28 F.2d 163 (Eighth Circuit, 1928)
Chicago Great Western Railroad v. Zahner
177 N.W. 350 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 F. 845, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-st-louis-southwestern-ry-co-arwd-1910.