Citation Numbers: 101 U.S. 711, 25 L. Ed. 872, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1977
Judges: Harlan, Swayne, Field, Bbadley
Filed Date: 2/18/1880
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an application, by petition, for a writ of mandamus to the judges of the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Colorado, commanding them to proceed and give final decree, in accordance with the opinion and mandate of this court, in the suit .of the Canon City and San Juan Railroad Company' against the Denver and Rio Grande Railway Company. The history of this litigation is set forth in Railway Company v. Alling (99 U. S. 463), to which reference is here made. The present application is supported by an exemplified copy of the proceedings had in the Circuit .Court at its May
The main contention of' the Denver and Rio Grande Railway Company was that the court below had failed and refused to comply with the mandate of this court; that, upon filing the mandate, that company became entitled absolutely, and beyond the discretion of the Circuit Court, to a decree restoring it, at once and unconditionally, to the possession of the Grand Canon of the Arkansas River; dissolving the injunction granted against it in that suit; adjudging that it had the prior right to occupy and use that canon for the purpose of constructing its railroad therein; and requiring the Canon City and San .Tuan Railway Company, its officers, agents, servants, and employés, to refrain from interfering with or obstructing the Denver and Rio. Grande Company in such occupancy and use of the canon, or in the construction of its railroad in and through the same.
It is essential to a proper understanding of the present application to recall some of the leading facts in this litigation. The controversy between these two companies arose out of .their respective claims to occupy and use the Grand or Big Canon of the Arkansas River for railroad purposes. The Circuit Court, upon the original hearing, held the prior right and location to be with the Canon City Company, with liberty, however, to the Denver Company to exhibit its bill in any court of competent jurisdiction to compel the former company to so locate and construct its road as to permit the convenient and proper location by the Denver Company of its road, or, if two roads could not be conveniently constructed and operated in the canon, to occupy the track and roadway of the Cañón City Company. While the causes were under submission in this court at its last term, it was represented that, after the rendition of the decree in favor of the Cañón City Company, the parties and corporations concerned had entered into binding agreements, whereby the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fé Railroad Company, in its own right, and in connection with the Pueblo and Arkansas Yalley Railroad Company (the successor of the Canon City Company), had become and was equitably the owner of all the property, rights, and interests of the Den
These motions were denied, for the reasons given in the former opinion. It was1 there said, that if the directors of the Denver Company, in prosecuting the appeals to final judgment, violated any trust committed to their hands, or any agreement which was binding upon the corporation and the minority stockholders, remedy might be sought “in some-court of original jurisdiction, into which, upon proper pleadings, all persons interested may b.e summoned.” The court also said: “ If, since those decrees were entered, the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Eé Railroad Company, or the Pueblo and Arkansas Valley Railroad Company have, by valid contracts, acquired a controlling interest in the property, rights, and affairs of the Denver Company, that interest can be asserted by' appropriate proceedings, and will not be affected by any thing we may determine upon the issues presented by these appeals.” '
Upon the merits of the cases it was held —
That the intention of Congress by the act of 1872 was to grant to the Denver Company a present beneficial easement in the particular way over which its designated routes lay, capable, however, of enjoyment only when the way granted was actually located, and, in good faith, appropriated for the purposes contemplated by the company’s charter and the act of Congress;
That when such location and appropriation were made, the title,-which was previously imperfect, acquired precision, and by relation took effect as of the date of the grant;
That the Deliver Company, by its occupancy of the Grand Canon on 19th April, 1878, for the purpose of constructing its road through that defile, came then, if not before, into the enjoyment of the present beneficial easement conferred by the act of Congress of June 8,1872j and was entitled to have secured, against all intruders whatever, the privileges or advantages which belonged to that position;
The opinion concluded as follows: —
“It results from what we have said, that the court below erred in enjoining the Denver Company from proceeding with the construction of its road in the Grand Canon. The decree, as entered, can only be sustained upon the assumption that the Cañón City Company had by prior occupancy acquired a right superior to any which the Denver and Rio Grande Railway Company had to use the cañón for the purpose of constructing its road. But that assumption, we have seen, is not sustained by the evidence, and is inconsistent with the rights given by the acts of Congress to the Denver Company. The Denver Company should have been allowed to proceed with the construction of its road unobstructed by the other company. Where the Grand Canon is broad enough to enable both companies to proceed without interference with each other in the construction of their respective roads, they should be allowed to do so. But in the narrow portions of the defile, where this course is impracticable, the court, by proper orders, should recognize the prior right of the Denver and Rio Grande Railway Company to construct its road. Further, if in any portion of the Grand Cañón it is impracticable or impossible to lay down more than one road-bed and track, the court, while recognizing the prior right of the Denver Company to construct and operate that tract for its own business, should, by proper orders, and upon such terms as may be just and equitable, establish and secure the right of the Cañón City Company, conferred by the act of March 3, 1875, to use the same roadbed and track, after completion, in common with the Denver Company.
“The decrees in these causes are, therefore, reversed, with directions to set aside the order granting an injunction against the Denver and Rio Grande Railway Company, and also the order dissolving the injunction granted in its favor, and dismissing its bill. By proper orders, entered in each suit, the
“ The court will make such further orders as may be necessary to give effect to this opinion.”
It appears from the transcript of the proceedings had in the court below, after the return of the causes, that the Pueblo and Arkansas Valley Railroad Company was permitted, against the objection of the Denver Company, to file supplemental bills, showing, that it was the successor of the Canon City Company, and setting out in detail, among other things, the same facts substantially that were relied upon in this court in support of the motions made at the last term to set aside the submission and dismiss the appeals. The prayer of the first supplemental bill was that those facts might be considered, and that upon the hearing the original decrees might be permitted to stand without modification or change.
An order was entered in the Circuit- Court, on the 14th of July, 1879, in which, after reciting the mandate of this court, and the reversal of the original decree of July, 1878, it was declared that the said decree theretofore given and allowed “be vacated and set aside,” with costs to. the Denver Company to the date of the filing of the mandate.
It was also adjudged that the right of the Denver Company “ to first locate and construct • its railway upon the way mentioned and described in the bill of complaint herein, as against the Canon City and San Juan Railway Company and the Pueblo
The decree proceeds: —
“ Forasmuch, however, as it is alleged by the said plaintiff [the Canon City and San Juan Railway Company], in certain supplemental bills by it filed herein, that since the said decree the said defendant [the Denver and Rio Grande Railway Company] hath .granted, sold, or-otherwise yielded to the said plaintiff its right of way in the premises; and forasmuch as it is also alleged by the said plaintiff that since the said decree the said plaintiff hath built wholly or in part upon the said way, and upon the'line heretofore located by the said defendant, a railway of such gauge and structure as the said defendant hath proposed to build, for which, as to the whole or some part thereof, the said defendant ought in equity and good conscience to pay the reasonable valué, and because the value of said railway is at present unknown to the court, no further decree touching the ultimate right of the parties can be given or allowed until the-court shall be better advised in the matters aforesaid.
“ And it is considered by the court that the relations of the parties of and concerning the line of railway heretofore constructed, or how in process of construction as aforesaid, ought not to suffer any change pending such inquiry touching the facts upon which the further and final judgment and' decree of the court will be given; therefore, let each of the parties be enjoined and restrained from doing any act or thing towards building and completing the said line of railway until the further order of the court. Nor shall either of the said parties interfere with the present possession of the other in the said line of railway, but each shall remain in the possession of that part which it now holds until the further order of the court. And' of this order the parties shall take notice without writ or further service. But if either of the said parties shall desire to construct another line of railway on the same right of way, without interfering with the grade or road-bed constructed by the said plaintiff or the Cañón City and San Juan Railway Company, it shall be at liberty to do so.”
Upon a subsequent day of the same term the Denver Company, by petition, suggested that the decree rendered was not full and complete, and that the court had not awarded all the relief to which it was entitled under the opinion and mandate of this court. The Circuit Court, however, held that further and final decree should be deferred until the matters set forth in the decree ot July 14, 1879, were determined.
Thus stood the case, in its essential features, when the petition for mandamus was filed-in this court. Subsequently, the attention of the court was called to the final decree rendered in the Circuit Court in -January, 1880.
After a careful consideration of all that has been said .in support of the present application, we are of opinion that a mandamus should be denied. Our former opinion discloses the fact
It is contended that the Circuit- Court plainly disobeyed our mandate when declining to make such orders as would place the. Denver Company, upon .the filing of the mandate, in the actual occupancy or possession of the Grand Cañón, without reference to, or without awaiting • the determination of, the claim which the Cañón City Company, or, its successor, had on account of money expended in. the construction of its road in the Grand Canon, or in that portion of it which admitted of but one roadbed or track. It is true that we said — referring necessarily to
It was undoubtedly competent for that court, in the exercise of its judicial discretion, to have put the Denver Company, upon the filing of the mandate, into immediate possession of the Grand Canon, including the road-bed and track which the Cañón City
We recognize, in its fullest extent, the power of this court, by mandamus', to enforce prompt compliance with its mandates; but it is not consistent with the principles and usages of law that we should, in that summary mode, revise the action of inferior courts, as to any matters about which they must or may exercise judicial discretion. “ The writ has never been extended so far,-nor ever used to control the discretion and judgment of an inferior court of record acting within the scope of its judicial authority.” Ex parte Taylor, 14 How. 3 ; Ex parte Many, id. 24; United States v. Lawrence, 3 Dall. 42; Life and Fire Insurance Company of New York v. Wilson's Heirs, 8 Pet. 291; Ex parte Hoyt, 13 id. 279; Ex parte Myra Clarke Whitney, id. 404; Ex parte Newman, 14 Wall. 152. The remedy for any errors committed by the Circuit Court, either in the decree of July 14, 1879, or in the final decree of January, 1880, is by appeal to this court. We therefore forbear, at this time, any expression of opinion as to the existence or non-existence of errors in those decrees to the prejudice of either party. We decide nothing more, upon the present application, than that this is not a case which, in our judgment, calls for interposition by a writ of mandamus.
One of the reasons assigned in oral argument why the application for mandamus should be favorably considered, is that by the act of Congress of March 3, 1877, amending the act of June 2, 1872, the time within which the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad Company must complete its road as far south as Santa Fé, will expire on June 2, 1882; in default whereof, it will forfeit, as to the unfinished portion of the road, the rights and privileges granted by the act of 1872. The time limited, it is
We recognize the force of this suggestion, and feel it to be our duty, under the circumstances, to afford the parties an opportunity to secure an early and final determination of their respective rights in the premises. To that end, upon an appeal being perfected, and upon the filing in this court of a transcript of the record, we will hear a motion to advance this cause for consideration at the present term.
Mandamus denied.