St. Louis Transfer Railway Co. v. St. Louis Merchants Bridge Terminal Railway Co.

Brace, J.

By the constitution and laws of this ' state every railroad corporation “organized for the purpose” has “the right to construct and operate a railroad between any points within this state,” and “with its road to intersect, connect with or cross any other railroad,” and to “construct its road across, along or upon any street,” with the assent of the corporate authorities of the city in which such street is situate. Constitution, art. 12, secs. 13, 14, 20; Eevised Statutes, 1889, secs. 2543, 2626.

By its charter the mayor and assembly of the city of St. Louis have power within the city “by ordinance not inconsistent with the constitution or any law of this state,” or of its charter, to “regulate the use of the streets of the city,” and “to grant to persons or corporations the right to construct railways in the city, subject to the right to amend, alter or repeal any such grant in whole or in part, and to regulate and control the same as to their fares, hours and frequency of trips, and the repair of their tracks, and the kind of their rails and vehicles.” Scheme & Charter, art. 3, secs. 2611, 2612.

The plaintiff is a duly incorporated railroad company organized for the purpose of constructing and operating a line of railroad 'within the city, along a route beginning at or near the crossing of Arsenal street by the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern railroad in the southern portion of the city to a point near the waterworks in the northern portion of the city *674to foe used in. the business of conveying persons and property, and “especially of transferring cars to and from manufacturing and business establishments along its route, and to and from other railroads and- ferryboats.”

Defendant is also a duly incorporated company, organized for the purpose of Constructing and operating a railroad connecting the Merchants bridge over the Mississippi river at Eerry street with the Union Depot, and all other railroads terminating in the city, to be used in a similar line of business.

By an ordinance approved June 11, 1884, and subsequent ordinances approved December 15, 1885, and February 18, 1886, the plaintiff was authorized to construct and operate its railroad between its terminal points aforesaid'across, on and along certain streets in said ordinance designated, and, among others, on and along Hall street between Bremen avenue and .North Market street, a distance of about one mile, on which it was authorized to lay a double track in accordance with plans to be approved by the board of public improvements; and with like approval to “connect their tracks by switches and sidetracks with any warehouse, factory, store, lumber, coal or stock yards, or depot yards, and transfer boats of any transportation company or other commercial or manufacturing establishment located adjacent to the railway of said company; said switches and sidetracks shall be so constructed as in no manner to interfere with the public use of the streets or alleys across which they may be laid, and they shall be removed by said company whenever it shall] be so directed by the municipal assembly.”

Afterwards, by an ordinance approved July 9, 1887, the defendant company was authorized to construct and operate its railroad with double tracks *675between the Union Depot and Chain of Rocks, in said city, across, on and along certain streets, in said ordinance designated, and among others on and along that part of Hall street, on and along the center of which the plaintiff by the precedent ordinances was authorized to lay and operate its tracks; provided, “that the tracks of said company shall be so laid as not to injure or destroy any tracks now laid by any other corporation, and provided, further, that the location of the route of said railway shall not in any manner interfere with any unforfeited rights of way heretofore granted by the municipal assembly by proper ordinances.”

It appears from the evidence that Hall street between North Market street‘and Bremen avenue is one hundred feet wide, without pavements, lamp posts or sidewalks. It lies through bottom lands which the Mississippi river overflows in times of high water. The adjoining property is for the most part used for sawmills and lumber yards, of which there are some seven or eight in this distance of one mile. Besides these industries there are the Union stock yards at Bremen avenue and the Mallinckrodt chemical works at Salisbury street.

At the date of the passage of the ordinance authorizing the defendant to lay its tracks on Hall street, the plaintiff had constructed its double track railway along the center of that part of Hall street in controversy, and some switches connecting the same with premises occupied on either side of said street; and in the spring of 1889 was operating its main tracks and some four or five of such switches on, along and across said part of said street, when the defendant proposed under the authority of its said ordinance to lay down and operate its double track railway on that part of said street.

*676Whereupon this action by injunction was commenced in the circuit court of St. Louis to restrain the defendant from constructing its proposed railway along Hall street, and from laying any tracks, sidetracks or switches over or along said street. A temporary injunction was granted and the case afterwards coming on to be heard on the merits in term, after issue joined, the issues were found for the defendant, the injunction dissolved, plaintiff’s bill dismissed, the damages assessed, and final judgment rendered in favor of defendant for the amount thereof, and plaintiff appealed.

It appears, that at the time the temporary injunction was applied for and granted, the defendant was engaged in constructing, and had filed with the board of public improvements a map or plan of, its proposed railway, including a track on Hall street; and on the trial produced two plans for the proposed construction thereof along Hall street. One of these plans contemplated the laying of a single track on Hall' street from North Market to Bremen avenue on either side of plaintiff’s double track in the center of said street; while the other contemplated the laying of a double track by defendant on Hall street from North Market to Dock street on one side of plaintiff’s tracks, then crossing those of plaintiff and continuing for the remaining distance of Hall street on the other side of plaintiff’s track. If the latter plan be adopted defendant’s double tracks would cross one of plaintiff ’s switches between Destrehan and Salisbury street, its main double track line at Dock street, and one of its switches between Montgomery and North Market streets. If the first'plan be adopted defendant’s eastern single track would cross one of plaintiff’s switches between Destrehan and Salisbury street, one at Dock street, and one at St. Louis avenue, and the main *677double track between Warren and North Market streets; and its western single track would cross plaintiff’s double track at Bremen avenue, one of its switches at Mallinckrodt street, one at Dock street, and one at Montgomery street.

The evidence tended to show that the width of Hall street (one hundred feet) was amply sufficient for the construction and operation of both lines of railroad upon it as provided for in the ordinances, according to either of the plans proposed; that the only interference in the operation of either would be the necessary delay in the movements of its trains or cars at the crossings when that space should at the time be occupied by the trains or ears of the other moving over the same crossing.

From the evidence of the business now being done on plaintiff’s road in the street and the immediate use the defendant proposes to make of the street for its business, it is apparent that the business of both can be conducted on the street for the purposes for which they were created without serious injury to the interests of either; and while it is true that these delays in the operation of plaintiff’s road will be increased and the difficulties and dangers attendant upon such operation enhanced as the business of each road in the street increases, yet it is far from appearing that the legitimate operation of both would ever become impracticable under such reasonable rules and regulations as self interest would dictate that each should observe in moving its trains and cars, and that might be prescribed by the city in the exercise of its legitimate power to regulate the use of its streets. And while the value of plaintiff’s franchise will be depreciated to the extent of the inconvenience and delay occasioned by such crossings as the result of a healthy competition with it by the defendant’s road for a class of business *678necessary to be done for the public good which alone affords a reasonable pretext for the existence of either road in the streets of the city. Such depreciation is u damnum absque injuria,” since the city could not grant the plaintiff an exclusive right to the use of the street for its business. Railroad v. Railroad, 97 Mo. 457. On account of such depreciation plaintiff cannot complain, since its own grant was dependent on the condition that its tracks should be so constructed and operated as not to interfere with the public use of the street; such being the character of the use to which defendant proposes alone to subject it.

The learned counsel for the plaintiff concedes that plaintiff’s right under its prior ordinance “is not exclusive, in the sense that no other citizen could use the street as a highway, or that no other railroad company could obtain permission from the city in accordance with law to lay a railroad thereon, but insists that it is an exclusive right in the sense that no other person or corporation can lawfully construct or operate a railroad on that street except by permission of the municipal authorities, and also that no person or corporation, obtaining such permission can lawfully construct or operate a railroad on said street except upon the compliance with the conditions prescribed; and it is maintained that the defendant acquired no right to construct and operate its railroad on Hall street by virtue of the ordinance authorizing it so to do, for the reason that it cannot comply with the conditions contained in the provisos thereof, “that the tracks of said company shall be so laid as not to injure or destroy any tracks now laid by any other corporation, and that the location of the route of said railway shall not in any manner interfere with any unforfeited rights of way heretofore granted by the municipal assembly by proper ordinance.”

*679It appears from the evidence that the main line of defendant’s track with some of its switches was laid in Hall street at the time the defendant’s ordinance was passed. The assembly knowing the condition of the street, and the public use to which it was subjected by plaintiff with its- assent, proposed in unmistakable terms to subject the street to another public use of a similar character by the defendant; in doing so however, it did not propose to deprive the plaintiff corporation of the use by it of the street to which the assembly had theretofore assented, which use was subject to the right of every other citizen and of every railroad company having the assent of the city authorities to cross its tracks in the legitimate pursuit of their business. Hence, the proviso. The defendant in constructing and operating its road in the street is not to injure or destroy any tracks already laid by the plaintiff, or to so lay its tracks as to interfere with any unforfeited right of plaintiff to lay and operate other tracks on said street. This is, we think, the plain and obvious meaning of the proviso; and when so construed it is also obvious that the defendant can construct its railroad in said street as it proposes to do, without injuring or destroying plaintiff’s tracks and without interfering with any right plaintiff may have to lay down and operate other tracks in said street.

The vice of the argument of plaintiff’s counsel by which the privilege of laying down and operating its tracks in Hall street, granted in express terms in the ordinance, is sought to be rendered entirely nugatory, by the provision that they must be so laid as not to interfere with any unforfeited rights of way theretofore granted by the assembly to the plaintiff, is in assuming that the assembly by the term “right of way” meant an absolute and unrestricted right of way, such as one might acquire by grant over the iand of another or by a railroad company by the exercise of the power of eminent *680domain over private property. The assembly conld not have intended the expression to bear such a meaning ; for it was not within the power of the assembly to make such a grant. The privilege which a railroad company acquires by the assent of the city authorities that its tracks may be laid down and operated in the streets of the city can never be more than a qualified right to the use of the street as a public highway in common with every other citizen, and as no one assembly can by giving its assent to one company limit the power of a subsequent assembly to give a like assent to another, the right is further restricted to the use of the street as a highway in common with any other railroad company acquiring a similar right in the same street by the assent of the city authorities. For convenience this privilege may be, and, in common parlance, is, called a right of way, but it is far from being an absolute and unconditional one, such as admits of no obstruction by crossing or otherwise without consent, and is always burdened by the right which every railroad has to cross the tracks of another imposed by statute law. It was this privilege, this qualified right of way of plaintiff in Hall street which was not to be interfered with, and which will not be interfered with, within the meaning of the ordinance by the defendant in laying down its tracks and operating them as it proposes to do upon territory in said street not occupied by the tracks of the plaintiff already, or which it has a right by ordinance to occupy for that purpose, whenever in the future it may have occasion so to do.

The right to cross plaintiff’s tracks in the street is derived not from the ordinance giving assent, but from the general law of the land, and is the only interference to which plaintiff will be subjected.

The judgment of the circuit court is for the right party, and is affirmed.

All concur, except Babclay, J., not sitting.