Kan. Okla. & Gulf Ry. Co. v. Rogers

Decision Date16 September 1947
Docket NumberCase Number: 32683
Citation191 P.2d 209,200 Okla. 111,1947 OK 235
PartiesKANSAS OKLAHOMA & GULF RY. CO. v. ROGERS
CourtOklahoma Supreme Court
Syllabus

¶0 1. EASEMENTS - Railroad right of way - Abandonment - Question of fact.

To constitute abandonment of an easement there must not only be an actual relinquishment, but an intention to abandon, and this is a question of fact to be determined under all of the evidence.

2. RAILROADS - Easements - Judgment that railroad has abandoned easement for water reservoir and station purposes not against weight of evidence.

Record examined, and held, that the judgment of the trial court in a quiet title suit that the railroad company has abandoned the easement for water reservoir and water station purposes is not clearly against the weight of the evidence.

3. APPEAL AND ERROR - Harmless error - Rulings on evidence.

A judgment will not be reversed for error in the admission or rejection of evidence, unless the error results in a miscarriage of justice or constitutes a substantial violation of a constitutional or statutory right.

Appeal from District Court, Hughes County; Bob Howell, Judge.

Action by W.G. Rogers against the Kansas, Oklahoma & Gulf Railway Company. From judgment for plaintiff quieting title to land in controversy, defendant appeals. Affirmed.

Charles P. Gotwals and James D. Gibson, both of Muskogee, and Warren & Warren, of Holdenville, for plaintiff in error.

Charles L. Orr, of Oklahoma City, and A.M. Woodford, of Holdenville, for defendant in error.

HURST, C.J.

¶1 This is an action commenced on August 17, 1938, by W.G. Rogers to quiet title to a tract of land consisting of 27.75 acres on which the defendant railroad company had an easement for water reservoir and water station purposes. From the judgment in favor of plaintiff, quieting title in plaintiff to the land in controversy, except the regular right of way of the railroad, this appeal was taken.

¶2 The M., O. & G. Railroad Company, predecessor in title to the defendant railroad company, acquired an easement on some five acres of the tract in 1907 and built thereon a reservoir known as the Coal Creek Reservoir. In 1914 it acquired the rest of the tract and enlarged the reservoir. The defendant company succeeded to the right of the M., O. & G. Railroad Company about 1919. In 1907 a dam and a wooden water tank were erected on the property, and from that time until 1930 or 1931 the company took water from this water station for its steam engines. In 1927 the company began using water cars to service its steam engines and in 1930 or 1931 it discontinued the use of this tank and reservoir. Within a year or two thereafter, the water tank and pump house were dismantled and removed, with the knowledge and consent of the company's section foreman, and since that time the company has taken no water from said reservoir. About February, 1937, the dam broke and has never been rebuilt. The reservoir has grown up in willows, cottonwood trees, and other vegetation. The reservoir was never fenced off from the surrounding land, which belongs to plaintiff, and plaintiff has been using it for grazing purposes since the dam broke. It is agreed that the railroad acquired no greater rights than it would have acquired under the power of eminent domain.

¶3 After the company acquired the easement on the 27.75 acres, the plaintiff acquired title to the land surrounding the 27.75 acres including the servient estate in the 27.75 acres. He had constructive, if not actual, notice of the rights of the company at the time he purchased his land. The easement for regular right-of-way purposes is not involved in this case.

¶4 The company does not claim that any effort to maintain the reservoir and water station has been made since 1931, when the use of water was discontinued, but introduced evidence to the effect that it is cheaper to rebuild such an installation than to maintain it when not used. The general superintendent testified that the company does not have any immediate need for the use of water from the reservoir, but he would not say that it would never have any use for the water. There was evidence on behalf of the company that certain concrete foundations remained, upon which the water tank and pump house could be rebuilt. Plaintiff testified that in his opinion these foundations were not in satisfactory condition upon which to rebuild.

¶5 Defendant's witness, R.H. Lomax, tax agent for the defendant, testified that the valuation record filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission in 1919 includes the land in controversy and that this land has not been eliminated from the record as required when land is abandoned or released. This witness further testified that the land in controversy was included in the return made in 1932 to the Oklahoma Tax Commission, which report is the basis for payment of taxes on such lands; that upon any change in ownership in the land reported such change must be reported; and that no change has been reported. Plaintiff, on the other hand, testified he paid taxes on all the land for some years previous to the trial.

¶6 Under the stipulation that the rights of the railroad acquired were only such "as could be obtained under condemnation proceedings," the railroad acquired in these lands only an easement which ceases upon abandonment. Section 24, art. 2, Oklahoma Constitution; Marland v. Gillespie, 168 Okla. 376, 33 P.2d 207. Therefore, the single question presented is: Has this right of way been abandoned by the railroad?

¶7 We have considered the question of the abandonment of an easement of right of way previously and have announced certain principles of law applicable here. To constitute abandonment of an easement for right-of-way purposes, there must not only be an actual relinquishment, but an intention to abandon, and this is a question of fact to be determined under all the evidence. Canadian River R. Co. v. Wichita Falls & N.W. R. Co., 64 Okla. 62, 166 P. 163; Santa Fe, L. & E. R. Co. v. Wichita Falls & N.W. R. Co., 64 Okla. 88, 166 P. 168; Fink v. Midland Valley R. Co., 100 Okla. 23, 227 P. 146. In C., & E. I. R. Co. v. Clapp, 201 Ill. 418, 66 N.E. 223, quoted in Canadian River R. Co. v. Wichita Falls & N.W. R. Co., supra, the court said:

"Appellant insists that the evidence in the case was insufficient to show an intention to abandon upon the part of the appellant company. It is true that nonuser for a definite fixed period is not of itself sufficient to establish an abandonment, but when 'the nonuser is accompanied by acts on the part either of the owner of the dominant or servient tenement, which manifest an intention to abandon, and which either destroys the object for which the easement was created, or the means of its enjoyment, an abandonment will take place'."

¶8 1. The defendant urges that the fact that this land was included in the 1932 report to the Oklahoma Tax Commission and that taxes were paid every year since, based upon this report, in conclusive that it had no intention of abandoning this easement. It cites People v. Southern Pac. Co. et al., 172 Cal. 692, 158 P. 177. We cannot agree with this contention. The cited California case involved a right of way over public lands granted by the state, and the lands there under consideration were described in annual statements for taxation, as part of their right of way under the provisions of the Political Code of that state. Here the evidence concerning the report for taxes is not conclusive as to the intention to retain the easement for the water reservoir and station. The report itself is not in the record. Only the testimony of Mr. Lomas, the tax agent for the company, is before us in this connection. He referred to a report or statement required by section 12400, O.S. 1931, which by Session Laws of 1931, ch. 66, p. 220, was required to be made to the Oklahoma Tax Commission. It is plain that under section 12400 the company was required to schedule all of its right of way, track and roadbed, and list its water stations and machinery and tanks in connection therewith in detail as to location. We consider this report of special importance in connection with the intention of the company to abandon since it was made and filed after the company had discontinued the use of water from the reservoir in 1930 or 1931.

¶9 The testimony of Mr. Lomax as to the report when compared with the map of Coal Creek Reservoir showing the boundaries and areas of the reservoir and the regular right of way for track and roadbed purposes and also with the judgment of the trial court, justifies the conclusion that the right of way for reservoir and water station purposes was not reported at all in 1932 and only the regular right of way for track and roadbed purposes was scheduled in the statement made at that time.

¶10 Three things are apparent from such a comparison: (1) the acreage reported by the company in 1932 (28.88 acres) is only one-half, approximately, of the total acreage of both the regular right of way and the right of way for water purposes within the two sections; (2) the acreage held to be regular right of way by the trial court is almost identical in amount and location with the three tracts identified in the testimony of Mr. Lomax; and (3) the testimony as to the report does not show that any right-of-way claim was scheduled at all in one quarter section, which, according to the judgment of the trial court and the map, contains approximately one-half of the acreage of the water reservoir.

¶11 The contention of the defendant that changes in runs or the addition of certain runs, or the requirement because of increased tonnage that water cars be discontinued, does not seem to be strong evidence of the lack of intention to...

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