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Gulf S.I.R. Co. v. Town of Collins

Supreme Court of Mississippi, Division B
Apr 14, 1930
127 So. 770 (Miss. 1930)

Opinion

No. 28644.

April 14, 1930.

MANDAMUS. Crossings. Town ordinance. Mandamus. Railroad could not be required by mandamus to open and maintain crossing, as provided by town ordinance.

The railroad was the owner of right of way by original deed from owners of soil, and had never parted with same by deed, grant, dedication, or by prescription, and the town had taken no steps whatever to obtain the right of way sought either by grant or by condemnation.

APPEAL from circuit court of Covington County. HON.W.L. CRANFORD, Judge.

T.J. Wills, of Hattiesburg, E.L. Dent, of Collins, and Chas. N. Burch, of Memphis, Tennessee, for appellant.

The railroad company never having dedicated a street or conveyed a street across its right of way at the point opposite First street south or East First street on the east side, the town and the public had no right to appropriate the said right of way for street purposes.

I.C.R.R. Co. v. The State, 94 Miss. 759, 48 So. 561; Illinois Central R.R. Co. v. Highway Commissioners of Mattoon, 161 Ill. 247, 43 N.E. 1100.

The mandamus would not issue for the reason that the city had the power of eminent domain.

Section 6773, Hemingway's Code of 1927; Section 3337, Code of 1906.

The petition would not lie because there is a plain, adequate and complete remedy at law.

Section 2709, Hemingway's Code 1927; Section 3231, Code of 1906; Hamlin v. Southern Railroad Company, 76 Miss. 410, 25 So. 295.

W.U. Corley and H.M. McIntosh, both of Collins, for appellee.

The purpose of the writ of mandamus is to enforce the performance of a duty and where a positive official duty is enjoined by law upon any court, board or officer and no discretion is given as to the mode or manner of performing, mandamus is the proper remedy to compel is performance. 26 Cyc. 157.

Section 2533, Hemingway's Code.

Municipality holds titles to streets in trust for the public and in absence of legislative authority cannot appropriate them to benefit of private persons, or divert them from uses to which they were originally dedicated.

115 So. 165.

The street in this case belonged to the city and could not be closed, except as provided by law.

Section 5833, Hemingway's Code; Laurel v. Rowell, 84 Miss. 435, 104 Miss. 94; Polk v. City of Hattiesburg, 69 So. 675; Elliott on Road and Streets, 315; Polk v. City of Hattiesburg, 69 So. 675.

Mandamus was the proper remedy in this case.

Florida Central R.R. v. State, 34 Am. St. Rep. 30; Chicago R.R. v. State, 53 Am. St. Rep. 571; Oshkosh v. Mil. R.R. Co., 17 Am. St. Rep. 177; Cumberland Tel. Tel. Co. v. Morgan et al., 24 So. 808; Hamline v. So. R.R. Co., 76 Miss. 410; State ex rel. Grady v. Chicago, M. N.R.R., 12 L.R.A. 180.

Code 1892, section 3555, requiring a railroad company to make easy grades over a highway, which its road crosses and to keep such crossing in good order applies to city streets as well as roads in country.

Hamlin v. So. Ry. Co., 25 So. 295; I.C.R. Co. v. Copiah Co., 81 Miss. 685; Railroad v. Swann, 83 Miss. 638, 228, 70 S.E. 171; Sutton v. Gray Lbr. Co., 3 Ga. App. 377, 60 S.E. 2; Smith v. Salem Brick Lumber Co., 118 So. 180, 151 Miss. 329.


On March 8, 1899, the railroad company obtained from the owners of the land here involved a right of way deed to a strip one hundred feet wide, upon which strip the line of the railroad was soon thereafter built. On September 15, 1899, the owners of the land through which said railroad right of way extended made their deed to said land to W.R. Holloway as trustee, and said trustee on October 19, 1899, filed his town plat of the lands thus conveyed to him, so far as said lands were located to the west and south of said railroad right of way. On February 20, 1900, said trustee, together with other individual owners, filed an enlarged town plat, on which twelve lots appear to be laid off on the east side of said railroad, but on neither of said town plats do any of the streets appear to cross the railroad, besides which the railroad does not appear in any way to have joined in any street dedications.

On these plats an avenue twenty or twenty-five feet wide is shown as running parallel with and adjoining the railroad right of way on the west side, throughout the entire length of the said plat. It appears from the testimony that the depot was first built on the east side of the track, but in 1906 it was decided, apparently by all in interest, that the said depot should be removed to the west side. Accordingly, on May 19, 1906, the railroad company obtained from Holloway, trustee, a deed to the twenty-five foot avenue above mentioned from Main street southward for a distance of seven hundred thirty feet; and on June 5, 1906, the town council passed an order closing the said avenue as a city thoroughfare, and on the same date another order allowing the removal of said depot and the use of the closed avenue aforementioned for depot purposes. The railroad availed of the privilege, and thereupon moved the depot; and the strip mentioned, as well as the adjoining right of way not covered by tracks, has ever since been used by the railroad for its depot and depot grounds.

On February 5, 1929, the mayor and board of aldermen passed an order reciting that a "public street and highway forty feet in width be and the same is hereby established, created, and ordered over and across the right of way and railroad of the Gulf Ship Island Railroad Company so as to connect and make complete First Street South and East First street;" and it was further ordered that clerk furnish the railroad with a certified copy of said ordinance. Thereafter a petition for a writ of mandamus was filed, averrring that the railroad had not complied with the notice, and praying that the said railroad company be compelled to open, grade, and properly maintain said crossing. The railroad company answered the petition, and showed that it is the owner of said one hundred foot right of way by original deed from the owners of the soil as heretofore mentioned, that it has never parted with same by deed, grant, dedication, or by prescription, and that the town has taken no steps whatever to obtain the right sought either by grant or by condemnation.

It is not disputed that the said crossing or additional street mentioned in the aforesaid order extends upon the premises hereinbefore described. It is not contended that there has been any grant of any street rights by the railroad or that it has joined in any dedications in respect thereto. There was some effort to show that there was at one time some sort of a street crossing at the point, but the testimony in this respect is insubstantial; besides which there is the insurmountable obstacle to any claim by prescription in the fact that, in 1906, before the ten years' prescriptive period could have run, the city closed the said crossing by the aforementioned order of June 5th of that year, and the railroad took and held possession thence forward of the entire premises. And it is immaterial that this order may have been invalid, for, whether valid or invalid, it did operate to do away, in point of fact, with any crossing that had been there, and to stop the running of the prescriptive period against the railroad company on account of any such crossing, if any there had been.

It is therefore clear that the case is controlled by Illinois Cent. R. Co. v. State, 94 Miss. 759, 48 So. 561. The requisite right and title in land cannot be transferred to a municipal corporation by the mere order or fiat of the municipal authorities that the land in question shall be and become a street; and such an order or fiat of the town is substantially all that it has to stand upon in this case, according to the record before us. Until the town acquires right and title in one of the manners established by law, it cannot maintain proceedings of a mandatory nature, as has here been attempted.

Reversed and dismissed.


Summaries of

Gulf S.I.R. Co. v. Town of Collins

Supreme Court of Mississippi, Division B
Apr 14, 1930
127 So. 770 (Miss. 1930)
Case details for

Gulf S.I.R. Co. v. Town of Collins

Case Details

Full title:GULF SHIP ISLAND R. CO. v. TOWN OF COLLINS

Court:Supreme Court of Mississippi, Division B

Date published: Apr 14, 1930

Citations

127 So. 770 (Miss. 1930)
127 So. 770

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