St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. of Texas v. Temple Northwestern Ry. Co.
St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. of Texas v. Temple Northwestern Ry. Co.
Opinion of the Court
In 1910, the Temple Northwestern Railway Company filed proceedings in the county court of Coryell county against the St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company of Texas, seeking to condemn 8Vi o acres of land out of the E. Norton survey, for right of way and other purposes. On the 16th of September, 1911, it recovered judgment in said court against appellant, condemning said land for such purposes, and awarding appellant damages therefor in the sum of $489.50, providing, however, that if said Temple Northwestern Railway Company, its successors and assigns, should fail, within 24 months from said date, to use said land for such purposes, the same should revert to appellant upon its repayment of said sum with 6 per cent, interest from date of said judgment. Thereafter 'the Temple Northwestern Railway Company became insolvent, and the Temple, Northwestern & Gulf Railway Company by purchase became its successor, and was legally entitled to all its franchises, rights, and property. On December 13, 1913, appellant paid to the trustees mentioned in said judgment the $489.50, together with 6 per cent, interest thereon from September 16, 1911, and filed its motion in said original condemnation proceedings in the county court of Coryell county, asking that said cause be reopened, alleging that the Temple Northwestern Railway Company had dissolved, and was no longer undertaking to carry out the purposes for which it was organized, and that neither it nor its successor, the Temple, Northwestern & Gulf Railway Company, had used said land for any or either of the purposes mentioned in said judgment within 24 months from date thereof, whereby it asserted that they had forfeited any right, title, or interest awarded to-them under said judgment The trustees answered, alleging that said payment was made voluntarily by appellant to them without any demand on their part therefor, and the Temple, Northwestern & Gulf Railway Company, filed its plea to the jurisdiction of the court, first on the ground that the county court had no right to pass upon such alleged forfeiture, for the reason that it involved title to real estate, and was further without jurisdiction to reopen said judgment after the expiration of two years from its rendition without allegations of fraud, accident, or mistake, and also answered, denying its failure to use said land within two years. The trial court sustained the plea to the jurisdiction for both reasons, from which judgment this appeal is taken.
“A right which one proprietor has to some profit, benefit, or lawful use out of or over the estate of another proprietor.” Washburn on Easements, 4.
By the judgment of the county court appel-lee was awarded an easement in and to the land for the purposes therein specified. It is true that said judgment likewise provided that upon a failure to use the land for the purposes named within 24 months it should *1075 revert to appellant. Tins right of forfeiture was dependent upon a condition subsequent, to wit, the failure to use within the time mentioned. See 6 Am. & Eng. Ency. Daw (2d Ed.) p. 500, subd. 5, wherein it is said:
“A condition subsequent is one that when it does or does not happen, is or is not performed, as the ease may be, defeats the estate.”
The easement which appellees acquired in said land was an interest therein, and could only be defeated by showing their failure to use the land for the purposes named within the time mentioned, and the determination of this question is, we think, peculiarly within the jurisdiction of the district court.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ST. LOUIS SOUTHWESTERN RY. CO. OF TEXAS v. TEMPLE NORTHWESTERN RY. CO. Et Al.
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