City of Long Beach v. Pacific Electric Railway Co.
Before: Shenk
SHENK, J.
This is an appeal from a judgment granting a nominal award of one dollar in a condemnation proceeding.
The defendant Pacific Electric Railway Company, hereinafter referred to as the company, is an interurban electric railway corporation. It has a right of way for its tracks along Long Beach Boulevard, a street running north and south in the city of Long Beach and intersecting Willow Street, a street running east and west. It owns an easement for “railroad purposes” on a tract of land located at the northeast corner of the intersection of Long Beach Boulevard and Willow Street. Beginning at 'Willow Street the easement runs more or less parallel with the company’s tracks on Long Beach Boulevard. Nowhere in the record does a precise description of the easement appear, but such a description is not essential to the determination of this appeal.
[601]
On January 30, 1951, the Long Beach city council adopted a resolution of intention to widen Willow Street by moving its northern line 20 feet further north over a portion of the area here involved. The strip sought for widening Willow Street was a part of the company’s easement but did not cross its tracks.
The company leased part of its easement, including the 20-foot strip, to a lumber company which operated and owned a building on the property. For the purpose of providing freight transportation for its lessee, the company maintained a spur track on the leased portion of the easement. For its own purposes, the company maintained two poles and connecting overhead facilities on the strip of land in question. At the time of the trial the lumber company building had been removed. .Counsel for the company stated that the building removal resulted from negotiations between the city and the lumber company.
By this proceeding, commenced on February 19, 1951, the city of Long Beach sought to obtain an easement for street purposes over the 20-foot strip. The dispute is over the amount of compensation. The city’s theory would require the payment of a nominal sum only for the proposed easement. The company maintains that it is entitled to recover the value of the property taken and the cost of moving and relocating the poles and overhead facilities required by the taking. It was stipulated by and between the parties: “That if the property over which plaintiff seeks to acquire an easement for street purposes is to be valued by the Court at other than a nominal valuation . . . the value thereof shall be fixed at the sum of . . . $2,150.00” and “That the widening of Willow Street as proposed will require relocation of two poles and connecting overhead facilities of . . . Pacific Electric ... at a cost of . . . $914.00, but will not require any other structural changes in the facilities of the defendants.”
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