Akron & C. J. Ry. v. Sandusky, N. & M. Elec. Ry.

22 Ohio C.C. Dec. 608
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJuly 1, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ohio C.C. Dec. 608 (Akron & C. J. Ry. v. Sandusky, N. & M. Elec. Ry.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Akron & C. J. Ry. v. Sandusky, N. & M. Elec. Ry., 22 Ohio C.C. Dec. 608 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

PARKER, J.

This matter comes into this court hy way of appeal. An application was made to the court of common pleas by the Akron and Chicago Junction Railroad Company, under an act (97 O. L. 548; R. S. 3333-1; Gen. Code 8834) entitled “An act to amend section one, of an act entitled ‘An act to provide for one steam railroad’s crossing another steam railroad’ passed May 10, 1902, relating to the crossing of railroads” to require that the'crossing over its railroad proposed and designed by the Sandusky, Norwalk and Mansfield Electric Railway Company should be made otherwise than at grade crossing.

[609]*609From the order or judgment of the court of common pleas, •an appeal has been taken to this court, and we have heard the testimony of the witnesses pertaining to the reasonableness and practicability of the mode of crossing otherwise than at grade; we have also heard the arguments of counsel upon the matter and have also viewed the location of the proposed crossing.

It may be thought since we have arrived at a conclusion in the case very soon after the arguments were closed, that we may not have given the case as full consideration as it merits; but I may state to counsel and parties interested that we have had the matter under consideration ever since the case was opened to us and Judge Haynes and myself have had it somewhat under consideration ever since the matter was presented to us at chambers at Toledo, some time ago. We feel that we are about as well informed as to all the circumstances that should be taken into consideration as we would be if we should give the matter more extended consideration.

The railway company makes this application as the owner and operator of a steam railroad. At the point in question, it has double tracks, and it appears from the testimony that it •designs to have four tracks some time in the future; that the road is doing a great deal of business and that its business is rapidly increasing. Without doubt it is at. the present time (saying nothing of the purpose for the future) a main trunk line, and at this point many trains are run over its road, some •of them at a high rate of speed; this point lies not very near to any village, upon a straight piece of track and a high rate of speed may be attained.

On behalf of the company it is insisted that it would interfere materially with its traffic and with its operations if a grade crossing were established here, and that such a crossing would be likely to result in expense to it and in damage to the traveling public, both those traveling over its line of railroad and those traveling over the line of the electric railroad. It is proposed by the electric road to cross the steam road at this point at right angles. The electric road is now constructed over a distance of about twenty-five miles and it is designed to be ex[610]*610tended. It is said that its purpose, when it is fully constructed, when it has completed this crossing, is to run in the neighborhood of thirty cars per day. It appears that the steam railroad runs from forty to sixty trains per day over its line of road at this point.

. From this brief statement of facts, it will appear that this will be a very important crossing of the railroads, and one where we think that even if the greatest precautions were observed by all the parties operating upon either line, accidents would be very likely to occur.

In applying this statute and in construing it, we feel that we should have in mind and enforce the evident legislative policy of the state, as manifested not only in this statute, but in a number of other statutes upon the statute books of the state, in pari materia; and it is very plain that that policy is to avoid in the future, as far as reasonable and practicable, the construction of additional grade crossings, and to do away with grade crossings that are at present in existence.

The statutes to which I refer, other than the one applicable to this case, are found in R. S. 3337-8 to 3337-17; Gen. Code 8863-8873; and another statute of like character, R. S. 33, 37-17a to 3337-17h (Gen. Code 8874-8892), and the statute passed on April 25, 1904 (97 O. L. 546; R. S. 5332; Gen. Code 11605, et seq.), entitled “An act to provide how railroad and highway crossings may be constructed.”

Under this statute applicable to this case, it devolvés upon the court to ascertain, determine and define by its decree, the mode of crossing which will inflict the least possible injury upon the rights of the company owning and operating the road which is intended to be crossed and if, “in the judgment of said court, or said judge, it is reasonable and practicable to avoid a grade crossing, it shall by its process, prevent a .crossing at grade. ’ ’

It is obvious that the mode of crossing that would be the least injurious to the company making this application, would be some other mode than a grade crossing; that a grade crossing, in other words, would be the most injurious mode of crossing to that company.

[611]*611It is urged, however, that it does not necessarily follow that such crossing would interfere with absolute rights of the company; that the rights of the company to that part of its road not to have it crossed, are not of that high degree, or not of that character that should receive great consideration in opposition to the project and rights of the Electric R. R. Company; that its right, in other words, to operate its line of railway over the country, is subject to the rights of the public as represented by other public service corporations to cross over its tracks.

We agree that the statute, in speaking of the rights of the company whose road may be crossed, has in view rights which are not absolute, but which are qualified in the manner already suggested by counsel.

We have to consider, under the evidence, whether another mode of crossing is practicable, and as we understand the testimony of the engineers, as an engineering proposition, — as a physical question, — the practicability of an overhead crossing at this point is beyond question. It may be done, and that, we think, is all that is intended by the word “practicability” in this statute. But, as we understand the statute, such a cr'ossing is not to be required, unless it is reasonable as well as practicable; so we have to consider the question of the reasonableness of such a requirement.

It seems to us that the main question here is, whether as a business proposition it is reasonable to require this of the company, which has invested, or which purposes to invest its money in this project. We have discussed this and we’ have taken into consideration in this connection the cost that would devolve upon the electric road of maintaining a grade crossing at this point.

It is clear from the evidence that the actual cost to the electric road of maintaining a grade crossing at this point would be about $500 a year, certainly not much less, and perhaps not a great deal more than that. Taking that into consideration, and taking the loss of power which has been testified would result from the starting or the stopping of cars, and the starting of cars again, as they are required to do at grade crossings, the delays incident to such stoppages, and'to observe whether trains [612]*612are coming and to wait for trains, if they happen to be coming, •and the possibility — to put

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ohio C.C. Dec. 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/akron-c-j-ry-v-sandusky-n-m-elec-ry-ohiocirct-1906.