Attorney General v. Erie & Kalamazoo Railroad

20 N.W. 696, 55 Mich. 15, 1884 Mich. LEXIS 426
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 20 N.W. 696 (Attorney General v. Erie & Kalamazoo Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Attorney General v. Erie & Kalamazoo Railroad, 20 N.W. 696, 55 Mich. 15, 1884 Mich. LEXIS 426 (Mich. 1884).

Opinions

Champlin, J.

As originally granted, the charter authorized the company to construct a railroad from Port Lawrence through or as near as practicable to the village of Adrian, and thence on the most eligible route to such point on the Kalamazoo river as they may deem most proper and useful. Important additional franchises were conferred upon the company by an amendment of its charter by an act approved March 26, 1835 (3 Terr. L. 1392). And by another amendment made in 1816, they were prohibited from constructing their road beyond the village of Adrian. The charter empowers the company to transport property and persons over their road by the force of steam or other power, and to charge and col[17]*17lect tolls for the same. Under the grant of power conferred by this charter, the Erie & Kalamazoo Railroad Company located and constructed its road from Port Lawrence (now Toledo) to Adrian. As located and constructed, the road passed through the village of Palmyra, at which a regular passenger and freight depot was established. In 1849 the Erie & Kalamazoo Railroad Company leased its road and franchises to the Michigan Southern Railroad Company, in perpetuity.

The Palmyra & Jacksonburg Railroad Company was chartered by the territorial legislature when the township of Port Lawrence constituted a portion of Monroe county. After the loss of the “ disputed ground ” by the Act of Congress defining the northern boundary of the state of Ohio and admitting -the State of Michigan into the Union, and the assent of Michigan thereto, the Legislature of this State passed an act by which the State agreed to release certain securities against the Palmyra & Jacksonburg Railroad Company, in consideration that it would release so much of its road as lay between the Michigan Southern road then owned by the State, and the Erie & Kalamazoo Railroad, and it was enacted that it should not be lawful for the Palmyra & Jacksonburg Company or its assignees ever to construct its road southerly beyond the Southern Railroad so as to connect with the Erii & Kalamazoo Railroad. Sess. L. 1846, p. 288. This legislation on the part of the State was in the interest of its own enterprise in building the Michigan Southern from Monroe to New Buffalo, by preventing the traffic which would pass over the Jacksonburg road from going to Toledo over the Erie & Kalamazoo road.

In 1846 the Michigan Southern Railroad Company was incorporated, and the-State sold to this corporation the Michigan Southern Railroad, and it undertook the completion- of the project which had been commenced by the State as part of her scheme of internal improvements. By the act of incorporation the Michigan Southern Railroad Company were bound to bnild the Tecumseh branch from the village of Tecumseh by way of the village of Clinton, and of Man-[18]*18Chester to the village of Jackson, along the line formerly authorized to be constructed by the Jacksonburg & Palmyra Railroad Company. The road from Tecumseh to Manchester was completed in 1855, and from there to Jackson in 1857. In 1856 the Michigan Southern & Northern Indiana Railroad Company, which was the successor of the Michigan Southern Railroad Company, constructed a road from a junction with the track of the Erie & Kalamazoo Company about 5000 feet east from the station at Palmyra village to a connection with the road of the Michigan Southern Company at Lenawee Junction, so called; said Lenawee Junction being the point at which the Jackson branch road of the Michigan Southern Company connects with its main line of road between Adrian and Monroe. The main object of constructing this piece of road was to save the necessity of transporting passengers and freight coming from the direction of Toledo, destined over the Jackson branch or over the main line, towards Monroe, or coming from the Jackson branch or from Monroe, destined towards Toledo, around by the way of Adrian, thus saving a distance of about eight miles. Another object was to avoid the heavy grades and reverse curves which existed on the line of the Erie & Kalamazoo Company’s road between Palmyra and Adrian.

There are several affidavits filed by the Attorney General in support of his application, from which it appears that the Erie & Kalamazoo Railroad Company, as early as 1835 or 1836, constructed its road between Adrian and the village of Palmyra substantially upon the line at present occupied by it, and that a general freight and passenger station was then established and has ever since until recently been maintained at Palmyra village; that this village contains about two hundred and twenty-five inhabitants, three stores, three blacksmith shops, one wagon shop, three halls, a graded schoolhouse, two churches, one steam saw-mill and one paper-mill; that it is the only village in a township containing about two thousand inhabitants; that soon after the completion of the road between Lenawee Junction and the Erie & Kalamazoo road east of Palmyra village, the company control[19]*19ling and operating said Erie & Kalamazoo Kailroad commenced gradually to withdraw the business which had been previously carried on over the Erie & Kalamazoo road between Palmyra and Adrian and to transfer it to the road to Lenawee Junction; but they still maintained depot facilities at Palmyra station and afforded the people all the usual accommodations at such station until 1867, when from that date to 1873 the railroad facilities at Palmyra station were still further diminished, and from 1873 the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Pailroad Company (who succeeded the Michigan Southern & Northern Indiana in 1869) has ceased and refused to deliver at said village freight in quantities less than car-loads; and since December 1, 1882 they have ceased to maintain any depot or station at Palmyra village, and have ceased to run freight and passenger trains over that portion of the Erie & Kalamazoo Pailroad lying between the cut-off about a mile east of Palmyra village, and the point of junction of the Erie &

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Bluebook (online)
20 N.W. 696, 55 Mich. 15, 1884 Mich. LEXIS 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-general-v-erie-kalamazoo-railroad-mich-1884.