Baird v. Erie Railroad

72 Misc. 162, 129 N.Y.S. 329
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 72 Misc. 162 (Baird v. Erie Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baird v. Erie Railroad, 72 Misc. 162, 129 N.Y.S. 329 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Marcus, J.

This action is brought by plaintiff as assignee of the rights and claims of the Union Iron Company of Buffalo and of the Union Iron Works, Buffalo, N. Y., to secure the reformation of an instrument, dated February 24, 1896, granting certain switching rates, and wherein the defendant the Erie Railroad Company is named as party of the first part, and the Buffalo Furnace Company party of the second part, and for the recovery of switching charges in excess of those stipulated, paid, under protest, to the railroad company. Plaintiff asks that the clause in the second [164]*164paragraph and near the beginning of said agreement, whereby the switching rates given are limited to two “ furnaces operated by the party of the second part,” shall be amplified so- as to apply to furnaces when operated by parties other than the Buffalo Furnace Company, the party of the second part, and thus accord with the last clause inserted at the end of said contract, just before its execution, which provided that, “ if the said furnaces, or either of them, shall be operated by other parties than the Buffalo Furnace Company, said parties so operating shall have the benefit of the switching rates named herein during the term of this contract.”

The ground upon which plaintiff seeks such reformation is that the-first of the above clauses was -left in said contract after the new clause was added, under a misapprehension by all of the parties thereto as to the legal effect of the two when read together, it being mutually understood that the newly inserted clause was intended to give the. switching rates to two furnaces, if operated by parties other than the Buffalo Furnace Company, as well as when operated by that company; and that plaintiff and his predecessors in interest did not learn of, and were not chargeable with knowledge of, the legal effect of such contract, 'as it was allowed to stand, with both clauses left in, until the courts, in an action at law, brought upon the contract as it was, to recover excessive freight charges, determined that the switching rates under the contract, as it stood, were available only to furnaces operated by the Buffalo Furnace Company, or its technical successors1, or assigns. In the action at law, a non-suit was granted, „ which was affirmed on appeal by the Appellate Division. Thompson v. Erie R. R. Co., 96 App. Div. 539.

In entering upon the consideration of this case, the court has in mind the proper and well-established rule that, to enable a plaintiff to succeed in an action for reformation, his proof must amount to more than a bare preponderance of evidence, which leaves the issue in doubt; that it must be clear, unequivocal, satisfactory and convincing. Southard v. Curley, 134 N. Y. 148, 155; Nevius v. Dunlap, 33 id. 676. A brief survey of the facts disclosed upon the present [165]*165trial is necessary to afford a proper basis for a consideration of the legal effect of the evidence and its force. As there is a great similarity in the names of various parties involved, it is necessary to keep the particular title of the different companies constantly in mind.

The defendant the Union Iron Company of Buffalo has, during all these times embraced in the present litigation, been the owner of a large tract of land of about fifty-two acres in the southeasterly portion of Buffalo, and its entire tract has been known for many years as “ Union Iron Works,” more or less of the premises having from time to time been occupied by blast furnaces. These lands were bounded on the north by two main freight tracks of the ¡New York, Lake Erie and Western Railroad Company, which was afterward reorganized into the defendant the Erie Railroad Company. Immediately south of these lands was a large tract owned by the railroad company itself, known as Farmer’s Point.

Mr. Baird, the plaintiff, became interested in the Union Iron Works property prior to 1892, being connected as an officer and stockholder with the company’s operating. blast furnaces thereon, and in 1892 obtained a ten-year lease of a little less than the southerly half thereof, upon which he completed a blast furnace, thereafter known as “ Furnace A.” Later on in the same year Mr. Baird organized the Buffalo Furnace Company, one of the parties to the agreement in controversy, and assigned to it his lease. Under this lease the lessee had certain rights to use and lay tracks through, and to store material upon, the remainder of the Buffalo Furnace Company’s entire tract of land, lying north of and between its lands and 'the railroad ’company’s tracks, and practically was in possession of the entire tract until 1896.

In the latter part of 1892, negotiations were had between Mr. Baird and Mr. Brunn, the superintendent of the western division of the ¡NTew York, Lake Erie and Western Railroad Company, looking to the acquirement by the railroad company of a double-track right of wiay southerly from its freight tracks and through the entire tract of land of the [166]*166Union Iron Company of Buffalo to the lands owned by the railroad company and known as Farmer’s Point, lying southerly of the said lands of the Union Iron Company of Buffalo, in exchange for favorable switching rates to be granted by the railroad company. In the course of these early negotiations, and in January, 1893, .a draft of a proposed written agreement was drawn up between the railroad company and the Buffalo Furnace Company, providing for switching rates from the works of said Buffalo Furnace Company to various railroads, which, however, was not accepted by either party, nor ever executed. Hr. Baird had no recollection of this agreement, when questioned in regard thereto upon the trial, but it is undisputed that the parties came to no agreement at the time and that negotiations in regard to the matter were dropped and abandoned on both sides for about two years and not resumed until 1894 or 1895. Hr. Baird then took up the question anew with Hr. Even B. Thomas, who wias successively first vice-president and president of the railroad company, was appointed one of its receivers in April, 1895, and became the president of the reorganized Erie. Railroad Company, the defendant herein, '¡November •14, 1895.

Hr. Baird testified that Hr. Thomas visited the property in question with him and that they saw Furnace A” of the Buffalo Furnace Company, and that he pointed out to Hr. Thomas where he proposed to erect a second furnace, thereafter known as Furnace B,” upon the northerly portion of the lands of the Union Iron Company of Buffalo. Hr. Baird states that he entered upon negotiations with Hr. Thomas, which finally resulted in an oral agreement, made in September, 1895, between the Union Iron Company of Buffalo, the Buffalo Furnace Company and the railroad company and its receivers, whereby it was agreed that the Union Iron Company of Buffalo, with the consent of the tenant, the Buffalo Furnace Company, should convey to the railroad company a double-tnaclc right of way from the railroad company’s main tracks, through the lands of the Union. Iron Company of Buffalo, to the railroad company’s lands south thereof, and that, in consideration thereof, the ■ rail[167]*167road company should, for fifteen years, switch cars to and from two blast furnaces, located or to be located up.on the entire tract of land owned by the Union Iron Company of Buffalo, by whomsoever operated, at certain stipulated rates as to different trunk lines in Buffalo to which such switching should be done.

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
72 Misc. 162, 129 N.Y.S. 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baird-v-erie-railroad-nysupct-1911.