Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Waters

66 A. 685, 105 Md. 396, 1907 Md. LEXIS 59
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 3, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 66 A. 685 (Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Waters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Waters, 66 A. 685, 105 Md. 396, 1907 Md. LEXIS 59 (Md. 1907).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company was chartered by ch. 123 of the Acts of Assembly in the year 1826, and by tlie fourteenth section of that Act the president and directors of.said company were “invested with all the rights and powers necessary to the construction and repair of a railroad from the city of Baltimore to some suitable point on the Ohio river, to be by them determined, not exceeding sixty-six feet wide, and with as many set of tracks as the said president and directors, or a majority of them may deem necessary; and in the same *398 section it was enacted “that they, or a majority of them, may make or cause to be made, lateral railroads, in any direction whatsoever, in connection with said railroad from the city of Baltimore to the Ohio river, and in the construction of the same, or their works, shall have, possess, and may exercise, all the rights and powers hereby given them in order to the construction or repair of the said railroad from the city of Baltimore to the Ohio river.”

Section 15 of the charter conferred upon the corporation ample powers of condemnation to be exercised “for the construction or repair of any of said roads, or of any of their works’’ and in sec. 23, the concluding section of the charter, it was provided, “That full right and privilege is hereby reserved to the citizens of this State, or any company hereafter to be incorporated under the authority of this State, to connect with the road hereby provided for, any other railroad leading from the main route to any part or parts of this State, provided, that in forming such connection, no injury shall be done to the works of the company hereby incorporated.”

The terminus upon the Ohio river was subsequently fixed at Wheeling then in Virginia, and the road was completed to that point and opened for business January 1st, 1853.

In April, 1906, the president and directors of this company, in pursuance of the authority conferred in section fourteen of its charter, determined to build a lateral railroad iñ connection with its railroad from the city of Baltimore to the Ohio river, from a point on its main line at or near Gorsuch Station in Carroll County, Maryland, through Baltimore County, and a portion of Harford County, to a connection with the Philadelphia Branch of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, between Van Bibber and Sewells Stations, to be known as the Patapsco and Susquehannah Branch of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, and have surveyed, located, and adopted the route or line of the same which is approximately forty miles in length, and passes several miles to the north of the city of Baltimore, effecting a saving of thirteen and a half *399 miles over the present line through the city of Baltimore, and relieving the congestion of freight and passenger traffic now passing through the tunnel from Camden Station to Mount Royal Station, and the tunnel beyond Mount Royal Station.

The descent over the main line from Gorsuch to the city of Baltimore, and the ascent over the Philadelphia Branch to Sewells, are by grades of about eight-tenths of one per cent, while by the proposed lateral line, the grades will be much lower and more even, being about three-tenths of one per cent for east bound traffic and five-tenths of one per cent for west bound traffic, the latter grade being higher, because the west bound freight is lighter and many cars returning are empty. This proposed lateral road runs through a tract of land in Baltimore County near Pikesville belonging to the appellee, and the appellant having taken the necessary steps to condemn the strip of land required for passage through said tract, the appellee filed a bill to enjoin the condemnation proceedings alleging that the defendant cannot exercise the power of condemnation “for constructing a steam railroad on the property of the appellee, not only because it is expressly prohibited from so doing by the Act of 1906, ch. 457, but also because the defendant has no such power under its charter, the said proposed road not being a lateral road within the meaning of the charter when properly construed.”

The defendant answered fully, averring that the proposed road is a lateral road within the meaning of its charter, and denying that the Act of 1906, ch. 457, is effectual to forbid the construction of the road. Testimony was taken, and after argument, the Circuit Court for Baltimore County perpetually enjoined the further prosecution of the condemnation proceedings, and from that decree this appeal is taken.

In the opinion filed with the decree, the learned Judge of the Circuit Court reached the conclusion that the proposed road was not a lateral railroad authorized by the charter to be built, and therefore did not find it necessary to consider the other question raised in the case, and we shall' follow this order of inquiry.

*400 The considerations which controlled the view of the Court below may be best stated in extracts from his brief but clear opinion. He found from the testimony of the president and general manager of the company that the proposed line “was intended to relieve the congestion in the freight yards and at the tunnels in the city of Baltimore, by running freight trains from the west over it, intendedfor the east, and running freight trains over it from the east, intended.for the west, so that zvestern a7id eastern freight, now passing through the city, will pass around it. * * * The charter of the Baltimore and Ohio R. R. Co., Act of 1826, ch. 123, was very liberal to the railroad, but it was intended to be, and was, a Maryland and Baltimore railroad; Baltimore was then, as now, the great metropolis of the State, and it was intended by the Legislature that this road should make Baltimore greater. It was the one. shipping port of the State of any importance, and the lawmakers at that time guarded with great caution its commerce,, and a suggestion at that time that the freight to be carried over the B. & O. Railroad for export would be shipped via Philadelphia or New York, would no doubt have been regarded as treasonable. The lawmakers at that time were not afraid that the freight over its line from the Ohio river to Baltimore would be diverted to some other port for export, for-the reason that there were no other railroads to carry it. So that the power .to build lateral railroads was a power to build branches to carry out the purpose for which the main line was built, towit, to develop the State, and make of Baltimore a great commercial city. In other words, a lateral roadas then understood, was, in the definition given by Bouvier; ‘a branch road running from some point on the main line, intended as a connecting line or feeder.’ There seems to be no legal straightedge to lay upon a railroad charter granting the right to build lateral lines (between its termini) to determine just what branches may be built under it. Every such charter, must be considered alone,, and what might be regarded in one,(ás a. lateral branch, might not be interpreted as such in another. So that if the intention of the Legislature granting the charter can- *401

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Bluebook (online)
66 A. 685, 105 Md. 396, 1907 Md. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-ohio-railroad-v-waters-md-1907.