Bond v. Murray

84 A. 655, 118 Md. 445, 1912 Md. LEXIS 43
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 10, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 84 A. 655 (Bond v. Murray) 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
Bond v. Murray, 84 A. 655, 118 Md. 445, 1912 Md. LEXIS 43 (Md. 1912).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit in ejectment brought by the appellants against the appellee, in the Circuit. Court for Allegany County to recover part of a tract of land, situate in the City of Cumberland, Aid., called “The Brothers,” containing eleven acres, three roods and ten poles.

The declaration avers, that Hugh R. Bond, Jr., Herbert B. Preston and George A. Colston, surviving trustees of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company, under and by virtue of the decree of the Circuit Court for Washington County, in Hos. 4191 and 4198 Equity, in said Court, for, on behalf of and in the name of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company, a corporation of the State of Maryland, duly incorporated under the laws thereof, and the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company, sue Margaret Murray for that heretofore, to wit: on the 13th day of June, 183J, the said Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company, at Allegany county, aforesaid, came into possession and was seized and possessed of all that' certain tract, lot or parcel of land lying and being in said county containing eleven acres, three roods and ten poles, that said parcel of land is part of a tract of land called “The. Brothers,” which is described in the condemnation proceedings of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company v. Mary Ann O’Neill, recorded in Judgment Bee *447 ords of Allegany County, in Liber Q, folio 538, etc., that Margaret Murray did on the 1st day of July, 1910, wrongfully enter the parcel of land and eject the plaintiff, and ever since has retained and still retains possession thereof. The plaintiffs then claim the recovery of the parcel of land and damages for its detention.

The case was heard, upon issue joined upon the plea of not guilty, and at the conclusion of the evidence upon the part of the plaintiffs the defendant offered a prayer, asking the Court to instruct the jury that there was no legally sufficient evidence to show legal title to the land, in controversy, to entitle the plaintiffs to recover, and the verdict must he for the defendant. This prayer was rejected by the Court, but leave was granted the defendant to file an additional plea by way of equitable defense, and as the action of the Court, in overruling the plaintiff’s demurrer to this plea presents the principal questions on this appeal, the plea will he set out in full. It is as follows:

For defense upon equitable grounds, the defendant further says, that the title to the land claimed in the declaration was vested in the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company by virtue of the proceedings in the condemnation case of said company against Mary Ann O’Neill in No.......Trials, ........Term, ........, and that the said Canal Company entered into possession thereof and used and occupied so much of the same as was necessary for its purposes of a canal and no more, in and about, the year 1838, and that at or about the time the Baltimore and Ohio Bailroad Company ocei^ied and entered upon and Lave since used and occupied a strip of land running through said property between the land occupied by the plaintiffs and that occupied by the defendant, without transfer or title from the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company within the linos of the condemnation aforesaid, and from thence hitherto, and that the defendant and those under whom she claims have for more than sixty years occupied by actual inclosure and possession, without any interference and from the Canal Company, its *448 trustees, officers and agents, the land in controversy in this case, and that one Crawford Black occupied and by regular deeds of conveyance divided, laid off and sold a portion of the land lying within the lines of said condemnation, lying east of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, without the consent of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company or any of its agents, and that one of the public streets of the City of Cumberland, called Thomas street, and another public street of said City, called German Lane, have been laid out, used and occupied continuously for forty years as public streets of the City of Cumberland, and that said two streets intersect said condemnation; that, for more than sixty years and ever since said condemnation, without leave, license, authority or interference of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company has maintained its tracks on said condemnation east of the canal towpath, and now Las a four-track system on said condemnation; that Sarah Riley for more than seventy years has resided on the said condemnation on a lot lying east of said canal and east of said railroad tracks in the house where she was born, and has exercised rights of ownership over said lot without interference from said Canal Company; that the lots of Myers and Ringler, the houses on which are intersected by one of the lines of said condemnation are situate ea,st of Thomas Street and German Lane; that on the lots of the defendant in this case is a large brick dwelling house erected more than sixty years ago in which she now resides with her mother, Catharine Johnson, and that said house was erected at great cost, and has with said Jots been occupied by the defendant and her mother for more than sixty years without interference of the said Canal Company; that the said railroad tracks are situate about thirty feet above the level of the canal and the lots and streets at a slightly higher elevation than the railroad, and are so situated as to be useless for the purpose of canal navigation, and the plaintiffs, or the said Canal Company or any of its officers, agents or trustees, never exercised any act of ownership *449 over any part of said condemnation lying east of the. canal, nor has it ever interfered with the occupancy of the same by the defendant or any other person, or with the said railroad, which has been operated as a through line, and is part of the main system of the B. & O. Railroad connecting the City of Baltimore, Maryland, with the cities of St. Louis and Chicago and intermediate points; and that by reason of a non-user and non-claim on the part of the Canal Company and its trustees and employees of any claim to the land on which the tracks of the B. & 0. Railroad are located, and those parts of the land claimed by the plaintiff lying east of the B. & O. Railroad, these defendants and those under whom they claim laid out and expended large sums of money in buildings and improvements and in the payment of taxes, and that it would be a fraud and inequitable for the plaintiffs to be permitted after the lapse of more than seventy years to eject this defendant from the premises aforesaid; and that all of said land and the land occupied and claimed by the defendant has been abandoned by the plaintiffs for more than sixty years before the bringing of this suit, and that the plaintiffs are equitably estopped from setting up any claim to the land so abandoned.

We think the Court committed an error in not sustaining the plaintiffs demurrer to this plea. It is manifestly a bad plea even by way of equitable defense, and is not a plea contemplated or permitted by the Act of 1888, Chapter 547, in actions at law.

In Williams v. Peters, 72 Md. 584, it is said, the facts which the Act allows a defendant to plead as an equitable defense in an action at law, are such facts as would entitle him-to relief in a Court of equity against the judgment, if recovered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 A. 655, 118 Md. 445, 1912 Md. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bond-v-murray-md-1912.