Chicago, Indiana & Southern Railroad v. Taylor

108 N.E. 1, 183 Ind. 240, 1915 Ind. LEXIS 48
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1915
DocketNo. 22,440
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 108 N.E. 1 (Chicago, Indiana & Southern Railroad v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, Indiana & Southern Railroad v. Taylor, 108 N.E. 1, 183 Ind. 240, 1915 Ind. LEXIS 48 (Ind. 1915).

Opinion

Spencer, J.

— This is an appeal from a judgment rendered against the Chicago, Indiana and Southern Railroad Company, hereinafter referred to as appellant, in an action instituted by appellee to recover his interest in certain property which, at the time of suit, had passed into the ownership and control of said company. The complaint was in one paragraph to which each of the defendants addressed a separate demurrer. These demurrers were overruled and the alleged error in such ruling as to the demurrer filed by appellant company is the first question presented for our consideration. Said demurrer challenged the complaint on two grounds: (1) that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and (2) that several causes of action were improperly joined therein.

1. The code expressly provides that “No judgment shall ever be reversed for any error committed in sustaining or overruling a demurrer for misjoinder of causes of action.” §346 Burns 1914, §341 R. S. 1881. It also provides that “no objection taken by demurrer, and overruled, shall be sufficient to reverse the judgment, if - it appear from the whole record that the merits of the cause have .been fairly determined.” §350 Burns*1914, §345 R. S. 1881. Substantially the same questions raised by the ruling on the demurrer for want of facts are presented by appellant’s exceptions to the conclusions of law based on a special finding of facts made at the request of defendants. For the purpose, therefore, of determining whether the ease has been fairly tried and the right result reached, we pass to a consideration of said exceptions to the conclusions of law and to appellant’s motion for a new trial.

The special finding is lengthy and contains many facts which are evidentiary in character and which we deem it [242]*242■unnecessary to set out in this opinion. It appears, however, that in 1899, appellee, having had experience in surveying and locating railroads, conceived the idea of building a road from Terre TIaute, Indiana, to West Lebanon, Indiana, and thence reach Chicago by a connecting line. To that end he organized and incorporated the Covington and Southern Railway Company and procured options on the towpath of the abandoned Wabash and Erie canals between Terre Haute and Covington, Indiana, a distance of fourteen miles. In September, 1900, the name of the Covington and Southern Railway Company was changed to the Chicago, Covington and Southern Railway Company and the northern terminus of said road was changed to Hammond, Indiana, the purpose and plan being to reach Chicago by a connecting line from that point. Certain surveys were made by appellee and others with a view of locating said railroad and expenses were incurred therein, some of -which were paid by appellee personally. In March, 1911, defendants Kent and McCray, learning of the operations of appellee by and through the Chicago, Covington and Southern Railway Company, sought a meeting with him and at said meeting requested appellee and those- associated with him in said railroad to so change the route thereof that it would pass through the town of Kentland in Newton.County, Indiana. In March, 1902, appellee, at his own expense, went to New York and secured a tentative contract from one Albert M. Lawrence to finance the construction of said proposed line and through said Lawrence, appellee and the Chicago, Covington and Southern Railway Company, secured the services of one Warren IT. Loss, civil engineer and expert on the location and construction of railroads, to view and report on the feasibility of a line of railroad extending from Terre Haute through Kentland and reaching Chicago either by way of Hammond, Indiana, or Chicago Heights, Illinois, which proposed route was already partly surveyed as aforesaid. Said Loss made an inspection of said lino, [243]*243accompanied and aided by appellee, and prepared a written report on the feasibility thereof.

The special finding further sets out a history of three other railroad corporations, viz., the Indiana Harbor Company of Indiana, the Indiana Harbor Company of New Jersey, and the Indiana Harbor Railroad Company, through which one C. V7. Hotchkiss and others proposed to build a line of railroad which should serve in part substantially the same territory to be traversed by the railroad projected by appellee. On January 17, 1903, appellee joined Kent and McCray in a written agreement wherein it was proposed that a new corporation should be organized by them to construct a railroad through the territory which the Chicago, Covington and Southern Railway was expected to serve. It was further agreed that those persons who held stock in the old company should be settled with in the best manner possible and that all moneys required for this settlement, as well as for the settlement of certain debts outstanding against said company, should be deducted from the gross amount realized from the project in ease it was disposed of; that the balance thereof should be distributed in equal parts to Kent, McCray and appellee. In accordance with this agreement the Chicago, Terre Haute and Southern Railway Company was incorporated on January 28, 1903, and subsequently had transferred to it, at the instance of Kent, McCray and appellee, all of the assets of the Chicago, Covington and Southern Railway Company, including the maps, plats, surveys, notes; profiles, estimates, reports, options and right of way contracts. On May 5, 1903, Kent and McCray informed appellee that they were going to sell out the rights, properties and assets of the Chicago, Terre Haute and Southern Railway Company. Appellee’s objection to this proposal was met with an assurance that he would be treated with fairness in said sale and such negotiations followed as resulted in the transfer to the Indiana Harbor Company of Indiana of all of the prop[244]*244erty of the Chicago, Terre Haute and Southern Railway 'Company, the same being of the value of $10,000. The Indiana Harbor Company, however, failed to carry out its agreement to build the line as projected and on May 5, 1905, it was formally released from said agreement by the Chicago, Terre Haute and Southern Railway Company. The property previously received by it was turned over to C. W. Hotchkiss and those associated with him in the Indiana Harbor Railroad Company, which company eventually constructed a line of railroad from Indiana Harbor, Indiana, to Danville, Illinois. The court further found that a part of said railroad was built on substantially the same line on which the Chicago, Terre Haute and Southern Railway Company had located its road and that “in so locating and constructing said line of railroad, the surveys, maps, plats and profiles that had been the property of the Chicago, Terre Haute and Southern Railway Company were of use and valuable to the Indiana Harbor Railroad Company,” and that the surveys made by appellee and those associated with him were made the basis of all subsequent surveys made by the Indiana Harbor Railroad Company in constructing said line. On April 6, 1906, the Indiana Harbor Railroad Company and the Indiana, Illinois and Iowa Rail-toad Company, a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the States of Indiana and Illinois, were duly and legally, consolidated as one corporation under the name of the Chicago, Indiana and Southern Railroad Company, the present appellant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 N.E. 1, 183 Ind. 240, 1915 Ind. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-indiana-southern-railroad-v-taylor-ind-1915.