City of McMechen v. Wheeling Traction Co.

110 S.E. 469, 90 W. Va. 24, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 187
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 110 S.E. 469 (City of McMechen v. Wheeling Traction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of McMechen v. Wheeling Traction Co., 110 S.E. 469, 90 W. Va. 24, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 187 (W. Va. 1922).

Opinion

Ritz, Judge:

The question involved on this certificate is the propriety of the ruling of the circuit court holding the return of the respondent to an alternative writ of mandamus to be insufficient. „

In the year 1893 the county court of Marshall county granted to the predecessor of the respondent a franchise authorizing the construction and operation of a street railway over the public road leading from Bemvood in said county of Marshall to Moundsville, the county seat thereof, which contained, among other conditions and stipulations, the following: Whenever the said railway company shall use for its road purposes any of the county bridges the said company shall strengthen the county bridges at the expense of said company.” Pursuant to such authority the respondent’s predecessor constructed its street railway over the county road between Benwood and Moundsville. Between these two cities said county road crosses a stream called McMechen’s Run upon an iron bridge which had theretofore been constructed by the county court, and the. street car company, under the authority of the franchise, laid its tracks across this bridge. At that time nothing was done by the street car company in the way of strengthening the bridge, it being the contention that it was entirely sufficient to support the railway traffic, as well as the ordinary traffic thereover. In the year 1895 the corporate limits of [27]*27the city of Benwood were extended south to the center of McMeehen Run, thus including within the said city of Ben-wood one-half of this county bridge. About the same time the city of McMeehen was created by an act of the legisla-true, its northern corporate line coinciding with the southern corporate line of the city of Benwood, so that from this time on the southern half of this bridge was in the corporate limits of the city of McMeehen, and the northern half thereof in the corporate limits of the city of Benwood. The street railway was operated over this bridge from the time it was put in operation in 1893 until the year 1915 without anything being done in the way of strengthening the bridge, either by the street railway company or the relators, the cities of McMeehen and Benwood. In the year 1915 the street railway company placed under its tracks, where the same cross this bridge, parallel steel girders, and supported these girders with steel posts, in this way relieving the bridge from the strain placed thereon by the operation there-over of the respondent’s railway. The relators, the cities of Mc-Meehen and Benwood, contend that it was the duty of the street railway company to strengthen the entire bridge. The alternative writ of mandamus avers that by reason of the operation of the respondent’s cars over the bridge before any effort was made to strengthen the same it had become weakened and insufficient for travel thereover in the ordinary wajq and that the respondent was obliged, because of the provisions of the franchise above quoted, to make the bridge sufficient for the purpose for which it was intended. Demand was made upon it that it strengthen the bridge with that end in view, and the respondent refusing to comply with this demand this writ of mandamus was brought to compel it to perform its obligations as contended for by relators.' A demurrer to the alternative writ of mandamus was overruled, and the respondent filed a return thereto.

In this return the right of the relators to have a writ of mandamus is denied upon the ground that there is no privity of 'contract between the relaotrs and the respondent, or its predecessor, the contract being made with respondent’s predecessor and the county court of Marshall county pro[28]*28viding for the nse of the county roads of that county by respondent’s predecessor; that this road is the main road between the city of Moundsville, the county seat of Marshall county, and the city of Wheeling, the county seat of Ohio county; and that the county court of Marshall county was not relieved of its duty and obligation to maintain this road because parts thereof, including this bridge, were afterwards included within the corporate limits of the re-lators, and particularly is this true in view of the fact that the said road from Moundsville to Wheeling has been designated as one of the main or class A roads by the county court of said county of Marshall; upon the further ground that the obligation of the contract only required the respondent or its predecessor, to strengthen the bridge so far as it might be necessary to strengthen the same because of the use thereof by respondent; that until the year 1915 the bridge was entirely adequate for all of the uses made of it, and that the same has not become weakened or unfit for use by reason of any strain to which it was subjected by the respondent; that in the year 1915 the respondent increased the size and weight of its equipment, for which reason it became necessary for it to strengthen this bridge; that it thereupon placed the steel girders above referred to under its tracks and entirely relieved the bridge of the weight of the tracks and the cars operated thereover; that if the bridge is unfit or insufficient for the ordinary traffic thereover at this time, it is not because of any strain placed thereon, either at this time, or at any previous time, by the respondent, but because of the use thereover of very heavily laden trucks by others using the highway, and that respondent is not required to keep the bridge strengthened so as to make it sufficient for this use; that the relator, the city of McMechen, cannot in any event have, any relief, for the reason that it, for a valuable consideration, released the respondent from its obligation under the franchise above referred to-; and further, that any relief is barred to either of the relators by the Statute of Limitations which is pleaded and relied upon. The court held that this return made [29]*29no defense to the alternative writ, and it is the propriety of that rnling that is involved here.

The respondent insists that the bridge in question is a part of one of the county roads of Marshall county, and that the relators are under no obligation to keep the same in good order or repair. It insists that the constitutional provision by which county courts are authorized and empowered to regulate and control county roads under such regulations as may be prescribed by law inhibits the relators from assuming any control or jurisdiction over this bridge inconsistent with the duty and authority of the county court to maintain the same in a condition making it reasonably safe for travel in the ordinary mode. In the case of Cavender v. The City of Charleston, 62 W. Va. 654, it was distinctly held, that the legislature had authority to enlarge the limits of a municipal corporation, and transfer to a city the duty of maintenance and repair of a public bridge within the limits of the city as so enlarged. In that case the corporate limits of the city of Charleston were extended so as to include a bridge which had been constructed by the county of Kanawha as a part of one of the public highways. The suit was to recover damages for an injury sustained by reason of the bridge being unsafe for travel in the ordinary way, and the liability of the city therefor was sustained. It is insisted by the respondent that the provision of the constitution in regard to the control of county roads by the county court, being § 24 of art. 8, is not referred to or passed upon in that decision.

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Related

Broun v. City of Charleston
178 S.E. 514 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1935)
Weaver v. Wheeling Traction Co.
114 S.E. 131 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 S.E. 469, 90 W. Va. 24, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-mcmechen-v-wheeling-traction-co-wva-1922.