Collins v. Craig Shipbuilding Co.

17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 802
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedMarch 18, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 802 (Collins v. Craig Shipbuilding Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. Craig Shipbuilding Co., 17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 802 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

HULL, J.

This is an action brought by the plaintiffs, Frank Collins and the Northwestern Realty Company, who are the successors in title of William A. Collins, to enjoin the defendants, The Craig Shipbuilding Company, The Toledo Belt Railway Company and The Wheeling & Lake Brie Railway Company, and especially the two railroad companies, from the use that they were making of a certain spur or side track running from the Wheeling & Lake Erie railroad tracks down to the lot or land of the Craig Shipbuilding Company, the plaintiffs claiming that such use was in violation of certain conditions and limitations contained in the grant by which the right to lay the track was conferred upon the predecessor of the Craig Shipbuilding Company, to wit, John Craig, from whom the company has acquired this title. The action came on for hearing before us upon a motion for judgment in favor of the plaintiffs upon the pleadings.

It appears from the evidence that in 1886 William A. Collins and Louis Paine were the owners of certain lands lying between the Craig shipbuilding lots and the Wheeling & Lake Erie railroad lots and that they granted to John Craig, who was then the owner of the Craig Shipbuilding Company lots, the right to lay this track to the Wheeling & Lake Erie tracks, by a written grant, and among the conditions and limitations in said grant it was provided that the track should not be used except for the business of the Craig Shipbuilding Company and their purposes or for industries located upon the Craig Shipbuilding Company lot, and the tracks were laid under this grant.

Some years afterward another side track or spur of the Wheeling & Lake Erie Company was built easterly to connect with another track running down to the Wheeling & Lake Erie track and thus connecting with several industries lying east of the Craig shipbuilding lot, the connecting road being known as the Maumee Connecting Company, and the products of these other industries lying east of the Craig shipbuilding lot were transferred on this connecting line to the Craig shipbuilding track, across that and up to the Wheeling road, upon this track in question, thus increasing very largely the transactions upon this track, the right to lay which had been granted to Mr. Craig and in the respect that the traffic was increased and the number of cars largely increased in this manner the conditions of the grant which limited the use to the Craig Shipbuilding Company and the industries thereon, were violated and this action was brought by the plaintiffs as the successors of William A. Collins and Paine, to enjoin the Wheeling & Lake Erie Railroad Company and the other roads from violating those provisions [804]*804of the grant and to require them to comply with all the provisions of the grant in respect to transportation, etc.

The claim of the railroad companies as set forth in their answer and as argued before us, in brief, is, that the plaintiffs have an adequate remedy at law and therefore there should not be a remedy by injunction. It is said that they have two remedies; that they may tender a deed to this right of way to the Wheeling & Lake Erie and demand compensation, and if not paid, interfere with its use of' the track; or, they may compel an appropriation of that part of the railroad under Lan. R. L. 10025 (R. S. 6448), and that therefore they should not be granted an injunction.

A very large number of authorities were cited by counsel on both sides. We shall not undertake to mention or to review many of them. Now it appears that this condition was contained in this grant; that it is being violated and has been violated for some years, • and that this violation will impose an additional burden upon this land, in that a great many more cars, several times as many perhaps, will be run across the property, than passed over it at the inception of the grant.

The grant was made in writing. Laning R. L. 10025 (R. S. 6448) applies in its express language only to eases where corporations authorized to appropriate are in possession of property without any agreement in writing with the owner thereof, and it provides in that event the owner may serve notice in writing upon the corporation, in the manner providing for service of summons against a corporation, etc., and proceed under the chapter to appropriate the lands, and on their failure to do so, the statute provides what may be done. Now it is said that while this original grant was in writing, the writing only conferred certain privileges upon John Craig, and if it was undertaken to go beyond that, it could not be said that the railroad company were in possession by virtue of the writing, and therefore the owners would come within the provisions of this statute.

It seems to us this is tenable. The original entry here was a written grant. The position of the plaintiffs is, that should they undertake to avail themselves of this statute, they would be met by the proposition-of the railroad company that they were in possession under a writing and that therefore their possession could not be both — and we think this is correct. The original possession was in writing; they have a right of possession with certain limitations and- conditions, but possession for the laying of this track and for the occupancy of this land twenty feet in width was granted to Mr. Craig in writing, and this statute provides that it shall only apply to cases where the possession [805]*805is not held by any agreement in writing. It cannot be said here that the possession is not in writing because the railroad company is now insisting upon certain rights which were not given by that writing; the contract cannot be wiped out and abrogated by an attempt on the part of the railroad company to go beyond the stipulations of the written agreement, so that it seems to us that it cannot be said that the plaintiffs here might avail themselves of these provisions.

There is another reason why they are not required to do this. The grant was originally made to a private individual, Mr. Craig, who had no power to appropriate or condemn land, and he afterwards assigned it to a railroad company, which has the power of appropriation, but by this assignment to the company they could not acquire any greater rights under the contract than he had; they had no more right, as it seems to us, — it being assigned to them under these circumstances,— to compel the owners of this land to require an appropriation than Mr. Craig would have had. Of course the railroad company has a right to condemn this property for all purposes; under their right of eminent domain they may do that at any time, but it seems to us that the possession not having been taken by .them originally, but having been granted to a private individual without this power of appropriation and this right of eminent domain, that their right so far as this man is concerned, can rise no higher than his and that the owners of this land are entitled to hold their rights as against the railroad company the same as they would if this grant were still held by Mr. Craig.

If the railroad company desires to have full and complete use of this right of way and of these tracks, they have a right under the law to appropriate and condemn. By running this increased number of ears over these tracks they are simply taking the private property of the owners of this land across which the track lies and imposing an additional servitude upon it.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-craig-shipbuilding-co-ohiocirct-1905.