Columbus, Newark & Zanesville Elec. Ry. v. Nelson

22 Ohio C.C. Dec. 431
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedMarch 15, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ohio C.C. Dec. 431 (Columbus, Newark & Zanesville Elec. Ry. v. Nelson) 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
Columbus, Newark & Zanesville Elec. Ry. v. Nelson, 22 Ohio C.C. Dec. 431 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The Columbus, Newark & Zanesville Electric Railway Company and the Ohio Electric Railway Company filed their joint-petition in the common pleas court of this county against John Nelson and Lena Nelson and asked that said defendants be enjoined from bringing building material upon certain real estate described in the petition and from digging up, cutting or destroying the ground or soil thereof, and from erecting thereon buildings, constructions or frameworks of any kind, and averring that the plaintiffs are the owners of said ground upon which the defendants purpose to erect such buildings and structures, said land having been conveyed to said plaintiffs by Lindsay Bounds and others, and that it constitutes a part of what is now commonly known as Buckeye Lake Park.

To this petition Lena Nelson filed an answer and cross petition admitting that the plaintiff, the Columbus, Newark & Zanesville Electric Railway Co., is a corporation and owns certain real estate known as Buckeye Lake Park, located in Buckeye Lake, admitting that the Ohio Electric Railway Company is a corporation, and denying all the other averments of the petition, and particularly that the plaintiffs or either of them have any interest' in or to -the land described in the petition upon which she was conducting building operations, and averring the deed from Lindsay Bounds and others did not convey said lands to said plaintiff, but on the contrary expressly and definitely excepted the same therefrom in the following language, to wit, “Excepting from the above real estate any right, title or interest that the said state of Ohio may have acquired in or to the second parcel herein by reason of the location of the Licking reservoir thereon; excepting also from said covenants whatever right or title the state of phio has in the first parcel abbve said water line herein mentioned for retaining banks of the waters of said reservoir”; and further averring [433]*433that she is the owner by lease from the state of Ohio of the premises in dispute so excepted from the operations of said deed. And for cross petition the said defendant avers that Buckeye lake, formerly known as the Licking reservoir, constitutes a part of the canal system of the state and that said body of water and lands covered by said waters and the lands adjacent thereto, are all owned by the state of Ohio and under the management of the state board of public works. That by recent legislation said Buckeye lake and lands adjacent thereto have been dedicated to the public as public parks for pleasure resort, fishing, boating and other recreations, and that the said board of public works has executed a lease to this defendant for the property so owned by it, and that it is upon this land and not other land that she had started the construction of the same and had largely accomplished said construction when the plaintiffs with a large force of workmen by force and violence entered upon these premises, tore up the platform of the pier, pulling up the tiling and stakes which constitutes the lower part and support of the pier, destroying the lumber out of which it was constructed and carried the same away and converted it to their own use, and tore the cottage and boat house from their foundations and moved the same from the land of this defendant to lands owned by the plaintiffs. And that the plaintiffs threaten and will unless restrained by the court again enter upon the lands of this defendant and destroy any buildings or piers she may erect thereon, and thereby deprive her of the use and profits of the same to her irreparable injury, for which she has no adequate remedy at law, and prays for a perpetual injunction and for a decree quieting her title in said premises.

To this cross petition the plaintiff filed an answer averring the ownership of these premises in plaintiffs and denying that defendants have any right, title or interest'thereto. The cause was heard upon evidence in the court of common pleas and now comes to this court upon appeal, and has been submitted upon the' transcript of the evidence taken in the com[434]*434mon pleas court with all the exhibits and such additional evidence as parties desired to offer.

It appears from the evidence that the state of Ohio commenced about the year 1828 and completed about 1832 the Licking reservoir as a feeder to the canal system under the authority of an act of the general assembly of Ohio, passed April 4, 1825. By the provisions of Sec. 8 of that act, it appears that the state might lawfully enter upon and take possession of and use all and singular any lands or water, streams or materials necessary for its canal system, for the purpose of making any and all such canals, feeders, locks, dams, etc., and that where such property taken should not be given or granted to the state that it should be the duty of the canal commissioners on application by the owners of said lands, waters, streams and materials to appoint a board of appraisers to make a just and equitable appraisal of the loss and damages to such private owners, and it was made the duty of said appraisers to enter an apt and sufficient description of the premises appropriated for the purposes aforesaid in a book to be provided for that purpose. It further provided that the fee simple of said premises should pass to and be vested in the state.

In the case of State v. Railway, 53 Ohio St. 189 [41 N. E. Rep. 205], it is held that by force and provisions of Sec. 8, above referred to, that wherever the state actually occupied a parcel of land for canal purposes, a fee simple title thereto at once and by virtue alone of such occupancy, vested in the state. It is said, however, by counsel for the plaintiff, that this reservoir is not a canal, and therefore it is not within the provision of this legislation, but Sec. 8 hot only provides for canals, but for feeders, dikes, locks, dams and such other works and devices as the canal commissioners may think proper. So that this reservoir being used as a feeder of the canal becomes a part of the canal system of Ohio, and the occupation of said land by the state of Ohio for such purposes is an appropriation of the land, and the fee simple passed to the state with the right only in the original owner to make application for damages and compensation therefor, and his failure to make such application for damages and compensation would in no [435]*435wise affect the title of the state thereto. It is suggested, however, that before such title could pass to the( state that there must be an apt and sufficient description of the premises, but the statute does not so provide. The statute provides that the canal commissioners and each of them or any superintendent, agent or engineer employed by them might enter upon and take possession of lands, waters, streams and materials necessary for canal purposes and does not seem to provide that a description thereof shall be given, and nothing further is required beyond the actual occupation of the same, but where damages and compensation have been demanded and the board of appraisers have considered such claims then it becomes the -duty of such board of appraisers to make an apt and sufficient description of the premises in a book to be provided for that purpose.

So that unless the owners of this property actually apply to the state for compensation and damages there would not be any description of the land as a matter of necessity, but only such description as the canal commission might have for its own use and convenience.

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18 Ohio St. 89 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1849)

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ohio C.C. Dec. 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/columbus-newark-zanesville-elec-ry-v-nelson-ohiocirct-1910.