Commonwealth Ex Rel. Bard v. Delaware Division Canal Co.

1 A.2d 672, 332 Pa. 53, 1938 Pa. LEXIS 745
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 24, 1938
DocketAppeal, 37
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1 A.2d 672 (Commonwealth Ex Rel. Bard v. Delaware Division Canal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Bard v. Delaware Division Canal Co., 1 A.2d 672, 332 Pa. 53, 1938 Pa. LEXIS 745 (Pa. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion

by Mr. Justice Drew,

This appeal is by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania from the dismissal of its hill and amended hill in equity, brought ex rel. the Attorney General, against the Delaware Division Canal Company and other named defendants, for a decree of forfeiture revesting in the Commonwealth full and complete title to the Delaware Division Canal. As an alternative to this remedy, the Commonwealth, in its amended hill, asks for a decree requiring *56 the canal company to restore the canal to navigable condition and to resume its operation as a waterway.

The Act of April 21, 1858, P. L. 414, which was declared constitutional in The Sunbury and Erie Railroad Company v. Cooper, 33 Pa. 278, authorized the Commonwealth, then owner of the Delaware Division Canal and certain other canals, to convey them to the Sunbury and Erie Railroad Company, the latter “to keep up the same including public and private bridges crossing the said canals as heretofore done by the canal commission, in as good repair and operating condition as they are now; and they shall be and remain public highways forever for the use and enjoyment of all persons desiring to use the same.” This act likewise preserved to the Commonwealth’s grantee the right, conferred by the Acts of March 20, 1818, P. L. 197, and February 13, 1822, P. L. 21, to use the water of the canal for water supply purposes, “provided it be so done that it shall not at any time interrupt or impede the navigation.” Pursuant to the Act of 1858 the Commonwealth conveyed the Delaware Division Canal to the Sunbury and Erie Railroad Company, which shortly thereafter conveyed it to the Delaware Division Canal Company, a corporation chartered by the Governor of the Commonwealth, on July 14, 1858, under authority of the same Act of 1858. The canal company operated the entire sixty miles of the canal, from Easton to Bristol, as a common carrier and public highway from that time to 1931 when, pursuant to the Act of June 26, 1931, P. L. 1387, it conveyed forty miles of the canal, from Raubsville to Yardley, to the Commonwealth. In 1936, however, the Commonwealth withdrew from possession under the conveyance of 1931, the Act of 1931 having been held unconstitutional: Yardley Mills Co., Inc., v. Bogardus, 321 Pa. 581. No part of the canal has been used for the purpose of transportation since 1931. The canal company has permitted the construction of embankments across the channel making navigation impossible, *57 and the Commonwealth, during its possession, lowered bridges across the canal and permitted it to get into general disrepair, likewise preventing the passage of canal boats. The canal company presently uses the canal exclusively to supply water for industrial purposes.

In the present proceeding the Commonwealth is endeavoring to enforce a forfeiture of the title to the entire canal, on the ground that, by the Act of 1858 and the Commonwealth’s conveyance pursuant thereto, the title of the Sunbury and Erie Railroad Company through whom the defendant, the Delaware Division Canal Company, derived its title, was upon the express condition that the canal be forever maintained as a public highway. Alternatively the Commonwealth claims that if it is not a condition of the conveyance, but only a covenant that the canal be maintained as a public highway, then it should be decreed that the canal company restore a navigable canal. Joined with the canal company as defendants are the Lehigh Navigation Coal Company, the lessee from the canal company of certain of the lands appurtenant to the canal, the Philadelphia and Trenton Railroad Company, a Pennsylvania Railroad Company subsidiary, to which the canal company has sold a part of the canal property, and the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. The City of Philadelphia has intervened claiming an interest to protect the water supply of Philadelphia. The Delaware Valley Protective Association has filed a brief, amicus curies under Rule 61, in support of the Commonwealth’s claims.

The contentions of the defendant are that the original grant under the Act of 1858 was not subject to any condition, the restrictive terms being only a covenant, and that, in any case, the Act of May 17, 1901, P. L. 261, authorizes the discontinuance of the use of the canal for transportation purposes. The court below found in defendant’s favor on each contention and dismissed the bill. This appeal followed.

*58 In considering the questions here involved, the facts found by the learned chancellor and approved by the court below will not be reversed in the absence of manifest error, and are to be given the same weight as the verdict of a jury: Houghton v. Kendrick, 285 Pa. 223.

The first question in the case concerns the correct interpretation of the Act of 1858, and the deed of May 19, 1858, from the Commonwealth to the Sunbury and Erie Railroad Company, the predecessor in title of the canal company, since we must determine whether the provision in the act and deed that the canal shall remain a public highway forever, is a condition subsequent, the breach of which would cause a forfeiture, or a covenant, the failure to perform which would give to the injured party, in some circumstances, a right to an action for damages.

The Restatement of the Law of Property, section 45, comment o, says: “When an otherwise effective conveyance contains a mere statement of the use to which the land conveyed is to be devoted, or, of the use, in consideration of which, the conveyance is made, such statement alone is not sufficient to cause the estate created to be an estate in fee simple subject to a condition subsequent.” To the same effect see T. W. Phillips G. & O. Co. v. Lingenfelter, 262 Pa. 500, and 14 Am. Jur. 481. This court in a careful review of the authorities by Mr. Justice Walling, in Sapper v. Mathers, 286 Pa. 364, 366, said: “. . . all provisions which seek to tie up real estate and prevent alienation are strictly construed, and as the deed in question makes no provision for a reversion or forfeiture, none exists. To make the estate conditional the words must clearly show such intent: Cook v. Trimble, 9 Watts 15. See also Brendle v. The German Reformed Congregation et al., 33 Pa. 415. . . . [p. 367] The same conclusion was reached by the trial court in the case at bar after a most careful and exhaustive review of the authorities by President Judge Martin, which he concludes by saying that: ‘It will be seen *59 that the deed closely follows the wording of the charter, and it is apparent that the purposes for which the conveyance was made, were the purposes for which the association could lawfully hold real estate. None of the technical words usually employed for the purpose of creating a condition appears in the deed. There is nothing to indicate that the consideration paid was not the full value of the land. No restraint was imposed on any alienation of the land. No clause provided for a forfeiture or termination of the estate in case the land ceased to he used for burial purposes. There was no reservation of a right of reentry on any contingency, and no technical Avords to create a condition, or other Avords equivalent thereto. . . . ’ ” The United States Supreme Court in Stuart v. Easton,

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Bluebook (online)
1 A.2d 672, 332 Pa. 53, 1938 Pa. LEXIS 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-ex-rel-bard-v-delaware-division-canal-co-pa-1938.