Day v. Atlanta & Charlotte A. L. Ry. Co.

108 S.E. 140, 116 S.C. 353, 1921 S.C. LEXIS 110
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 30, 1921
Docket10667
StatusPublished

This text of 108 S.E. 140 (Day v. Atlanta & Charlotte A. L. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Day v. Atlanta & Charlotte A. L. Ry. Co., 108 S.E. 140, 116 S.C. 353, 1921 S.C. LEXIS 110 (S.C. 1921).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Gary.

The allegations of the complaint herein are as follows:

“(1) That defendant is a corporation duly chartered by and under the laws of the State of South Carolina, and has a line -of railway in said county and State, operated by its agents, employees, and lessees, and said line of railway-runs through the town of Easley, and in part through the property now belonging to plaintiff.
“(2) That plaintiff owns two dwelling houses facing and fronting on East Main street in the city of Easley, said county and State, and resides in one of said dwelling houses, and has maintained for a number of years yard fences inclosing the front yards.
*355 “(3) Heretofore, on or about'March 8, 1917, the defendant, its agents, servants, and lessees, entered upon the premises of plaintiff in defiance of written notice warning against trespass, and, over protest and disregard of the rights and feeling of plaintiff, did willfully and maliciously trespass on the land of plaintiff, tore down his yard fence, tore up shrubberry and flowers and the ground within said bound of fences, and left same in rough and dilapidated condition.
“(4) The plaintiff rebuilt said fences, and thereafter, on or about March 29, 1917, the defendant by its agents, servants, and lessees did again willfully and maliciously and in defiance, and over the protest of the plaintiff, and in disregard of warning, enter upon said land of plaintiff and tore down said fences for the second time.
“(5) ' That by reason of the unlawful, willful, and malicious disregard of the rights of plaintiff the defendant has caused actual and punitive damage to plaintiff in the sum of $6,000.
“Wherefore plaintiff prays judgment against defendant for the sum of $6,000 and cost of this action.”

The defendant, answering the complaint herein, alleges:

“(1) That it denies each and every allegation thereof except as herein admitted.
“(2) That it has constructed a double track of its line of railway through the city of Easley, but has done no acts connected therewith except upon its own right of way, and has not trespassed or entered upon any land belonging to the plaintiff.”

Mrs. Leila Day, for the plaintiff, sworn, says:

“I am the wife of the plaintiff, and was at home on March 8, 1917, when the agents and servants of the defendant came and started tearing down the yard fence, and Mr. Day stopped them by having the foreman arrested. Mr. Day went off somewhere, and later on the same day the *356 hands of defendant, about 30, came back, and I heard a great fuss and noise, and saw that they were tearing down the fence, breaking down the post, pulling down the braces, cutting up the shrubberry and flowers and shade trees, and throwing the rubbish back to the door steps. When they finished they left, though I asked them not to do anything in Mr. Day’s absence, but Mr. Steele, the foreman, was obdurate and didn’t treat me politely. I asked him not to disturb my flowers if the property was theirs, but to take it in a legal manner. After Mr. Day had put back the fence, the hands of the defendant came again on March 29th, and tore down the fence again while Mr. Day was sick in bed and unable to get up. I went, at Mr. Day’s request, and served a Written notice on the foreman, telling them to keep off the premises, but they tore down that part of the fence of the tenant lot. They put the rubbish all over my yard, and walked all over it, and put cigar stubs on my doorsteps.”

A. D. Perkins, sworn for defendant, says:

“I am civil engineer, and made this plat of the property in question. If is 100 feet from the center of the right of way of the main line of the railroad, down to the two houses of Mr. Elias Day. It is 42 feet from these two houses up to* the present sidewalk. The railroad intended to widen this street in the direction of the Day houses, 8 feet. That would leave a frontage in each yard of 34 feet. When the second track was put down, it was laid on the south side of the old track. The width of this second track is 8 feet. There is- 30 feet of roadway there now. The public uses it up to the railroad on both sides of the track.”

Mr. F. Furlo, for defendant, sworn, says:

“I am a civil engineer for defendant, and know that this plat is correct, and when they laid the double track through Easley on the south side of the old main line track we had to take up a part of the street in front of Mr. Day’s house, *357 and when we were tearing down Mr. Day’s fence we were taking 8 feet more on the other side of the street, so that the street would not be any narrower than it was originally.
“The plat I refer to is the one made by Mr. Perkins, Exhibit F. In putting down the second track, we used 8 feet of what the town was using as a street, and it insisted that we give for a similar use 8 feet of our right of way on the other side. This was the purpose of opening up the 8. It was part of the construction work of laying the double track.”

J. M. King, for defendant, sworn, says:

“I was' mayor of the town when these things took place, and the town council required the railroad to leave South Main street in front of Mr. Day’s house its original width, after laying down the second track, and occupying a part of the original street. .We required the railroad to open up the 8 feet in front of Mr. Day’s property before we were willing for it to lay the double track. This was in lieu of that which had been taken by laying down the second double track. This street has been used ever since I can remember as a railroad right of way and a street on it. The city council passed an ordinance requiring anybody that did any work on the streets to first get a permit to- do it. The railroad company got this permit when it laid its second track.”

The defendant moved the Court to direct a verdict in its favor upon the following grounds :

“ (1) That under the deed from Jas. S. Smith to the Atlanta & Richmond Air Dine Railway, the defendant owns for a right of way 100 feet on each side of the track, measuring from the center thereof.
“(2) That the recitals in said deed as to the matters to be done and not to be done are void, because repugnant to the estate previously granted, and also because the said deed *358 is signed by Jas. S. Smith only, and the mere acceptance of said deed did not bind the grantee thereof or the defendant as to said recitals.
“(3) That the plaintiff cannot maintain this action, as he purchased his land subject to defendant’s right of way created by the Smith deed.
“(4) That the recitals and statements in the Jas. S.

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Bluebook (online)
108 S.E. 140, 116 S.C. 353, 1921 S.C. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/day-v-atlanta-charlotte-a-l-ry-co-sc-1921.