Dulaney v. United Railways & Electric Co.

65 A. 45, 104 Md. 423, 1906 Md. LEXIS 189
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 16, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 65 A. 45 (Dulaney v. United Railways & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dulaney v. United Railways & Electric Co., 65 A. 45, 104 Md. 423, 1906 Md. LEXIS 189 (Md. 1906).

Opinion

Schmuckkr, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal in this case is from a decree of Circuit Court No. 2, of Baltimore City, sustaining the demurrers of the appellees, as defendants below, and dismissing the bill of complaint. The primary purpose of the bill was to procure an injunction restraining the United Railways and Electric Company of Baltimore from constructing and maintaining a switch from its main track on West Lombard street across the sidewalk to the warehouse No. 407 West Lombard street owned and used by the Gaither’s City and Suburban Express Company. The bill incidentally asked that the Ordinance of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore authorizing the construction of the switch be declared void. The appellants are the respective owners of warehouses on Lombard street adjacent to and near by that of the express company.

The bill was filed against the United Railways and Electric Company as sole defendant. Its material allegations are as follows:

That the complainants own large and valuable warehouses, on the south side of West Lombard street, adjacent to or near by the one of the Express Company, in which they conduct extensive manufacturing enterprises employing in that connection hundreds of persons largely young girls and women *434 who in going to and from their work traverse the sidewalk over which it is proposed to lay the switch and that the same thing is true of the patrons and customers of their respective factories. That the immediate neighborhood in which the appellants are located is rapidly being filled up with large factories and warehouses whose occupants and customers must also use the same sidewalk, and that the complainants, by reason of their close vicinity to the Express Company’s warehduse, have a peculiar interest above that of the general public in having that sidewalk kept free and unobstructed for the use of pedestrians.

- That the Express Company is engaged in the business of carrying all kinds of freight and express matter, including, combustible and explosive substances, which it transports in freight or express cars owned by it and used only for its private business of carriage of freight and express matter and that the United Railways Company hauls such cars over its lines without any warrant or authority of law; that by ch. 390’ of the Acts-of 1898 the Legislature attempted to authorize The Baltimore Consolidated Railway Company to transact an éxpress business over its lines in Baltimore city and adjoining counties," but if that Act be valid and'the benefit of it passed to the United Railway Company it would not authorize that company to transact such business by hauling over its lines the cars of Gaither’s Express Company.

That Gaither’s Express Company proposes to use its recently acquired warehouse No. 407 West Lombard street for a distributing depot of all kinds of freight and express matter, including inflammable and explosive'materials, and desiring to' have the proposed switch connection with the railway tracks in the bed of the street and not having itself the power to con - struct a track on either the street or the sidewalk it induced the United Railways Company to procure from the City of Baltimore supposed authority for that purpose by the passage' of the Ordinance of February 6th, 1905, of which and the plat herein referred to copies were filed with the bill as exhibits.. The ordinance is then alleged to be void because it is self *435 contradictory in its terms and provisions and also because the small sum of fifty dollars charged for the franchise is not in compliance with sec. 37 of the Baltimore City Charter. A third reason alleged for the invalidity of the Ordinance is that the business of the Express Company is a private and not a public one and that the city has no power to authorize the laying of the switch, or the overhead construction of wires necessary for its operation, over the street or the sidewalk for the benefit of a purely private enterprise.

The bill then charges that the construction and operation of the proposed switch with its overhead wires would seriously damage the plaintiff’s properties and menace the lives of many persons lawfully occupying them by increasing the danger of fire, and would also seriously interfere with the access to their premises and would especially interfere with the receipt and shipment of goods by the occupants of the property of the appellant the Resinol Chemical Company whose warehouse adjoins that of-the express company and would inflict upon the appellants great damages for which there would be no adequate remedy at law.

The prayer of the bill is that the Ordinance of February 6th, 1905, may be declared void, that the United Railways Company may be restrained from constructing or operating the proposed switch and the overhead trolley wires and for general relief.

The Gaither’s Express Company intervened by petition and asked to be made a co-defendant in the case, which was done by an appropriate order of Court, and then it also demurred to the bill.

The Court below after a hearing upon the demurrers, sustained them, and the plaintiffs declining to amend their bill the Court dismissed it by the decree appealed from.

The theory of this bill is that the express business as now conducted by the United Railways, through the agency 01 Gaither’s Express Company, by transporting the express cars of only the latter company is in fact a private business which the Railways Company cannot lawfully conduct, and that *436 therefore the City of Baltimore has no power to authorize the construction of the proposed switch to the express company’s warehouse to be used in conducting that kind of an express business, as to do' so would be to devote the public street to private uses. The assertion is also made that the Ordinance of February 6th, 1905, purporting to authorize the construction of the switch is void because of the alleged inherent defects already referred to. The broad. allegations made in the bill that the Railways Company is carrying on its lines the cars of the Express Company without any warrant or authority of law, and that the City of Baltimore could not lawfully authorize the construction of the proposed switch constitute mere conclusions of law, the truth of which is not admitted by tibe demurrers. The sufficiency of the bill must be tested by ascertaining whether the facts stated in it justify the conclusions at which the plaintiffs arrived.

We will first consider the validity of the Ordinance of February 6th, 1905 authorizing the construction of the switch. There is an apparent conflict or inconsistency between the declared purpose and express provisions of the title and body of this Ordinance and the statement contained in its second section that the switch should be so constructed • and laid down as “not to interfere with or encroach upon the sidewalks or gutters as now laid out and existing upon and along the streets above mentioned.” Taken by itself this provision looks like a flat prohibition to lay the switch across the sidewalk, but read in connection with the other portions of the Ordinance and the plat therein referred to, it becomes apparent that no such intention can be ascribed to the authors of that piece of legis-' latión.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 A. 45, 104 Md. 423, 1906 Md. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dulaney-v-united-railways-electric-co-md-1906.