Erie Metroparks Board of Commissioners v. Key Trust Co.

764 N.E.2d 509, 145 Ohio App. 3d 782
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 14, 2001
DocketCourt of Appeals No. E-00-068, Trial Court No. 99CV442.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 764 N.E.2d 509 (Erie Metroparks Board of Commissioners v. Key Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Erie Metroparks Board of Commissioners v. Key Trust Co., 764 N.E.2d 509, 145 Ohio App. 3d 782 (Ohio Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Sherck, Judge.

This is an appeal from a declaratory judgment issued by the Erie County Court of Common Pleas in a property dispute. Because the trial court’s determination concerning the scope of the lease in question was proper, we affirm that portion of the court’s decision. However, with respect to the court’s determination that a prior breach of the terms of the lease rendered it void, we reverse.

*784 In 1827, the Ohio General Assembly chartered the Milan Canal Company to construct and operate a canal from Milan, Ohio to Lake Erie. In due course, the canal company acquired land and dug a canal between Milan and “Lock 1,” located where the navigable portion of the Huron River intersected the canal.

In 1881, the Milan Canal Company leased a one-hundred-fifty-foot-wide corridor through its property to the Wheeling and Lake Erie Rail Road Company, upon which to construct and operate a railroad. The lease was for ninety-nine years, renewable “forever.” The lease required an annual rental fee of $50 and also provided that “on the failure of said Lessee * * * to sp maintain and operate said Rail Road for public transportation and travel and on the abandonment thereof for railway purposes or on the failure for Six months to pay said annual rental of ($50) Fifty Dollars to the said Lessor after the same became due and payable these presents shall become void and the said real estate shall revert to the said Lessor the Milan Canal Company * *

It is undisputed that during the next one hundred years, the railroad, in one corporate guise or another, 1 maintained and operated a line on the leased corridor. In 1979, the railroad’s lease was renewed for another ninety-nine years. In 1995, the Wheeling and Lake Erie Railway Company sold the lease to appellee and cross-appellant, Board of Commissioners, Erie Metroparks (“appel-lee”). Appellee intended to convert the property to a recreational hiking/bicycling trail.

In 1904, the Milan Canal Company was dissolved and its assets purchased by Stephen Lockwood. Stephen Lockwood’s interests in the property eventually devolved to the testamentary trust of Verna Lockwood Williams and its trustee, Key Trust Company of Ohio. Following the purchase of the railroad’s lease interest by appellee, a dispute arose between the trust and appellee concerning the continued validity of the lease.

On September 30, 1999, appellee initiated a declaratory judgment action against the Lockwood Williams trust. Appellee sought a declaration that the 1881 lease remains in effect, that the property may be properly used for a recreational trail, and that the scope of the lease be determined. The trust answered appellee’s complaint, denying the validity of the lease and counterclaiming for a quiet title.

During the pendency of this case, the Lockwood Williams trust sold its interest in the disputed land to appellant and cross-appellee Buffalo Prairie, Ltd. Buffalo *785 Prairie, in turn, began to convey portions of the land at issue to adjacent property owners. With this development, appellee amended its complaint to include not only the Lockwood Williams trust, but Buffalo Prairie and thirty-two named adjacent property owners (“appellants”). 2

This matter then proceeded to a bench trial. At the trial, appellants presented evidence that at the time appellee acquired its interest in the property, the railroad had been several years delinquent in paying its rent. Appellants also presented evidence that rail traffic on the line had ceased in the mid-1980s and that the track and the railroad infrastructure had been allowed to deteriorate since then. Indeed, the railroad had years previously filed a notice of route abandonment with the former Interstate Commerce Commission. Appellants argued that this behavior constituted a failure to maintain the property, an abandonment of the property for “railway purposes,” and a default in rent. Appellants asserted that such multiple breaches of the lease caused the lease to become “void.” The real estate should, therefore, “revert” to appellants as successors of the Milan Canal Company.

Appellee responded with testimony that both the railroad and appellee attempted to remedy the rent default but that the Lockwood Williams trust had rejected the tender. As far as abandonment was concerned, appellee pointed out that “abandonment” is governed by Ohio property law, not federal transportation policy. Moreover, it was undisputed that neither the trust, nor anyone else, had made a demand for rent or performance of any other term of the lease. Appellee argued that under the common law of leases, such a demand is essential before any default may be declared.

Alternatively, appellee argued that even if it were determined that the 1881 lease was void, not all of the appellants were entitled to a quiet title. This is so, according to appellee, because the Milan Canal Company did not have clear title to the full length of the canal. The 1881 lease described a one-hundred-fifty-foot corridor along the full length of the canal but conveyed only that portion “owned by said Milan Canal Company.” At trial, evidence showed that, in the disputed area, the canal company was deeded land only from Kneeland Townsend and Ebeneser Merry. Since the canal company could lease to the railroad only so much as it owned, appellee asserted that the land at issue should be confined to that portion once owned by Townsend and Merry — a section of land substantially less than which appellants claim.

*786 At the conclusion of the trial, the court found that the railroad had materially breached the terms of the lease by failing to promptly pay rent and that it had abandoned the property for purposes of operating a railroad. By the court’s interpretation, the lease then became void on its own terms. Consequently, the railroad’s conveyance to appellee was ineffective.

Concerning the scope of the lease, the court found that the canal company obtained land only from Townsend and Merry and, consequently, set the boundaries of the land derived from the canal company as extending from the canal basin in Milan to “Lock 1,” where the canal joins the Huron River.

From this judgment, appellants now bring this appeal, setting forth the following six assignments of error:

“I. The trial court erred when it allowed evidence refuting lessor-appellants’ title to the leased property in a declaratory judgment action seeking to determine lease validity.
“II. The trial court abused its discretion in allowing appellee to try claims not raised in its amended complaint over appellants’ objections.
“III. The trial court erred in reforming the lease property description where intent of the parties is presumed to reside in the lease language and the court found the lease unambiguous.
“IV.

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Bluebook (online)
764 N.E.2d 509, 145 Ohio App. 3d 782, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erie-metroparks-board-of-commissioners-v-key-trust-co-ohioctapp-2001.