Fall River Line Pier, Inc. v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad

181 N.E.2d 552, 344 Mass. 179, 1962 Mass. LEXIS 716
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 11, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 181 N.E.2d 552 (Fall River Line Pier, Inc. v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fall River Line Pier, Inc. v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 181 N.E.2d 552, 344 Mass. 179, 1962 Mass. LEXIS 716 (Mass. 1962).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

This is an action of contract by Fall River . Line Pier, Inc. (Pier), against the railroad to recover quarterly rent of $6,000, for the period February 17 to May 16,1958, for pier premises leased to the railroad. The railroad filed a declaration in set-off asserting that Pier owed the railroad $4,536.98, with interest, for overpayment of rent for the preceding quarter. The only claim for jury trial was by Pier on the writ. Upon the filing of an auditor’s report, Pier insisted “upon its right to jury trial, previously claimed, and reserve [d] the right to introduce evidence of the [railroad’s] liability . . . under the . . . lease . . . dated May 17, 1948.” The case was tried to a jury. After the plaintiff had rested, the railroad’s counsel proceeded to read the auditor’s report. The judge ruled that “counsel [was] not to read anything in . . . [the] report concerning the counterclaim”1 and that “the only issue before the [c] curt was whether . . . the . . . [railroad] owed . . . [Pier] the sum of $6,000.” The judge said “There has been no insistence on the counterclaim. So . . . this trial does not include the counterclaim.” Pier claimed an exception to this ruling and to the direction of a [181]*181verdict for the railroad in the original action. Later the railroad moved for judgment in its favor on the auditor’s report on the declaration in set-off. Pier also claimed an exception to the allowance of this motion. The case is here on Pier’s bill of exceptions. The principal questions relate to the interpretation and application of par. 17 of the 1948 lease (quotedbelow).

The auditor’s findings were as follows: On May 17, 1948, Pier, then “in control of . . . premises ... in Fall River,” leased a portion of these to the railroad at an annual rent of $24,000 payable quarterly in advance. Paragraph 17 of the lease reads, “If at any time during . . . this lease . . . the Commonwealth . . . or . . . [Pier] shall elect to extend their [p]ier development so as to include the demised premises . . . [Pier] shall at its expense furnish new facilities of equal capacity, including equivalent track and driveway facilities which . . . [the railroad] may continue to use in the operation of its business within the demised area or at a location satisfactory to the . . . [railroad], and these new facilities . . . must be made available ... so as to permit the uninterrupted . . . operation of the . . . business. . . . [T]hese new facilities will be leased to the . . . [railroad] under the same terms . . . herein contained covering the demised premises” (emphasis supplied).

On November 12, 1957, Pier mailed to the railroad a letter stating that Pier, in purported exercise of its rights under the lease, was starting new construction on the leased premises, that this construction would interfere immediately with the railroad’s use of tracks serving the demised building, and that the building would not have the use of any railroad sidings after December 1, 1957. This had the effect of depriving the railroad of essential attributes of the then leased building and would amount to constructive eviction (see Charles E. Burt, Inc. v. Seven Grand Corp. 340 Mass. 124,127, and authorities cited) unless the new premises, described below, offered to the railroad complied with par. 17.

[182]*182In the letter of November 12, Pier offered to the railroad substitute facilities on the same pier property. These facilities were served by two railroad sidings and were then being used by at least one other tenant, with whom the railroad would have had to share use of the sidings. A duly authorized representative of the railroad immediately advised Pier that the new facilities would not permit the railroad to operate as economically or as satisfactorily as theretofore and that the railroad would not accept them. As a consequence, the railroad moved on December 10, 1957, and relinquished the demised premises to Pier. The auditor-concluded (a) “that the new facilities . . . compared with those that [the railroad] had been occupying, were not of equal capacity and did not include equivalent track and driveway facilities and would not permit” as economical and satisfactory operation as theretofore, and (b) “that the [railroad’s] refusal ... to accept the new facilities was not unreasonable.”

Rent payments under the lease were made by the railroad in advance, including the payment due on November 17, 1957. The quarterly payment of $6,000 due on February 17, 1958, which Pier seeks to recover, was not made. The railroad claimed to have been constructively evicted on December 10, 1957, and by its declaration in set-off sought to recover a proportional part of the quarterly rent paid on November 17,1957. The auditor found for the railroad on Pier’s declaration and for the railroad on its declaration in set-off in the sum of $4,536.97 with interest.

Pier, at the trial before a jury, presented, among other matters, the additional evidence stated below. Pier operated in Fall River a pier which ran generally east and west. The pier, entered from the east side, was “more or less rectangular and was surrounded on the north, west, and south sides by water.” In 1957, there were two buildings on the pier, a small one story frame building, fifty years old, on the north side, and a larger marine terminal, built in 1955, on the south side.

The small building, then leased to the railroad, contained [183]*18312,000 square feet of space (200 feet by 60 feet). On its south side (where there were no railroad tracks) there were nine wooden sliding doors, used for the receipt of freight from trucks. Trucks were backed up to these doors to discharge cargo. On the north side, there were eight sliding doors, not all of which could be open at once, leading to two railroad tracks.2 Six freight cars could be accommodated at one time on the tracks north of the smaller building.

There were no other tenants in this building.

The railroad, in 1957 and theretofore, placed freight cars on the tracks north of the smaller building to be loaded through the doors on that side. The cars would not be separated. There was no platform on the north side and freight was never unloaded from trucks on that side. “Operating from the smaller building it was necessary to discharge cargo on the south side, truck it through the building [where the railroad sorted and classified the freight] over a deteriorated wooden flooring on hand trucks and [have railroad employees] load it on . . . freight cars on the north side. ’ ’ This was a ‘ ‘ continuous operation. ’ ’

The floor of “the smaller building was approximately 18 inches from the ground and was thus 2% to 3% feet beneath the trucks from which cargo was unloaded. The distance from the north side of the smaller building to the freight car on the tracks was approximately five feet which necessitated the placing of a six foot plate from the building to the cars.” It took two men to handle this plate. The smaller building was not used for the storage of freight.

The two tracks on the north side of the smaller building joined each other east of the building and continued to the east as a single track. A short distance east of Pier’s premises, this single track passed an open shed used in 1957 for loading and unloading of freight.

The larger building (600 feet by 160 feet) is approximately 200 feet south of the smaller building. It has one spur track on its south side and two spur tracks on its north [184]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 N.E.2d 552, 344 Mass. 179, 1962 Mass. LEXIS 716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fall-river-line-pier-inc-v-new-york-new-haven-hartford-railroad-mass-1962.