Field v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co.

13 Ohio C.C. Dec. 1, 3 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 130, 1897 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 337
CourtAshtabula Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 12, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Ohio C.C. Dec. 1 (Field v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ashtabula Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Field v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co., 13 Ohio C.C. Dec. 1, 3 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 130, 1897 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 337 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

LAUBIE, J.

The case of Mary F* Field and Albert Field against the Fake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Company and William K. Vanderbilt, has been submitted to us in the arguments of counsel and extensive briefs, wherein the plaintiffs ask to have the judgment of the court below reversed for various claimed errors as stated in the petition in error.

The court below charged the jury that the plaintiffs could not recover in that action the value of the lands claimed as upon an appropriation, and if that direction of the court to the jury is correct, that ends all questions in this case. It is entirely immaterial what other errors may have been committed, if that was not erroneous.

Now the action was brought, according to the ninth amended petition before us, to recover the value of certain lands in this county, which were deeded to the railway company or its trustees (the same thing) in 1871, by the plaintiffs, in consideration of the sum of one dollar in hand paid and upon the condition that was provided in the deed for the con* struction of the road within the period of two years. It was alleged that this condition has not been complied with, but that the plaintiffs have not enforced it, except as they seek to enforce it now. That is, they seek now to recover the value of the lands conveyed, because the condition was not complied with, as to the building and operation of the road, and the court instructed the jury, as I have said, that the action could not be maintained.

Why might a recovery be had, as claimed by the plaintiffs? They say that they are entitled to recover because of the fact that this condition in the deed was not complied with, and that this was the condition: “Nevertheless, the above conveyance is upon the express condition subsequent, that if the Fake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Company shall not within two years from this date have constructed and in operation its Ashtabula and Jamestown branch railroad, having its main business line running from the east side of the harbor of Ashtabula to Jamestown, in the state of Pennsylvania, then upon the demand of the said Mary F-, her heirs and assigns, the said Clark shall reconvey the above granted lands to said Mary F., her heirs and assigns.’’

That the plaintiffs had in 1890 commenced an action by ejectment to recover possession of these lands and damages for their retention, and that that action is this one, — this being the ninth amended petition in the [3]*3case; that they abandoned the right to recover by ejectment and they now seek to recover the value of the premises, by alleging that this condition was never performed; that it is true they stood by and saw the railway company occupy the land and make large and valuable improvements upon it, but that they are now entitled to charge the defendant company with having taken the lands as by an appropriation, at least an appropriation in fact; and,'therefore, that they should have compensation for the value of the land, which they declare .to be six hundred thousand dollars. This, in short, is this ninth amended petition.

I need not recite the defenses. It is sufficient to say, as solely bear' ing upon what I shall pass upon in this case, that they deny that this condition was not performed. They allege in their answer that the company did perform it; that it built and operated its road and has been running it ever since; that it built it and operated it within the time mentioned, the two years specified in this condition subsequent, or whatever it may be, and that they did expend, as alleged in the petition, large sums of money in making large and valuable improvements and changing the aspect of the land, and -they claim the plaintiffs are estopped from any relief by reason of. the fact that they never made, up to the time of the commencement of the action, any claim of recovery of the land, nor any objection to the railroad company’s using it, or that the condition had not been performed.

The rights of the plaintiffs to recover I have simply stated as they make it, that is, that under the facts and circumstances of the case they were entitled to charge the company with the value of the premises, because compensation has never been paid and the company have appropriated in fact, the land; and as I have said the court below held that action could not be maintained by the plaintiffs and so charged the jury.

It is entirely immaterial, as we think, and as viewed by the court below, what the condition was, whether it was a covenant or a condition subsequent; but we are not disposed to hesitate about the matter, and consider it in the light claimed by the plaintiffs, that it was a condition subsequent and the performance of which might avoid the estate. If a condition subsequent, however, the thing did not work of itself, it had to be worked by, somebody. A plow is a good thing to plow up land with, but it won’t do much effective excavation unless some body uses it with some kind of force. So a condition subsequent is a very good thing to rely upon, but it don’t work out any one’s rights of itself; the grantor in the deed must do something. If he wants to recover the land on the ground that the condition subsequent has not been performed, he has either got to enter the premises and take possession on that ground for the reason that the condition was not performed, or else [4]*4be has to apply to a court that can grant him that relief and have the forfeiture declared and a reconveyance ordered of the premises. They commenced an action for that pnrpose upon ejectment in this instance, and finding that would not hold, they abandoned it; that is, we assume so, because it would not hold. An action of ejectment under .the circumstances stated here, was not a remedy open to these parties, and we assume that it is the reason they abandoned it; but the title remains in the grantee until some act is done by which he is ousted from the premises, either by the act of the party or by an act of the court, and the mere saying that the condition has not been complied with, works nothing for either party; it does not disturb title or possession of the grantee in any sense or form.

It seems to be assumed by counsel in argument here, that the mere declaration on their part that the condition was not performed works a forfeiture all right and that they are entitled to recover the land. That is the assumption, and yet in these same briefs, counsel for the plaintiffs in error, says this: “ A conveyance upon a condition subsequent passes a present estate in the land subject to be defeated by non-performance of the condition and the estate continues until avoided for breach of the condition by one having a right to avoid it.” It is expressed in a little different language from mine, but it includes what I have said, that some one, who has a right to avoid it, must in some way avoid it, either by taking possession of the premises and ousting the grantee, on the ground that he has not performed the condition, or else by application to a court of justice upon that proposition.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Ohio C.C. Dec. 1, 3 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 130, 1897 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/field-v-lake-shore-michigan-southern-railway-co-ohcirctashtabul-1897.