Freud v. Detroit & Pontiac Railway Co.

95 N.W. 559, 133 Mich. 413, 1903 Mich. LEXIS 521
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1903
DocketDocket Nos. 106, 107
StatusPublished

This text of 95 N.W. 559 (Freud v. Detroit & Pontiac Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Freud v. Detroit & Pontiac Railway Co., 95 N.W. 559, 133 Mich. 413, 1903 Mich. LEXIS 521 (Mich. 1903).

Opinion

Moore, J.

This is an appeal from a decree dismissing injunction bills. The circuit judge was of the opinion that complainants had a remedy at law. The following statement of facts, which is fully justified by the record, is taken from the brief of the solicitors for complainants:

‘£ The two cases in the above title were heard together. The circuit judge filed one opinion in the two cases. Separate decrees were entered, and appeals taken. Except for ,the description of the property, the amended bill of complaint in the Freud case is substantially identical with the bill of complaint in the Candler case, and the answers of defendant are substantially idexxtical.
“The complainant Freud, in the one case, and the complainants Candler Bros., in the other case, are owners of sepax-ate parcels of land fronting on the -west side of the Detroit & Birmingham Blank Road, which is a continuation of Woodward avenue, in Detroit. The Candler property includes a little less than 20 acres, and was bought by [415]*415them from Mary Granger in 1892 or 1893. It is situated a short distance northerly of the boundary between the counties of Wayne and Oakland, and it has a frontage on Woodward avenue, so called, of about 924 feet. The Freud property adjoins the Candler place immediately on the north. It includes about 29 acres, and was purchased by Mr. Freud in 1893. It has a frontage of about 750 feet on Woodward avenue. The highway was originally the Saginaw Turnpike, and its location and width were established by the legislature. Act No. 107, Sess. Laws 1857. The width of the road was to be four rods, — two rods on each side of the center of the then existing plank road.
-‘As early as 1867, the Granger families owned and occupied both the Freud and Candler properties. - In that year they improved both places, and before the year 1870 there had been planted along the front line of both properties shade trees,, outside of which had been built a fence marking the line of the highway as to both properties. Within the fence on the Candler place, and not far from the house, was sunk a well, which remained until it was destroyed by defendant, in May, 1900. * * * Along the front of complainants’ property, the highway (that is, the space between the fences on either side) was nearly, if not quite, 66 feet in width; the graveled part of the plank road being about in the center of the highway as thus defined. The line of the fences was not in all places on a straight line, and the graveled road meandered slightly, but their lines were substantially as above stated.
“In January, 1895, the township of Eoyal Oak, in which all of the property mentioned is situated, gave a franchise for the construction of an .electric street railway along Woodward and other thoroughfares to George Hendrie, Fred A. Baker, Stephen Baldwin, John C. Donnelly, and Strathearn Hendrie. On October 21,1895, the Detroit & Birmingham Plank-Eoad Company granted permission to the Oakland Railway Company to occupy the highway for the construction of a single-track electric railway along Woodward avenue, under conditions set forth in the' contract. In pursuance of these contracts, the Oakland Railway Company, during the years 1895 and 1896, constructed a single-track electric railway from Detroit to Birmingham and Pontiac; the track being laid in the highway on Woodward avenue between the traveled part of the plank road and the fences which had marked the line of the complainants’ two properties for many [416]*416years. In the construction of this single track, and the operation of it, none of the trees were removed from the front of either of the properties, nor were the fences disturbed, unless possibly at the upper end of Freud’s land the fence which had stood outside of the trees was then placed immediately to the west, and behind the trees; also some of the trees at the upper end of Mr. Freud’s property had some of their limbs cut off by the railway company, so as not to interfere with the poles and wires used in the construction and operation of the plant.
“On March 21, 1899, the Oakland Railway Company secured the privilege from the Detroit & Birmingham Plank-Road Company for the construction of a double-track where previously it had maintained only a single-track railway. Previous thereto, the railway company had purchased fapm Mr. Porter, who adjoined complainants on the north, a strip of land one rod wide along the front of his property, and immediately north of Freud’s land. During 1899 the railway .company constructed a double-track railway from Royal Oak southerly to the northerly line of Freud’s property; building the tracks in such a way as to protect the line of trees which had previously marked the front of Mr. Porter’s land.
“The defendant, the Detroit & Pontiac Railway Company, succeeded to any rights which the Oakland Railway Company had in the railway, in 1897 or 1898. Previous to May 1, 1900, at which time defendant began the destruction of the trees in front of both properties, and the removal of the fences thereon, no request for permission to appropriate their property and no negotiations of any kind were had by defendant, or by any one on its behalf, with any of the Candlers. As to Mr. Freud’s property, there had likewise been no negotiations of any kind, except with a Mr. Springsteen, who, claiming to represent defendant, saw Mr. Freud, and made an offer to pay him for the privilege of constructing the double track. Mr. Freud refused to sell his property for the amount which Springsteen proposed, viz., $1,000, and told him he preferred to have the railway laid in the center of the road; Mr. Springsteen having suggested that Mr. Hendrie owned a controlling interest in the graveled road, and could do so.
“ Without further warning, defendant’s men, under the personal instruction of its manager, entered upon the complainants’ properties with a large force of men; moved the fences back a distance of substantially seven feet along [417]*417the line of botn properties; cut down all of the trees, which had stood along this line for 30 years or thereabouts; filled in the well on the Candler property; graded the entire front, utterly regardless of the slope of the land on the adjoining properties, or of the grade of the plank road; and constructed upon this property a double-track railway, built substantially as commercial railways are constructed, placing trolley poles immediately against the fence in its new location, and having the ties and the rails of the inner track, throughout a large part, if not all, of the length of the properties, on the land which had previously been included within the fences of complainants.
“ Complainant Freud immediately applied to the Oakland circuit court for an injunction restraining these trespasses; his original bill being filed on May 2, 1900. The circuit judge .refused to grant an ex parte injunction, except to. restrain the defendant from cutting trees. As the trees had already been cut down, the injunction was of no use whatever to complainant. Upon a hearing after notice, the circuit judge refused to grant any preliminary injunction.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Donovan v. Allert
91 N.W. 441 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1903)
Nichols v. Ann Arbor & Ypsilanti Street Railway Co.
16 L.R.A. 371 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1891)
Nieman v. Detroit Suburban Street Railway Co.
61 N.W. 519 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1894)
Kennedy v. Detroit Railway
66 N.W. 495 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1896)
Stock v. Township of Jefferson
38 L.R.A. 355 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 N.W. 559, 133 Mich. 413, 1903 Mich. LEXIS 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freud-v-detroit-pontiac-railway-co-mich-1903.