Grey v. Greenville & Hudson Railroad

46 A. 636, 60 N.J. Eq. 153, 15 Dickinson 153, 1900 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 61
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 31, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 46 A. 636 (Grey v. Greenville & Hudson Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grey v. Greenville & Hudson Railroad, 46 A. 636, 60 N.J. Eq. 153, 15 Dickinson 153, 1900 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 61 (N.J. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Emery, V. C.

An order has been made, by consent, consolidating these causes and bringing on together the hearing of three motions made in the causes, as if the motions had been made on a supplemental information against both defendants, with leave to mould the pleadings before entry of orders or decrees.

The motions are — first, an application to attach the Green-ville and Hudson company for contempt for the alleged violation of an injunction or restraining order, dated April 31st, 1900, and which was issued in the first cause before the filing of the answer of that companjr, to the supplemental information in the cause; second, a motion by the Greenville and Hudson company, upon their answer to the supplemental information, to dissolve this injunction directed on the supplemental information ; and third, a motion by the attorney-general, in the second cause, for a preliminary injunction against both railroad companies to enjoin, pending final hearing, the construction of a railroad by either of them across Chapel avenue, a public highway within the limits of Jersey City. The opinion advising the issuing of a preliminary injunction against the construction of a railroad across the avenue by the Greenville and Hudson road gives the substantial facts relating to the situation up to that time, and I will now only state briefly the conclusions I reach upon the motions.

First. The motion to attach for contempt must be continued over until the final hearing of the cause. In these proceedings [155]*155the allegation on the part of the attorney-general is that the Greenville and Hudson road has, since the restraifiing order, built its branch road across the avenue, in violation of the order. The Greenville and Hudson road, by affidavits, denies that it has built the road across the avenue, and alleges that the belt line road has built and owns the road, and has a lawful right to build it. Whether the belt line has, in fact, built the road, and has the right to build it, is an issue raised on the information subsequently filed against both companies, and it is a question which must be decided in that suit on proofs formally taken in a cause to which both companies are parties. It appears, therefore, that the question of the building of the railroad across the avenue, subsequent to the order, although it may, if built by the Green-ville and Hudson, involve a contempt of the order of the court, is a question which should be decided upon formal issues and proofs rather than on summary proceedings for contempt. If built in violation of the order of the court, the removal of the road would be necessary in order to punish or to clear the contempt, and the belt line company, which is alleged by both companies to have built the road and to be in possession of it, is manifestly entitled to be heard, before any such action is taken, where the claim is apparently made in good faith. This motion will, therefore, stand over, with leave to renew at final hearing upon the proofs then taken.

Second. The motion to dissolve the injunction directed to be issued against the Greenville and Hudson company, upon the answer filed to the supplemental information, must be denied. In its answer to the original information this company set up a location of its route on the route of the belt line company, at the place in question, made with the consent of the belt line, and declared its intention to construct on that location. After this answer to the original information, the order restraining the Greenville and Hudson from building its so-called branch across the avenue was advised upon the supplemental information. A railroad was subsequently constructed across the avenue, and, as is claimed by the Greenville and Hudson company’s affidavits in answer to the contempt proceedings, and by its answer in the suit against both companies, this road was constructed by the [156]*156belt line on its own location. This location on the avenue at the crossing of the highway is the same location on which the belt line had previously consented that the Greenville and Hudson might construct its branch line. In the answer to the supplemental information against it alone, upon which answer it now moves to dissolve, the Greenville and Hudson still sets up and claims the right to construct its road across the avenue, up in the answer to the original information, which is made part of the supplemental answer by reference. In my judgment two railroads cannot be constructed on the same route, under this consent clause of the General Railroad law, and the actual construction by one road, with the consent of the other, will, in my judgment, determine the rights of location and construction as to both at the place where their routes coincide.

The authoritjr given by the eleventh section of the General Railroad law (Gen. 8tat. ¶. 2660 88) to railroad companies incorporated under it, to construct a railroad between the terminal points named in its articles upon the route filed in the secretary of state’s office, gives an authority, as against the state, to construct the railroad (not exceeding one hundred feet in width, unless required for cuts or embankments) across the public highways on the route as located. The survey and location of a route, and-the filing thereof, gives a right of location and construction which is prior to, and exclusive of, all other locations and construction. Morris and Essex Railroad Co. v. Blair, 1 Stock. 635 (Errors and Appeals, 1854.). This principle has never since been questioned.

The thirty-sixth section (Gen. Stat. p. 2654/. 61), forbids the taking, using or occupying by condemnation by any company formed under the act, of the located route of any railroad except for the purpose of crossing the route, with the proviso that a railroad may be located or constructed on the surveyed route of any other railroad with its consent, and not otherwise.

This provision cannot be construed, either as against the state or landowners on the located route, to authorize the actual construction and existence of two railroads on the same located route, for such power of imposing additional burdens upon the highways or private lands, after a railroad has once been con[157]*157structed, cannot be inferred by implication. When a railroad, before the construction of its own road, has given its consent to the location and construction of another road upon its located route, the latter company has the statutory right to locate and construct its road on the prior location, and the construction of both roads on the same location not being authorized, it might by actual construction lawfully appropriate the route.

But this consent of the two railroads as between each other being something with which the state has no concern, so long as only one railroad is constructed on the same located route across its highways, it may be released, abandoned and rescinded by the subsequent act or consent of the two railroads. Coe v. New Jersey Midland Railway Co., 4 Stew. Eq., 105, 147 (Chancellor Runyon, 1879).

In the present instance, the Greenville and Hudson, after securing the consent of the belt line company to construct its road on the located route of the latter (across Chapel avenue), has consented to, if it has not actually procured or assisted in procuring, the construction of the road of the belt line road on the location.

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Bluebook (online)
46 A. 636, 60 N.J. Eq. 153, 15 Dickinson 153, 1900 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grey-v-greenville-hudson-railroad-njch-1900.