Grinnell v. Portage Co.

17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 118
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedSeptember 15, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 118 (Grinnell v. Portage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grinnell v. Portage Co., 17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 118 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

LAUBIE, J.

In this case plaintiffs seek to enjoin the commissioners from changing the location, and vacating a portion, of the public highway running west from the town of Ravenna to Kent in said county, known as the Ravenna-Kent road. The facts sufficiently appear in the special finding of facts made by this court at the request of defendants.

The Pennsylvania Company, a defendant herein, controls and operates the Cleveland and Pittsburgh railway and has laid out and is now constructing a new and shorter line for that railway through Portage county, which is to cross said highway diagonally, as the direction of said new line in from northwest to southeast, at a point between said towns a mile distant from its original line, at a grade of more than thirty feet below that of the highway; and at a point some seven hundred feet east thereof said new line is to cross another public road nearly at [120]*120grade, known as the Sandy Lake road, which runs from the south northward and connects with said Ravenna-Kent highway north of said new line of railroad.

The object of the suit is to restrain the defendants from carrying out an agreement entered into between them, to change and divert the line of said Ravenna-Kent highway and vacate and abandon a part thereof, as follows:

Commencing at a point about 350 feet east of said proposed crossings of said Ravenna-Kent highway, thence turning and running said highway to the southwest until it intersects said new railroad, crossing the same by an overhead bridge at right angles, and then turning to the northwest and paralleling such new railroad until it strikes or intersect» the original highway at a point west of where such new line of railroad was to strike said highway, and vacate and abandon such portion of the said highway, as lies between the said points of divergence.

The object of this, as claimed by the defendants, is to avoid the nearly-at-grade crossing of the said Sandy Lake road for the safety and convenience of the public, said agreement also including a change of the line of that road by turning it to the northwest at Some point south of where it was to be crossed by such railroad, and to connect it with said Ravenna-Kent highway at a point near the southwest end of said overhead bridge; and the right to do this, it is claimed, is conferred upon the commissioners by the provision of the act of April 27, 1893 (90 O. L. 359).

That the provisions of said act do not apply to such a case as this, is evident — even the title of the act shows this. It reads, “To provide for the abolition of dangerous grade crossings. ’ ’ Section 1 of that act, (Lan. R. L. 5312; B. 3337-8) in regard to crossings outside of municipalities, provides that if “the commissioners of any county in which, outside of any municipal corporation, a railroad or railroads and any public road or highway cross each other at grade, and the directors of the railroad company or companies are of the opinion that the security and convenience of the public require that alterations shall be made in such crossing, or in the approaches thereto, or in the location of the railroad or railroads or the public way, or any grades thereof, so as to avoid a crossing at grade, or that such crossing should bef discontinued with or without building a new way in substitution therefor, and if they agree as to the alterations which should be made, such alterations may be made in the following manner:”

Section 2 (Lan. R. L. 5313; B. 3337-9). “When it is deemed necessary * * * the commissioners * * * shall by [121]*121resolution, declare such necessity and intent, and shall state * * * the manner in which the alterations in the crossing are to be made, ’ ’ etc.'

Section 10 (Lan. R. L. 5321; B. 3337-17) provides that “When any grade crossing is on a county line road, the commissioners of each county in which such crossing is situated may join in all the proceedings necessary for the abolition of such grade crossing as provided in this act,” etc.

This act and all of its provisions, beyond question, relate solely to existing crossings — crossings that have been and are being used by, and on the line of operated railroads, to the danger and inconvenience of the public, and for that reason are to be changed or abolished.

Here there are not only no existing crossings, but no built and operated railroad — there is nothing to change, alter or abolish except a scheme or design. How is it possible to abolish a crossing, because of its dangerous character, that does not and never did exist? Commissioners of counties are quasi corporations, and have only such power as is conferred by statute, and such statutes are to be strictly construed; and the power here conferred is limited to existing crossings upon existing and operated railroads, and cannot be enlarged to include proposed crossings upon a proposed railroad.

But if it were otherwise there are still other reasons why their action would be illegal, and plaintiffs entitled to relief prayed for.

The grade crossing which they are thus seeking to abolish is not, or will not be on the Eavenna-Kent highway, but on the Sandy Lake road; and that is the only highway, necessary,'or that they could have any right to change in order to abolish such crossing. The statute in question limits such right to the highways intersected, and to the points of intersection.

That road could be changed just as proposed and its crossing abolished by continuing it instead of the Eavenna-Kent highway, along the south line of said railroad to the northwest, until it strikes said Eavenna-Kent highway where said highway was to be reunited as aforesaid, without affecting or changing one foot of the line of the EavennaKent highway.

It would seem therefore, that even if the proposed change in the line of the Eavenna-Kent highway was agreed upon for the security and convenience of the public in getting rid of a grade crossing on another highway and not for the pecuniary benefit of the Pennsylvania Company, that it could be done at much less expense to the county and productive of much less inconvenience and. injury to the adjacent landowners.

[122]*122Again, the plaintiffs live upon lands owned by them, abutting on the Bavenna-Kent highway at the point in question, and they will, it appears, suffer injury by the vacation and abolition of such part of such highway in excess of and different from that of the general public; and therefore, before .their property rights in such easement can be taken, compensation must be first made then.

But here there is no provision or method in this or any other statute by or under which their damages could be ascertained and ordered paid. And in such cases, where no provision exists for.awarding compensation the parties thus injured are entitled to an injunction restraining the' officials from making the proposed change. Tussing v. King, 65 Ohio St. 10 [60 N. E. Rep. 986]; Kinnear Mfg. Co. v. Beatty, 65 Ohio St. 264 [62 N. E. Rep. 341; 87 Am. St. Rep. 600].

We have an earlier statute which, while it is not decisive of the question, reflects somewhat upon it. The act of April 2, 1891 (88 O. L. 261), confers upon township trustees authority to fix and determine the kind and extent of all new crossings, and the time and manner of constructing the same, within their townships.

Section 1 of said act (Lan. R. L. 5307; B.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grinnell-v-portage-co-ohiocirct-1904.