Hagerstown & Cross Roads Turnpike Co. v. Evers

99 A. 980, 130 Md. 8, 1917 Md. LEXIS 93
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 10, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 99 A. 980 (Hagerstown & Cross Roads Turnpike Co. v. Evers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hagerstown & Cross Roads Turnpike Co. v. Evers, 99 A. 980, 130 Md. 8, 1917 Md. LEXIS 93 (Md. 1917).

Opinion

Bora, O. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court,

The appellant was incorporated by Chapter 89 of the Acts of 1.868 with authority to construct a turnpike road from Hagerstown to Cearfoss, in Washington County, with power to erect a toll-gate or toll-gates thereon. The road is four miles in length and runs in a northwesterly direction from Hagerstown. The only toll-gate erected on it was at a point about a mile from the then limits of Hagerstown, and a short distance southeasterly from what is called Broadfording road, which is a public county road. Under Chapter 257 of the Acts of 3914, the corporate limits of Hagerstown were extended to a point not far from the toll-gate, which is still located where it was originally built, and the portion of the road within the new limits (about a mile) was ceded to and accepted by the city. The distance from the Broadfording road to the city limits is 283 feet, along the turnpike road of the appellant. The ¡appellant owns about- half an acre of land o-n which the toll-gate house is built—it having been conveyed to it by Jennie S. Evers and Abraham M. Evers, her husband, two of the appellees, who own a farm on the westerly side of the turnpike which, extends into the present limits of Hagerstown. Milton E. Hoover, another appellee, owns a small farm adjoining that of the Evers on the northwest side, extending to the Broadfording road, and fronting on the appellant’s road between the latter and the lot conveyed to the appellant by Air. and Mrs. Evers.

On the 15th of April, 1936, Air. and Mrs. Evers made a lease to J. Alilton Long and eighteen other persons- of a “strip of land not more than twenty-five (25) feet wide” “for the public use of a road or way,” for the term of one year with the right of the lessees to renew the lease on the same terms and conditions .for a period of five years longer at .$35.00 per *10 annum. Milton E. Hoover made a lease to the same parties on the same terms and conditions for a strip of land on his farm, excepting there is no money consideration mentioned in the lease. The road was- laid out from a point on the Broadfording road near the appellant’s road to the lot of the appellant, purchased of Mr. and Mrs. Evera, and then along and around that lot until it reached the southwest comer of it, and from there it diverged from that lot to a point not far from the turnpike, and then ran southeasterly to the corporate limits of Hagerstown. The proposed road does not touch the turnpike at any point, but runs into what was formerly a part of it, and is now a street in Hagerstown.

A bill was filed by the appellant against Mí. and Mrs. Evers, Milton E. Hoover, Norman B. Holsinger, Benjamin R. Dorsey, J. Milton Long and William S. Foley, asking for an injunction against Mr. and Mrs. Evers and Mr. Hoover prohibiting them “from granting permission or leasing to the other defendants any lands over which there is to be constructed a ‘Shun Pike Road,’ ” and against the five other defendants named, as well as others said to be unknown to the plaintiff, “from building and constructing any such ‘Shun Pike Road’ or road around the south side of the complainant’s toll-gate, to be used for the purpose of evading the payment of tolls to the complainant for the passage of any wagons, carriages or vehicles of any kind passing over the Broadfording road, or over the turnpike road of this complainant to and from Broadfording and Oaerfoss to Hagerstown.” An injunction was granted on April 24, 1916. Later the plaintiff filed a petition alleging that before the injunction was served on the defendants the road was built, and praying for a mandatory injunction prohibiting them from maintaining and keeping open the said road, and ordering them to close it. On May 1st, 1916, an order was passed directing the issuance of that injunction. An answer was filed by Mr. and Mrs. Evers and Mr. Hoover and another by Messrs. Holsinger, Dorsey and Long. A motion to dissolve the injunction was *11 made, testimony was taken and after a hearing the Court passed a decree dissolving both injunctions. From that decree this appeal was taken.

All of the defendants and all of the lessees except Air. and Airs. Evers and William S. Foley, live on the Broadfording road. Just where it ends is not very clearly shown in the testimony, but it crosses the turnpike which runs from Williamsport, Aid., to Greencastle, Pa., and apparently reaches the appellant’s road again at Cearfoss, where the latter ends. There are also two county roads running from the Broad-fording road to the appellant’s road, as shown by a plat filed. William S. Foley lives on the appellant’s road, but his testimony shows that he had nothing to do with the new road, excepting he was employed to work on it a day and a half, but never used and did not expect to use it. The appellant charges those coming from the Broadfording road two cents toll each way for a. one-horse vehicle, and four cents each way for a two horse vehicle to Hagerstown. After the limits of Hagerstown were extended the people along the Broad-fording road applied to the appellant and to the1 County Commissioners to have the toll reduced, and, failing in that, a bill was offered in the Legislature to require a removal of tlie toll-gate from its present location to a point balf a mile further from Hagerstown. That bill passed the House of Delegates, but failed iu the Senate, and the lessees then built the new road, apparently to secure from appellant a reduction of the tolls. They claim that the tolls charged are exorbitant, and testified in substance that their object in building the road was to have the tolls reduced and that they did not intend to permit it to he used by any person not living on the Broadfording road, excepting the Evers, through whose farm it runs. They only use the appellant’s road in going to Hagerstown 283 feet, since the city limits were extended, but there has been no reduction of tolls.

The charter of the appellant wras granted at the same session of the Legislature which adopted the General Corpora *12 tion Laws of tbe State, and, included provisions for the formation and regulation of turnpike, plank road and passenger railway companies. By section 216 of Chapter 471 of the Acts of 1868, being the General Corporation Law referred to, it was declared that all corporations theretofore formed under the General Laws of the State relating to corporations, or under any special Act, were entitled to the benefit of and to be subject to all the regulations in that article contained for the government of the corporations therein referred to, so far as applicable to said corporations. There is nothing in the charter which indicates that that company should have more rights and powers than one incorporated under the General Laws which were to be submitted to the Legislature at the same session and which were then adopted.

An examination of the General Laws will fail to show an> intention to prohibit another turnpike company, or any kind of a road, from being built which might interfere with tolls of one so incorporated, and the same may be said of the charter of appellant. Any five citizens of the United States, a majority of them being citizens of this State, could then organize a turnpike company, and since 1908 three adult persons, one of whom is a resident of this State, can do so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 A. 980, 130 Md. 8, 1917 Md. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hagerstown-cross-roads-turnpike-co-v-evers-md-1917.