Hines v. Symington

112 A. 814, 137 Md. 441, 1921 Md. LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 12, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 112 A. 814 (Hines v. Symington) 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
Hines v. Symington, 112 A. 814, 137 Md. 441, 1921 Md. LEXIS 15 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee is the owner of land in Baltimore County along the margin of which extends a line of railway known as the Green Spring Branch of the Pennsylvania Pailroad Company. In this suit recovery Was sought and obtained by the appellee for the alleged appropriation of part of her land by the railroad company for the construction of a siding connected with the existing single track of the branch line just mentioned, and the use of the siding for the operation of freight trains in such manner as to cause injury to the appellee’s nearby dwelling and serious discomfort to the occupants. The most important question in the case is whether there is legally sufficient evidence to prove that the siding was constructed upon the appellee’s land and not upon ground which the defendant railroad company was entitled to use for that purpose as being included within the limits of its right of way. While the siding was built before the period of federal control of railroads, and the suit was not brought *443 ■until after tbe close of that period, some of the consequential damages sued for were sustained during the. administration of the Director General of Railroads, and for that, reason, presumably, he. was joined with the Pennsylvania Railroad Company as a defendant.

The Green Spring Branch railroad was originally constructed about eighty years ago by the Baltimore and Susquehanna Railroad Company, under a charter which provided that the width of the railroad should not exceed sixty-six feet. After various 'intermediate transfers, the possessory and operative rights in the railroad are now vested in the defendant railroad company as lessee. There was testimony admitted at the trial to the effect that the ground occupied by the railroad adjacent to the land now owned by the plaintiff was not acquired by tbe Baltimore and 'Susquehanna Railroad Company, or by any of its successors, through condemnation proceedings or by any method of conveyance, but that tbe company built its1 railway over tbe land by permission of the plaintiff’s predecessor in title. It was a single track railroad and, where it borders on the plaintiff’s land, the full' width of the ground included within the bounds of its actual use and occupation was considerably less than the limit of sixty-six feet mentioned in the charter.

The evidence was in conflict as to whether the siding complained of was located beyond the space previously appropriated to the railroad, but the verdict of the jury decided that question of fact in favor of the plaintiff’s contention. It does not appear, however, that the new track is outside of the right of way of the defendant railroad company, if it is entitled to the use of one sixty-six feet wide at that place. The theory of the defendant is that this is. the real extent of its right. It contends that in view of the charter power of the Baltimore and Susquehanna Railroad Company to build a railroad of tbe width of sixty-six feet, and of the fact that its property and franchises were subsequently vested by authorized consolidation in the Northern Central Railway *444 •Company, which in the year 1857 conveyed the railroad to the Western Maryland Railroad Company, which company reconveyed it in 1874 to the Northern Central Railway Company, by which it has been leased for ninety-nine years to the defendant railroad company, the predecessors in title of the latter company must be held to have been in adverse possession, from the year 1874, at the latest, of a railroad right of way sixty-six feet wide which includes: the land in dispute. It is argued that whatever may have been the width of the space actually used and occupied for the railroad, and whatever may have been the extent of the right of user conferred upon the Baltimore and Shsquehanna Railroad Company, the later and formal conveyances of the railroad should be regarded as placing the grantees in the position of having entered under color of title, and as consequently extending their adverse possession to the limits permitted by the franchise to which they had succeeded. A right of way sixty-six feet wide is therefore claimed by prescription.

It is a rule well supported by judicial opinion that a railroad company can ordinarily acquire by adverse possession such land only as it holds by actual occupation. Some of the decisions to that effect are: James v. Indianapolis & St. L. R. Co., 91 Ill. 554; Floyd v. Louisville & N. R. Co., 25 Ky. Law Rep. 2147, 80 S. W. 204; Coleman v. North Pac. Ry. Co., 36 Minn. 525; Phila. & Reading R. Co. v. Obert, 109 Pa. 193; Omaha &. R. V. Ry. Co. v. Richards, 38 Neb. 847; Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Smith, 141 Ala. 335; St. Louis S. W. Ry Co. v. Davis, 75 Ark. 283. There are decisions to the contrary, upon which the appellants rely, but we think the rule we have stated has the weight of reason and authority in its favor. It gives logical application to the general and well-settled principle that adverse possession without color of title affects only the land actually occupied. The charter right of a railroad company to acquire land of a specified area does not give it color of title to that extent with respect to land of which it has appropriated a smaller *445 area by permission, of tbe owner. Tbe color of title which the law recognizes isi that which is created by an instrument purporting to give title to the particular land which it describes. It is only by virtue of a color of title thug created that actual possession of a part of the land described is constructively extended to the whole. In the ordinary case of a mere permissive entry and user by a railroad company, there is no just principle upon which thei effect of its actual occupation should be extended in its favor on the theory of constructive possession.

Oases have been cited in which the landowner sued the railroad company to recover the value of his ground appropriated for its rigjht of way, and in which ho wag held to be entitled to compensation for the full space which the company was authorized to acquire for that purpose under its charter. But there is a very important difference between a case of that class and the one we have now under decision. In the cases cited the land owner was conceding the right of the railroad company to the land included in a right of way having the full charter width, and the suit was to recover its reasonable value. In a case like the present the landowner is disputing the right of the railroad company to ground it did not originally and actually occupy, and it is claiming a larger area by constructive possession and without offer of compensation.

The conveyances under which the railroad with which we are now concerned eventually came into the control of the defendant company did not purport to transfer any other or wider right of way than that which the Baltimore and Sus>quehanna Railroad Company possessed. There is no descrip^ lion of the width of the right of Way in any of the deeds by which the railroad wasi conveyed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 A. 814, 137 Md. 441, 1921 Md. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hines-v-symington-md-1921.