In re Avon Beach & Southern Railroad

3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 561
CourtLorain County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 13, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 561 (In re Avon Beach & Southern Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lorain County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Avon Beach & Southern Railroad, 3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 561 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

Washburn, J.

This is 'an application on behalf of -the Avon Beach and Southern Rajlrpad Company, wherein it is sought 10 havp this [562]*562court grant said company permission to iay its tracks across certain streets in the city of Lorain, at grade, and to prescribe what gates, signals and .other safeguards shall be maintained by said company at said crossings in addition to the signals and safeguards prescribed by statute.

This application is filed under a provision of a law passed in April, 1904, and found in 97 Ohio Laws, at page 546, and which will be referred to hereafter in this opinion as a new law. For convenience sake I shall designate the said company as plaintiff, and the municipal corporation of the city of Lorain as defendant.

Before plaintiff filed its petition, proper notice under said new law was given to the defendant, and the defendant has filed an answer and entered its appearance and participated in the trial of the case, without any further notice than that served upon it previous 1» the filing of the petition.

Before the hearing, and at the request of both parties, I viewed the premises in question. A part of the proposed line has been constructed that is, that part from Grove avenue in the city of Lorain, where the plaintiff’s line connects with the Lorain Street Railway Company, and thence east across all of the streets in question, except Thirteenth avenue. The line so far as it has been constructed is at grade with said streets, and except where it crosses said streets is upon a private right of way, and so far as the rails have been laid poles have been erected and trolley wires strung, and it was the intention of the plaintiff to build on across Thirteenth avenue, crossing the same at its junction with the Globeville road, which is on the west bank of Black river.

It is conceded that the plaintiff received no grant, license or permission from the defendant to lay its tracks across the streets as they are now laid, and after the rails were laid as far as they are now laid, the defendant, through its mayor, stopped further construction of the road, and by agreement of the parties nothing further has been done. After the work was stopped, the plaintiff company made application to the defendant for permission to lay its tracks across said streets, and the defendant, on [563]*563the advice of its city solicitor, declined to grant such permission, on the theory that it had no authority to grant such right to the plaintiff, it being claimed that the authority to- grant such right was vested in the court, by virtue of said new law'.

The plaintiff claims that it is a railroad, organized under the general railroad laws of Ohio, and that as such, by reason of the provisions of said new law, it should he granted the permission asked for in its petition by this court.

The defendant claims that the plaintiff is not a railroad within the meaning of said new law, and that if it is a railroad within the meaning of said law, it can not be granted the permission it asks until it has acquired from the defendant, either by agreement with the defendant or by condemnation proceedings, the right to cross said streets.

This last claim- is made under the provisions of Sections 3283 and 3284 of the Revised Statutes of Ohio, -which read as follows:

“Section 3283. If it be necessary, in the location of any part of a railroad, to occupy-any public road, street, alley, way, or ground of any kind, or any part thereof, the municipal or other corporation, or public officers or -authorities, owning or having charge thereof, -and the company may agree upon the manner, terms and conditions upon which the same may he used or occupied; and if the parties be unable to- agree thereon, and it be necessary, in the judgment of the directors of such company, to use or occupy such road, street, alley, way or ground, such company may appropriate so much of the same as may be necessary for the purposes of its road, in the manner and upon the same terms -as is provided for the appropriation of the property of individuals, hut every company which lays a track upon any such street, -alley, road or ground shall be responsible for injuries done thereby to private or public property lying upon or near to such ground, which may be recovered by civil action brought by the -owner, before the proper court, at any time within two years from the completion of snch track.
“Section- 3284. A company may, whenever it is necessary in the construction of its road to cross a road or a stream of water, divert the same from its location or bed; hut the company shall, without unnecessary delay, place such road or stream in such condition as -not to impair its former usefulness, and any or all railroads hereafter constructed, which shall cross any [564]*564avenue or public highway leading from a city of the first or second class to a public cemetery of such city, situated within or without the limits of any such city, shall be constructed so as either to pass under or over such avenue or public highway, at such elevation or ¡depression, as the case may be, as will allow the unobstructed passage of all wagons, carriages, or other vehicles which it may be necessary for any person to use upon such avenue or public highway. ’ ’

If the plaintiff is a railroad company within the meaning of said new law, then the contention of the defendant, that the plaintiff can not build across said streets until it has acquired the right so to do from said defendant, or by condemnation proceedings, is supported by a Hamilton County District Court opinion, Cincinnati Northern Railway v. Cincinnati, 8 Bull., 334, in which it was decided that:

“The right to fix a terminus of a railroad in a city does not imply the power to cross intervening streets without consent or condemnation. ’ ’

And in that case the railroad company was enjoined from crossing the street until it had acquired the right to do so, either by agreement with the municipality or by condemnation proceedings.

Said contention is also supported in the case of Youngstown v. Railway, 3 C. C., 214, in which it is said that:

“The provision of said Section 3284, which declares ‘a company may, whenever it is necessary in the construction of its road to cross a road or a stream of water, divert the same from its location or bed/ does not authorize a railroad company to construct and maintain its road across, a street of a city, without consent of the city authorities or without appropriating the right to do so; but such right of occupancy of a street can be obtained only by agreement with the city authorities or by appropriation, as provided in Section 3283, Revised Statutes. ’ ’

These two circuit decisions are directly in point and should be followed by this court in the absence of authority to the contrary.

I -have found and have been cited to no authorities to the contrary, and unless the new law heretofore referred to supersedes [565]*565•those sections, the contention of the defendant would appear to be well taken, so far as requiring plaintiff to acquire, by agreement with the defendant or by condemnation proceedings, the right to lay its tracks across said streets, before it can legally build its road across them. u

It is true,-that my attention has been called to a decision of Judge Boynton in Little Miami Ry. v.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-avon-beach-southern-railroad-ohctcompllorain-1905.