Ireton Bros. & Eckenberg v. Ft. Wayne, Van Wert & Lima Traction Co.

2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 317
CourtAllen County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 15, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 317 (Ireton Bros. & Eckenberg v. Ft. Wayne, Van Wert & Lima Traction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Allen 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
Ireton Bros. & Eckenberg v. Ft. Wayne, Van Wert & Lima Traction Co., 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 317 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

Tbe gist of tbe complaint in tbis ease is tbat tbe defendants are constructing a.street railroad in and along Second street in the village of Delphos, Ohio, under an ordinance which they [318]*318claim is invalid because tbe owners of a majority of the feet front abutting upon said Second street did not, in writing, consent to the passage of the granting ordinance prior to its passage, and because the construction of said railroad along said Second street in front of the plantiffs’ premises which abut thereon will greaty injure their means of ingress and egress and interfere with their use and occupation of said premises for the purposes of their business as warehouse and elevator men, in this respect injuriously affecting them differently from the manner in which the remainder of the lots abutting upon said street will be affected by the construction and operation of said railroad.

A temporary injunction was allowed by the Probate Court of Allen County, preventing the defendants from prosecuting the work until a final hearing of this action or the further order of. the court. Subsequently the defendant moved this court to vacate said injunction and the matter was heard upon the evidence and argument of counsel, and is for determination on such motion.

It appears from the evidence and the admissions of the parties during the hearing that the council of the village of Delphos established a street railroad route in said village commencing in Monroe street north of the Pennsylvania tracks, running thence to Second street, thence along Second to State street, thence along State street to Ohio street, thence along Ohio street to the west corporation line of the village; that the consents of certain property holders owning property abutting upon said route were presented to the council and the council subsequently, after taking the steps required by law as to advertising and bidding, granted to the defendant traction company the right to construct, maintain and operate a street railroad along said route; that the provision of said ordinance fixing the time within which said railroad must be constructed and in operation, has been extended from time to time until October 1, 1904; that the defendant traction company has entered upon and is proceeding to construct said railroad over a part of said established route, viz., from Douglas street through Second street to State street and at the former point that it departs from said route and runs [319]*319over private right of way to the corporation line, and at the latter point it continues on westwardly with its track through that part of Second street west of State which has been opened to the public, and- beyond that on private right of way; that-where the proposed railroad passes the premises of the plaintiff in Second street its track is to be in the center of the street and the rails on a level with the surface thereof, and that the said street at that point is 72 feet wide.

It is claimed by the plaintiffs that their right of ingress and egress to and from said lot will be materially injured by the construction and operation of the road, and that by reason of such construction and operation it will be less convenient for farmers and others having grain to deliver and occasion to do business with the plaintiffs, to reach the warehouse of the plaintiffs located on the premises in question, and that the operation of a street railway through said street will deter many of them from dealing with the plaintiffs, especially in view of the fact that Second street furnishes the only means of access to said premises because of certain steam railroad tracks in the street immediately east of said premises. Aside from the averment as to injury to the ingress and egress the petition states no facts showing how the plaintiffs’ easement in said street and their business will be injured by the proposed railroad, and the plaintiffs admit that there is no change of grade contemplated by reason of the construction of the road, and that their ingress and egress will not be affected except in so far as the presence of a street car passing along in front of their premises would make it impracticable, for the time being, for any one to cross the-track. In other words, it is not claimed that the ingress and egress are affected in any manner differently from the way in which the ingress and egress to and from every other lot abutting upon Second street will be affected, and the plaintiffs base their claim of special injury upon the character of the business they are carrying on upon said premises and their apprehended loss -of patronage by reason of the disinclination of farmers and others to drive up to and upon their premises over said street when there is a likelihood of a street car passing along the track of the defendant company in the street.

[320]*320It is well settled in this state that a street railroad in a municipal street is not an additional servitude, and it is evident, from plaintiffs’ offer of evidence on that point, that no addi-. tional burden in this case can be shown. The owners of lots abutting upon a street in a municipality, hold them subject to the right of the public to use the street for street purposes, of which the construction and operation of a street railroad is one, and unless a change of grade is involved in the construction of such a railroad, or some unnecessary interference with the abutter’s easement in a street' is caused by its construction, he has no right to complain when the council, which has the care, supervision and control of the streets, exercises the power which the Legislature has conferred upon it, to authorize such improved method of travel upon the highway. If, as a matter of fact, by reason of the peculiar business of the abutter, his trade is impaired, or the abutting property is not so desirable by reason of the added noise or in some other particular, this is damnum, absque injuria.

No proof was received as to alleged injuries to the paintiffs’ lot for the reasons above stated, and the court is of the opinion that there is no equity in plaintiffs’ claim in this behalf.

Coming now to consider the real point involved in this motion, it may be premised that the plaintiffs predicate their right to the relief demanded upon their proprietary interest in a lot abutting upon Second street, and they do not sue as tax-payers in behalf of the city, seeking to enforce any right that the public may have by reason of a violation of’ the law or an ordinance by the defendants. While undoubtedly the owner of land abutting on a street or part of a street along which it is proposed to construct a street railroad has the right to complain and enjoin constructon if the owners of a majority of the foot frontage on that street or part of street have not consented in the mode prescribed by statute, yet if they have so consented, then the personal privilege of the abutter to object is gone. Thereafter— if the requisite number of consents have been obtained and a ■ granting ordinance passed — if the grantee fail to conform to the stipulations of the grant as to the route, the public and not an abutting property owner is the real party in interest (Gin. [321]*321St. R. R. Co. v. Smith et al, 29 O. S., 291). As the owners of a majority of the frontage on each separate street or part of street along which it is proposed to build a street railroad must have consented in writing to the construction thereon of the road (Cable Railway v. Near, 54 O.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ireton-bros-eckenberg-v-ft-wayne-van-wert-lima-traction-co-ohctcomplallen-1904.