Johnson v. Philadelphia, B. & W.R. Co.

62 A.2d 86, 62 A. 86, 38 Del. Ch. 58, 1905 Del. Ch. LEXIS 5
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedNovember 6, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 62 A.2d 86 (Johnson v. Philadelphia, B. & W.R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Philadelphia, B. & W.R. Co., 62 A.2d 86, 62 A. 86, 38 Del. Ch. 58, 1905 Del. Ch. LEXIS 5 (Del. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Nicholson, Chancellor:

The bill in this cause was filed August 31, 1905, and the answer September 11, -1905, at the hearing of a motion for a preliminary injunction on bill, answer, affidavits, and exhibits. The hearing began September 11th and ended September 16th. The case is one of a number brought by abutting property owners against the Philadelphia, Baltimore & Washington Railroad Company for the purpose of preventing the elevation of the railroad tracks upon the railroad’s right of way between West and Justison Streets, in the city of Wilmington, or the condemnation of the properties adjoining the railroad’s right of way on the north. This is the second of such suits to be heard on motion for a preliminary injunction; decisions having been rendered and opinions filed in the other suit on two several motions. Daniel Bubenzer v. P.B. & W. Railroad Co., (Del.Ch.) 57 Atl. 242, and Id. (Del.Ch.) 61 Atl. 270. The complainant in this suit has presented essentially the same case as did the complainant in the Bubenzer suit, with the exception of the evidence adduced in relation to his claim of a right of way, and more specially as to the existence of a public street (Water Street) over that portion of the railroad’s property or right of way between West and Justison Streets. The case presented by the respondent, however, is radically different. At the hearing of the first motion for a preliminary injunction in the Bubenzer suit, there was no denial by the respondent of the allegations in complainant’s bill, supported by a number of affidavits, in relation to his alleged easement of a right of way; and the preliminary injunction was granted expressly because of the implied admission of all the plaintiff’s allegations by such failure to deny. The question of the right of way is referred to in the opinion delivered by this court upon the decision of the second motion (that made upon the amended pleadings sub *60 sequent to the condemnation proceedings) as follows: “And in respect to the original right of way above described, the respondent alleges in his answer to the amended bill that the condemnation proceedings concerning all that portion of complainant’s property abutting upon the respondent’s right of way have destroyed the easement and right of way alleged by the complainant over the respondent’s present right of way, or the alleged bed of Water Street, and that the destruction of said alleged easement or right of egress and ingress was considered by the said commission is assessing their damages for the condemnation of said property.” Bubenzer v. P., B. & W.R. Co., (Del.Ch.) 61 Atl. 272. After the decision of that motion, affidavits and plots and photographs relating to a longitudinal right of way alongside the railroad tracks, to1 and from the property of complainant, were presented at Chambers by the respondent’s solicitors, and from these were formulated the terms of the order actually signed. In the present case, however, a great number of affidavits are introduced, denying any adverse user of a way either across or alongside the tracks of the railroad, respondent, although the answer alleges, as did the answer in the Bubenzer case, above cited, “that the destruction of said alleged easement or right of egress and ingress was considered by the commissioners in assessing their damages for the condemnation of said property.” The most vital difference, however, between the case presented by respondent in this suit and that presented by it in the Bubenzer suit consists in the respondent’s treatment of the alleged fact which constituted the crucial point of the decision in the suit brought by Daniel Bubenzer, and the ground upon which that decision rested exclusively. I refer to- the alleged fact of the existence of an outbuilding of the value of $300 upon the premises sought to be condemned. The respondent did not deny that there was an outbuilding on Bubenzer’s property of the value of $300 or upwards, and that circumstance alone brought the Bubenzer property within the restriction of respondent’s power of condemnation contained in the charter of the Wilmington & Susquehanna Railroad Company, viz.: “That it shall not pass through any burying ground or place of public worship, nor any dwelling house without the consent of the owner thereof, nor shall it pass through any outbuilding of the value of three hundred dollars without such *61 consent.” In the case before me, however, this vital allegation of the complainant is denied, both in the answer and by affidavits, and as, according to the principles laid down in the Bubenzer suit, the complainant’s case must rest ultimately upon his proof of this alleged fact, it would seem proper that this should be the first point considered.

The complainant’s allegation upon this point in the first paragraph of his bill is as follows: “And on Water Street, in which respondent’s tracks are now laid, a stable opening upon said Water Street, which stable has been in use, with egress and ingress by, through, and upon Water Street, where said tracks are laid, certainly for fifty years, which said stable is of the value of more than three hundred dollars, to wit, the value of one thousand dollars.” The respondent answers this allegation as follows: “And respondent further denies that there is any stable or other building or outbuilding of any kind upon the rear portion of said lot, described as No. 1, which portion of said lot was condemned by commissioners on petition of the said respondent railroad company, in accordance with the forms of law and of the statutes of the state of Delaware in such cases made and provided, of the value of three hundred dollars or upwards.” The complainant supports this allegation of his bill by his own affidavit, as follows: “The stable on the easterly of two properties in which he is interested is of great value to the place as a licensed house, and has been regularly rented, when not used by the properties, for as much as five dollars a month, though sometimes for three dollars per month.” There is but one affidavit corroborating or supporting in any way this allegation. That affidavit is made by William M. Connelly, the present building inspector of the city of Wilmington, and gives no estimate whatever of value. Mr. Connelly estimates what it would cost to' construct an equivalent building, but significantly refrains from giving his estimate of the value of the present building. I will give his affidavit in full: “My name is William M. Connelly, and I am building inspector of the city of Wilmington, Dela. On Thursday, the 14th day of September, A.D. 1905, I visited the locality known to me for thirty years as Water Street, west of West Street, where the southerly ends of the *62 properties fronting on Front Street west of West Street abut. I made an examination of the stable on the rear end of the Johnson property, for the purpose of determining what it would cost to place a building there to answer the same purpose for which this is fitted. The building is, of course, weather beaten, but a little pointing up of bricks and some paint would cause it ff> make a very different appearance. It would not be possible to erect an equivalent building there for less than $450 to $500. The building as it stands is sound, and answers all the purposes a new one would be of the same size and character.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A.2d 86, 62 A. 86, 38 Del. Ch. 58, 1905 Del. Ch. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-philadelphia-b-wr-co-delch-1905.