Lexington & Ohio Railroad v. Ormsby

37 Ky. 276, 7 Dana 276, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 136
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 23, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 37 Ky. 276 (Lexington & Ohio Railroad v. Ormsby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lexington & Ohio Railroad v. Ormsby, 37 Ky. 276, 7 Dana 276, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 136 (Ky. Ct. App. 1838).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

The Lexington and Ohio Railroad Company having located their road through the land of Stephen Ormsby, junior, in a manner obviously injurious to him, he objected to the location; and, thereupon, the Company’s agent agreed to change it, if he would execute the following release — which he did accordingly execute: to wit.

“ Know all men by these present, that if, in the con- “ struction of the contemplated railroad, by the Lexing- “ ton and Ohio Railroad Company, the company should “ determine to construct the same through my land in “ Jefferson county, I do hereby give, grant, bargain, sell, “ convey and relinquish, to the said Lexington and Ohio “ Railroad Company, so much of my said land as the “ said company may desire — not exceeding four poles “ in width, upon which to construct their said road: “ provided said road shall not run farther north of my “ south-west corner than ten feet, and not farther north “ of my south-east corner than one hundred and forty “ feet.”

The company afterwards located their road through his land, so as to leave about nine feet between his south-west corner and the southern edge of the road, and not near as much as one hundred and forty feet between the south edge of the road and his north-east comer — the whole road between those points being on his land. Sometime after this last location, he ploughed the field through which it was made, leaving unploughed the sixty six feet which had been designated for the road by stakes; and also, told the contractor for the [277]*277construction of that part of the road, that he might go on with the construction through his land, according to the location as thus made.

Where there is-an ambiguity in a writing, pai taking of the nature of both patent and latent ambiguities — *, e. where the words used have a settled meaning,but admit of two interpretations, according to the subject matter in the contemplation of the parties-extrinsic facts, not contradictory of the writing , but which? will aid in upholding it, maybe proved by pa-rol, in order to explain the actual intention ofthe parties. Of that description is the relinquishment in this case, supra; and the fact that, after the road had been located, and staked off, entirely on the land of the grantor, he ploughed the field through which it passed, without touching it, and told the contractor to go on in constructing it as laid off, fortifies the above construction. Where a landowner — with a correct under - ■standing of the matter — has given permission , (verbally,) that a road may be constructed upon his land, or some specified part of it — a court of eq. should not interpose to restrain the grantee from using the privilege so conceded, merely because the grantee, having changed his mind, wishes to revoke his grant. —The trespass could be justified under a license.

[277]*277But, some ¡months afterwards, Ormsby filed-a bill in chancery for enjoining the company from proceeding with the construction according to the location — insisting, as he did, that such a location, taking from him more than ten feet of his land at his south-west corner, was not, either contemplated by him, or authorized by the true interpretation of the written contract.

The company, in its answer, insisted that the location of the road, as made, was authorized by the verbal agreement, and was also perfectly consistent with a proper construction of the terms of the written memorial of it, which, as they contend, imports that the entire width of the road (four poles or sixty six feet,) might be on his land, provided only, that the road should not run farther north of his south-west corner than ten feet, nor farther north of his south-east corner than one hundred and forty feet, which it does not do, as located, near either point.

Upon the final hearing of the cause, on the bill, answer and various depositions, the Chancellor perpetuated the injunction, so far as to restrain the Railroad Company from proceeding any farther in the construction of the road in such a manner as to extend any part of it, at Ormsby’s south-west corner, more than ten feet north of that cornel'.

The company prosecutes this writ of error to reverse that decree.

Waiving, as unnecessary to the decision of the case, the question made by the counsel of the plaintiff in error, as to the jurisdiction of the Chancellor, we are of the opinion that the facts exhibited in the record do not sustain the decree.

Looking at the written release alone, as the evidence of the intention of the parties to it, there might be some difficulty in determining with certainty what they understood by the proviso thirt the road should not run farther north of the south-west corner than ten feet. But considering the entire instrument altogether, we should, with[278]*278out any extraneous aid, be inclined to the opinion, that it imports a concession to the company of sixty six feet of land at that corner, (if so much should be deemed necessary,) with no other qualification than that the road (including the sixty six feet,) should not be farther north of that corner than ten feet; that is — not that there should not be, at that place, more than ten feet of Orms-by’s land taken by the road — but that there should not be more than ten feet between the road and the corner. It rather seems to us that he intended to relinquish (if so much should be desired by the company,) sixty six feet of his land for the road, through the whole extent of his east and west line.

The road,” without qualification, means the whole road, in width sixty six feet; and therefore, by prescribing that the road shall not run farther north of his southwest corner than ten feet, Ormsby should, as we are inclined to think, be understood as meaning that the entire road, when constructed, should not be farther north of that corner than ten feet. If he intended that no part of the road, at that point, should encroach on more than ten feet of his land, then, in no event, was he relinquishing, of that part of his tract, as much as one sixth of the ground required for the width of the road, although he had just said, in the same writing, that, if the company should determine to construct the road through his land, he relinquished sixty six feet, provided they should desire so much; thereby meaning, as we would infer, that the company might have a way sixty six feet wide through his entire tract. And this interpretation is fortified by the fact, that, after giving leave so to locate and make the road through his land, he certainly authorized the construction of it in such a manner as to cut off' and leave between the road and his south-west corner, a slip óf his land; and by the fact also, that the same words (“ the road shall not run farther north” &c.) are applied to the restriction at each end of his tract.

But should we be mistaken in the foregoing interpretation, we feel very confident that the construction claimed by Ormsby, and established by the Chancellor, is far from being a necessary or very clear deduction [279]*279from the terms and context of the writing. The most that c.ould, as we think, be said against our construction would be, that the relinquishment is ambiguous on its face. But even then, the ambiguity would be of that intermediate class, which, in the language of Judge Story, “partakes of the nature of both latent and patent

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

New York City v. Pine
185 U.S. 93 (Supreme Court, 1902)
Buckwalter v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co.
67 P. 831 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1902)
Atlanta, Knoxville & Northern Railway Co. v. Barker
31 S.E. 452 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1898)
Northern Pacific Railroad v. Smith
171 U.S. 260 (Supreme Court, 1898)
Northern Pacific R. Co. v. Smith
171 U.S. 260 (Supreme Court, 1898)
Roberts v. Northern Pacific Railroad
158 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1895)
Missouri Pacific Railway Co. v. Gano
47 Kan. 457 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 Ky. 276, 7 Dana 276, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lexington-ohio-railroad-v-ormsby-kyctapp-1838.