Lowe v. W. & L. E. Ry. Co.

12 Ohio C.C. 743
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Ohio C.C. 743 (Lowe v. W. & L. E. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowe v. W. & L. E. Ry. Co., 12 Ohio C.C. 743 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1891).

Opinion

Bentley, J.

Mr. Lowe brings this action to obtain an injunction against the defendant, the Wheeling & Lake Erie Railway Company, to prevent the company from filling up a certain cattle-pass which now exists under its railway track connecting two parts of the plaintiff’s farm. The company admits that it is its purpose to fill up the cattle-pass, and denies the right of the plaintiff to the injunction forbidding it so to do.

The case being appealed to this court, it has been tried before us upon the pleadings and statement of facts and the evidence adduced, including certain records from the county records here.

The land in question, the farm of the plaintiff, is the east half of lot No. 147, of the 4th section of Townsend township, Huron County, Ohio. This farm originally contained about 100 acres of land. In 1880, the predecessor of the defendant company, the Wheeling & Lake Erie Railroad Company, desired to construct its line of road through this farm, and applied to Alpha Lowe, the father of the present plaintiff, who then owned the farm, for permission so to do. He permitted the railroad company to so construct this track through the farm, and entered into a certain written contract with it by which he so permitted it. This construction of the road seemed to require a high grade across this farm of ten or twelve feet in height, and the road so crossed the farm that it left to the south of the grade a part of the farm of seven or eight acres in extent, the rest of the farm being upon the north side of the grade. The contract was signed by Mr. Lowe only,and sealed by him,but when accepted by the railroad company under such circumstances,so far as the contract contained stipulations to be performed by the railroad company, it was bound to perform them, the same as if its officers had in fact signed the contract.

The contract provides as follows:

“Elnoiy all men by these presents, that I, Alpha Lowe, of Townsend township, in the county of Huron, in the state of [745]*745Ohio, in consideration of one hundred and fifty dollars, cash to be paid, and the further consideration of the public good and the benefits which will accrue to me from the construction of the Wheeling & Lake Erie Railroad, do agree that said company may locate and construct its road upon or through my land situate in the county of Huron, Townsend township, state of Ohio, and described as follows, to-wit: Being the east half of lot No. 147, in the 4th section of said township, and being the farm on which I now reside, said company to construct an under cattle-pass, if practicable, also one over-crossing at grade; and if the said road shall be under contract or process of construction not later than two years from this date, I hereby covenant and agree for the above consideration, on demand, to convey to said company for railroad purposes for single or double track, sixty-six feet in width, that is to say, 83 feet r n each side of the center of said road, as the same may be located or constructed by said company over and through said land by a good and sufficient deed of conveyance to said company, stipulated as hereinbefore and after, and binding on me and my heirs and assigns, said sum to be paid in full before possession taken, and said sum to cancel a claim 11 owhave against said company for ten dollars for injury to my corn.

In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and seal this 4th day of October, 1880.

“(Seal.) Alpha Lowe.

“Attest R. H. Cochran, W. W. Graham.”

After the making of this contract that grade was made across this farm as stated. In apparent compliance with the contract the railroad company did construct a cattle-pass some ten or twelve feet in height,and with a clear space high enough that a wagon with a rack might be driven through thus creating a pass between the northerly part of the farm with that upon the southerly line of the grade.

Thereupon, shortly afterwards, when the railway came to be fenced, the fence was made with reference to the use by the land owner of this cattle-pass in connection with the farm; that is, the fences upon the line of the road were turned in to the edges of the cattle-pass on both sides, so that there was free ingress and egress for cattle and for anything that the owner wished to pass through there from one side of the farm to the other. That situation was maintained from that time until the present, and it is the cattle-pass thus built and maintained that the present owner of the right of way designs to fill up.

[746]*746In 1883, after the making of the cattle-pass in apparent conformity with the stipulations of the contract, Mr. Lowe made a deed to the railroad company, and as its terms are important, at least a portion of the terms, and as the deed is short, I will read it:

“Know all men by these presents, that we, Alpha Lowe and Maria, wife of said Alpha, of Townsend township, Huron county, Ohio, in consideration of the benefits to accrue to us from the construction of the Wheeling and Lake Erie Railroad and the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars, in hand paid by the Wheeling and Lake Erie Railroad Company, here receipted, do give, grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the said Wheeling and Lake Erie Railroad Company, its successors and assigns, a strip or parcel of land containing one and 74-100 acres, more or less, through the land of said grantor, situate in the east half of lot No. one hundred and forty-seven, (147,) section four, (4), Townsend township, Huron county, Ohio, and which is described as follows:

“A strip of land sixty-six (66) feet wide, commencing at the east boundary line of the lands of John Gr. Bott, being the west half of said lot on the west, and thence funning south-easterly to west boundary line of lot-No. one hundred and forty-eight (148) in said section on the east. Said strip or parcel of land is 66 feet in width; that is to say, 33 feet on each side of the center line of said railroad, as the same is located through said land from a point on the west boundary line of said land to a point on the east boundary line of the same as above described.

“To have and to hold said described strip of land to said The Wheeling and Lake Erie Railroad Company, its successor and assigns, for the purposes of said railroad and as its right of way.”

Then follows the release of dower by Mrs. Lowe, and the usual formalities in the execution of a deed.

This deed being delivered to the railroad company, was shortly'thereafter filed for record, and duly recorded in the proper volume of the records of deeds of this county. Before the making of this deed, the railroad compaixy had mortgaged its entire line of property to certain persons in the East for a large sum of money borrowed, and that mortgage was duly recorded. After the .making of. this deed, in July, 1884, the mortgagees of the railroad company began an action in the United States court for the northern district of Ohio, eastern division, against the railroad company for foreclosure of this mortgage, and such proceedings were [747]

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ohio C.C. 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowe-v-w-l-e-ry-co-ohiocirct-1891.