M. Lurio & Brother v. Pennsylvania Railroad

14 Pa. D. & C. 605, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 432
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lancaster County
DecidedApril 19, 1930
DocketEquity Docket No. 8
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Pa. D. & C. 605 (M. Lurio & Brother v. Pennsylvania Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lancaster County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M. Lurio & Brother v. Pennsylvania Railroad, 14 Pa. D. & C. 605, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 432 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinion

Groff, J.,

The pleadings in this case consist of a bill in equity filed on Aug. 23, 1929, and served on the defendant the same day. The said bill asked for a permanent injunction restraining the defendant from interfering with the plaintiffs’ right to the use of a certain passageway described in the said bill, and such other relief as equity may require and the court may see fit. To this bill, an answer was filed on Sept. 21, 1929, admitting the facts alleged in certain paragraphs of the said bill, and denying the facts alleged in certain other paragraphs of the said bill.

There is but one issue raised in these pleadings, and that is, have the plaintiffs gained a right by adverse user to a certain alley or driveway located on defendant’s property in the City of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, immediately in the rear of its depot and used in connection therewith?

[606]*606 Findings of fact.

1. The defendant is a corporation incorporated under the Act of Assembly of the State of Pennsylvania approved April 13, 1846, and found in the Pamphlet Laws of that year at page 312.

2. Section 2 of the said act provides:

“. . . That said company shall not purchase or hold any real estate, except such as may be necessary or convenient for the making and constructing of said railroad, or for the furnishing of materials therefor, and for the accommodation of depots, offices, warehouses, machine shops, . . . and for the persons and things employed or used in or about the same. . . .”

3. Section 11 of the said act provides:

“That the president and directors of said company shall have power and authority by themselves, their engineers, superintendents, .... to survey, ascertain, locate, fix, mark and determine such route for a railroad as they may deem expedient, not, however, passing through any burying ground, or place of public worship, or any dwelling house without the consent of the owner or owners thereof; and not, except in the neighborhood of deep cuttings or high embankments, or places selected for sidings, turnouts, depots, ... to exceed four rods in width; and thereon to lay down, erect, construct and establish a railroad, with one or more tracks. . . .”

4. That the said Pennsylvania Railroad Company did, by deed dated July 1, 1859, and recorded in the office for the recording of deeds in and for Lancaster County, at Lancaster, Pennsylvania, in Record Book W, volume 8, at page 400, acquire from James B. Lane and G. Taylor Lane, administrators of the estate of John N. Lane, deceased, a certain tract of land located in the City of Lancaster, to wit:

“All that certain House, called the ‘Lancaster City Exchange’, and other buildings thereto belonging, and Lot or piece of ground upon which they are erected, Situate in the City of Lancaster aforesaid, on the north side of the Pennsylvania Railway, and on the east side of North Queen Street; containing in front on North Queen Street, about fifty nine feet, one inch, more or less; and in depth two hundred and forty five feet, to a fourteen feet wide alley, upon which it contains, eighty one feet one inch more or less. Bounded on the north by the south wall of a two story Brick house and ground of Jacob McCully; on the east by said alley, on the South by the Pennsylvania Railway.”

5. That at the time the said land was purchased by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company it was subject, on the northern border, to the use of an alley nine feet and five inches wide, and extending in depth of that width east-war dly from North Queen Street and along the northern boundary of the granted premises a distance of 60 feet.

6. That on Oct. 25, 1860, and recorded in the Recorder’s Office of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, in Record Book X, volume 8, at page 507, James T. McCulley and Sarah Jane McCulley, his wife, then being the parties owning the premises having a right to the use of the said alley, did release and forever quit-claim unto the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, its successors and assigns, for themselves, their heirs and any person claiming under them, all their right, title, interest, privilege and use of the said alley.

7. That the Board of Directors of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, by a resolution passed June 29, 1859, “Resolved that the Pennsylvania Rail Rd. Company will locate and erect a building or depot for the accommodation of the passenger travel & other business on the line of their Road, on the plot of ground bounded by North Queen St. on the west and Chestnut St. on the [607]*607south, in the City of Lancaster,” which described plot of ground included the ground over which the alley in controversy passes.

8. That in the years 1860 and 1861 the Pennsylvania Railroad Company constructed and erected upon the said premises a depot, located on the north side thereof; and for use in connection therewith established, between the station and its northern boundary, an alleyway of the width of fifteen feet three inches on North Queen Street, and gradually narrowing to the width of fourteen feet and six inches on North Christian Street.

9. That the said driveway and passenger depot have been used continuously from the time of the erection of the depot until the present time, by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, for a depot and other purposes incidental to the operation of its railroad and for railroad purposes.

10. That the said alleyway was paved, cleaned and kept in repair by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, through its employees, from the time it was laid out until the present time.

11. That in addition to the Pennsylvania Railroad Company using the said alley, it was used by the public generally for a passageway from Duke, or Christian, Street to North Queen Street, or the reverse, when the Christian and North Queen Street crossings were blocked by trains; and by the owners of the premises on the north, in gaining access to and from their premises, in common with the public and the Pennsylvania Railroad.

12. That at certain times during the period of the existence of the said alley, or driveway, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company would construct barriers across its ends and maintain them temporarily.

13. That there were numerous doorways and openings from the north side of the depot building into the said driveway, affording entrance and exit to and from the depot, to and from a restaurant established therein, to and from the cellar of the depot, to and from an apartment on the second floor of the said depot, and to and from the rooms used for storage of materials used by the defendant.

14. That the said alley was used for the purpose of hauling trunks to and from the said depot; for the purpose of hauling expressage to and from the express company’s rooms, which occupied the northwest portion of the said building; for the purpose of taking material necessary to the maintenance of the said railroad to and from its storage place in the said depot; and for other necessary and convenient handling of the business of the said railroad and the entertainment of the traveling public.

Discussion.

This bill in equity is brought by the plaintiff to restrain the defendant from closing up an alley on the north side of the Pennsylvania Railroad Station, in the City of Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Pa. D. & C. 605, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-lurio-brother-v-pennsylvania-railroad-pactcompllancas-1930.