Metropolitan Street Railway Co. v. Toledo Electric Street Railway Co.

9 Ohio C.C. 664
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ohio C.C. 664 (Metropolitan Street Railway Co. v. Toledo Electric Street Railway 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
Metropolitan Street Railway Co. v. Toledo Electric Street Railway Co., 9 Ohio C.C. 664 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

Haynes, J. (orally).

These cases have been heard together and will be decided together. The cases are both actions for an injunction [665]*665against the defendant company. The petitions were filed on the 2nd day of July, 1891, and in each the plaintiffs aver that they are incorporated companies organized for the purpose of building and operating street railways in certain streets of the city of Toledo — being in different streets, of course.

The Metropolitan Street Railway' Company avers, among other things, that it is allowed to run a line of street railroad along St. Clair street, crossing Monroe street and extending on further south; while the Central Street Railway Company has a line of street railroad that runs along Superior street down to Monroe street out to Erie Street, and then along Erie street. The Metropolitan street Railway Company avers that at the crossing of Monroe street they have intersected the line of railroad that runs along that street, and have been to the expense of assisting in putting in certain crossings there, of which they own one-half, and that the cost of the whole structure is $2,500, or nearly that sum.

It avers that the defendant company is about to enter upon the line of its railroad at Monroe street, and crossing its track there to use that crossing without having first in any form or manner obtained the consent of the plaintiff company or appropriated the right to so pass along the street as against the plaintiff company; it prays an injunction to restrain the defendant from doing so until it shall have appropriated the right or otherwise obtained the consent of the plaintiff company.

In the other case, the plaintiff company, the Central Street Railway Company, avers that it is the part owner of a line of street railroad across and along Monroe street, from Superior street to Erie street- — -a double track; that its interest is one-third,I think it says, of the whole of the tracks, and that, in like manner, the defendant company is about to, or threatents to, enter upon said street railroad in Monroe street, without the consent of the plaintiff company and [666]*666without appropriating the right of way; and it also prays for an injunction to restrain defendant from so doing until it obtains the consent of the company, or otherwise legally obtain the right to pass over the track.

The Electric Street Railway Company has filed numerous answers as the case grew and developed, and it avers that the Toledo Consolidated Street Railway Company — -which it avers is an incorporated company — has obtained the right to operate street railways through a large number of streets' in the city, viz: the 'Monroe & Dorr Street Railroad Company, the Monroe Street Railroad Company, and the Toledo Street Railroad Company; that it also purchased all the stock of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company and all the stock of the Central Street Railway Company, and that the officers of the Consolidated Street Railway Company became, after January, 1891, the same as the officers of the Metropolitan and the Central Street Railway Companies, and claims that the Consolidated Street Railway Company has possession of these tracks along Monroe street, and is using them and has the income and profits from them, and is to keep them in repair, and has kept them in repair, and rebuilt them to a certain extent. Defendant further claims that prior to the second day of July they had commenced appropriation proceedings under the statutes of Ohio, against the Consolidated Street Railway Company, for the purpose of obtaining the joint use with it of the line of street railway running along between these points upon Monroe street, and that such proceedings were had that a verdict was rendered in that case, and that within two or three days — -perhaps on the third of July- — the right would accrue to the Toledo Electric Street Railway Company to have that verdict confirmed, and it would then be authorized to make payment of the amount which had been awarded and take possession of the road; and defendant claims that it has the right, under that appropriation pro[667]*667ceeding, to the use of this track, and the whole of it, without any regard to the alleged rights of these two plaintiffs, and they deny, in fact, that these companies have any rights in the road of any value whatever.

It appears by the testimony that the Toledo Consolidated Street Railway Company was composed of several companies, and, among others, the Monroe Street Railroad Company, and the Monroe & Dorr Street Railroad Company, and ■obtained the right to exercise the franchises of a railway company in Toledo. And it appears that prior to this timp— in 1889 — the Consolidated Company had executed a mortgage, for the purpose of borrowing money; that that mortgage was executed in conjunction with this Metropolitan Street Railroad Company and the Central Street Railroad Company. It was recited in that mortgage that the Consolidated Street Railway Company intended to buy the street railways belonging to those two companies, and such por■ceedings were had that the money borrowed under this mortgage was appropriated, among other things, to improving those two companies’ lines, including these tracks along Monroe street. It appears that during the time that this suit was pending for the appropriation — during the early part of 1891 — terminating, say, the first of July, 1891— that the crossing in question, at St. Clair and Monroe streets, had been placed there by the agent of the Consolidated 'Company, and consisted not only of the frogs at the actual crossing of the two tracks, but also of some curves which were to be used in passing from the Metropolitan line upon St. Clair street to the line on Monroe street. It is said by the Toledo Electric Street Railway Company that those curves were never used, nor claimed by it; that it claims no right to use them in any manner or form, and that so far as the controversy is in regard to them, they disclaim any Tights to use them; so that the controversy between the plaintiff companies and the defendant company, in that case, is limited to the actual crossing at the point in Monroe street.

[668]*668In regard to the Central Road,, it seems that some time about the year 1881, or 1882, there had been an agreement entered into between the Monroe Street and the Dorr Street Railroad Companies, and the Central Passenger Street Railroad Company — the latter company being the predecessor of the Central Street Railway Company — a mortgage having been foreclosed, so that the Central Street Railway Company became the successor to it. Under this agreement between those companies the tracks on Monroe street were to some extent rebuilt, and to be paid for in a certain manner. The Monroe & Dorr Street Railroad Company and the Monroe Street Railroad Company were “to furnish the present tracks on Monroe street from said Superior street to Erie street, and the iron for two additional rails between said streets with spikes to spike said rails to the stringers. The Central Passenger Company to furnish the rest of the material necessary for said double track (of eight rails) from the straight track of the Superior street switch to the point on Erie street where said Central Passenger Company’s track leaves the said double tracks, and the said Central Passenger Company is to superintend and perform all ,the work necessary to lay said double tracks as aforesaid from said Superior street switch to said point of departure on Erie street, and repave the street from said point of departure of the Central Passenger Company’s tracks on Erie street.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Ohio C.C. 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-street-railway-co-v-toledo-electric-street-railway-co-ohiocirct-1893.