Midland Railway Co. v. Fisher

8 L.R.A. 604, 24 N.E. 756, 125 Ind. 19, 1890 Ind. LEXIS 384
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1890
DocketNo. 14,325
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 8 L.R.A. 604 (Midland Railway Co. v. Fisher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Midland Railway Co. v. Fisher, 8 L.R.A. 604, 24 N.E. 756, 125 Ind. 19, 1890 Ind. LEXIS 384 (Ind. 1890).

Opinion

Elliott, J.

— In May, 1873, the then owners of the land described in the appellee’s complaint conveyed to the Anderson, Lebanon and St. Louis Railway Company a right of way. In consideration of the grant of the right of way the company, by an agreement incorporated in the deed, promised to construct a board fence, five boards in height, on each side of the railroad as soon as it should be completed. The deed conveying the right of way was signed by the grantors, but not by the grantee. The railroad was completed in 1876, and the action was brought in 1886. In 1875 the company mortgaged all of its property and rights, and in 1883 the mortgage was foreclosed by a decree of the circuit court of the United States. A sale of all the property and franchises of the company was made upon the decree of foreclosure, and the Midland Railway Company purchased all of the rights of the mortgagor. Under the title thus acquired the Midland company entered into possession and began to operate the road purchased by it as soon as it acquired [21]*21title. Yo fence has been erected, as provided in the deed granting the right of way. Eisher became the owner of the land in August, 1884.

The contention of appellant’s counsel is that their client did not become liable for the general debts of its predecessor, and that the debt which the appellee seeks to enforce is 3 general debt. We agree with counsel, that the rule is that a corporation which succeeds to the property and rights of another corporation through the medium of a sale upon a decree of foreclosure, is not responsible for the general debts of the corporation whose property and franchises it acquires. Lake Erie, etc., R. W. Co. v. Griffin, 92 Ind. 487 ; Hoard v. Chesapeake, etc., Railway, 123 U. S. 222 ; Gilman v. Sheboygan, etc., R. R. Co., 37 Wis. 317.

But we can not agree that the assumption that the claim of the appellee is a mere general debt is valid, for we regard the performance of the agreement to build a fence as a condition of the right to enjoy the easement granted by the owners of the land. The right which the appellee seeks to enforce is more than a general claim for money, for it is a right blended with that of the appellant to use and occupy the land with its track. The appellant’s liability does not rest upon the claim against the old company, but upon the duty which arises out of the occupancy of the land. It can not, in equity, be permitted to enjoy the easement, and yet-refuse to perform the agreement which created and conferred the easement. We think the principle declared in Lake Erie, etc., R. W. C. v. Griffin, supra; Bloomfield R. R. Co. v. Van Slike, 107 Ind. 480; Lake Erie, etc., R. W. Co. v. Griffin, 107 Ind. 464; Bloomfield R. R. Co. v. Grace, 112 Ind. 128; Indiana, etc., R. W. Co. v. Allen, 113 Ind. 308, and Donald v. St. Louis, etc., R. R. Co., 52 Iowa, 411, governs this phase of the case.

The appellant is in the possession of the right of way as the grantee of the original contractor, and it must take the benefit it enjoys subject to the burden annexed to it by the [22]*22contract which gave existence to that benefit. It can not enjoy the benefit and escape the burden, for the burden and the benefit are so interlaced as to be inseparable. The right to the benefit is so blended with the burden that equity and justice forbid a severance.

One who takes a privilege in land to which a burden is annexed has no right to assert a claim to the privilege, and deny responsibility for the burden. A party who acquires such a privilege acquires it subject to the conditions and burdens bound up with it, and must, if he asserts a right to the privilege, bear the burden which the contract creating the privilege brought into existence. The one he can not have at the expense of the other. In Louisville, etc., R. W. Co. v. Power, 119 Ind. 269, we said of a railroad company: “ Holding the land under the deed, as it did, it was bound to perform its contract. To permit it to retain the land and' repudiate the deed would be against equity and good conscience.”

In this instance the covenant written in the deed was an essential part of it, and the agreement to construct the fence was part of the consideration for the land. The case is near akin to that of a suit to enforce a vendor’s lien; for here the deed upon its face exhibited the contract, and the facts open to observation showed that the covenant had not been kept. The facts open to observation did more than put the appellant upon inquiry; but had they done no more than put it upon inquiry, it could not justly claim the rights of a pui’chaser without notice. It must be held that the covenant in the deed through which the appellant claims, and the facts open to observation, imparted notice of the covenant, and notice also of its non-performance.

The covenant is, as we have indicated, an integral part of the deed upon which rest the rights of the appellant. The deed which creates the asserted right discloses the covenant which burdens the right. In accepting the right under such a deed, and asserting a claim to the privileges conferred by [23]*23it, subsequent grantees of the original covenantor became bound to perform the agreement. The covenant passed with the land. The easement which burdened the fee was an encumbrance, and the party that took the land took it subject to the encumbrance; but in taking subject to the encumbrance of the easement, that party acquired the benefit interwoven with the encumbrance. Both the burden and the benefit, the easement and the covenant, essentially inhere in the land. One burdens the estate, the other benefits it. The party who acquires the estate necessarily acquires it with both the burden and the benefit. He must submit to the one, but he has a right to the other. In Hazlett v. Sinclair, 76 Ind. 488, the question was examined with care, the authorities collected, and the judgment of the court was that a covenant very similar to the one under consideration was a real covenant, running with the land. In the case referred to the court quoted, with approval, from the case of Savage v. Mason, 3 Cush. 500, the following statement of the law: “ The liability to perform, and the right to take advantage of, this covenant, both pass to the heir or assignee of the land, to which the covenant is attached. This covenant can by no means be considered as merely personal, or collateral, and detached from the land.”

In Hazlett v. Sinclair, supra, the case of Bloch v. Isham, 28 Ind. 37, was shown not to rule such a case as this.

The question in Junction R. R. Co. v. Sayers, 28 Ind. 318, must, for many reasons, be regarded as radically different from that here presented ; but it is enough to say that in that case the burden was not annexed to the easement conveyed, but was created by an independent agreement. The question received careful attention in the case of Conduitt v. Ross, 102 Ind. 166, and the rule there declared is substantially the same as that laid down in the case of Hazlett v. Sinclair, supra.

In Bronson v. Coffin, 108 Mass. 175, the authorities are reviewed at great length, and a covenant such as that here un[24]

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Bluebook (online)
8 L.R.A. 604, 24 N.E. 756, 125 Ind. 19, 1890 Ind. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/midland-railway-co-v-fisher-ind-1890.