Millcreek Valley Street Railroad v. Village of St. Bernard

8 Ohio N.P. 288
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ohio N.P. 288 (Millcreek Valley Street Railroad v. Village of St. Bernard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Millcreek Valley Street Railroad v. Village of St. Bernard, 8 Ohio N.P. 288 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

Spiegel, J.

On the 9th day of November, 1900, the Mill-creek Valley Street Railroad Company filed its petition in this court against the village of St. Bernard, its councilmen, mayor and marshals, praying for an order to restrain the defendants and each of them from interfering with or in any manner molesting plaintiff or any of its officers or agents in the quiet and peaceable enjoyment of its said railway property; from obstructing plaintiff, its officers or agents in restoring its tracks and other railway appliances aforesaid, and in maintaining its said tracks and other railway appliances in proper condition and repair, and from interfering with the plaintiff’s use and operating of the same in the regular carriage of passengers through said village, along said tracks or any part thereof whatsoever.

Plaintiff alleges that it is the owner of and is engaged in operating a certain line of electric street railway in the county of Hamilton, beginning in the c.'ty of Cincinnati, at the entrance to the Zoological Gardens in Erkenbrecher Avenue, and extending thence along said avenue to the Carthage Pike by double tracks; thence along said Carthage Pike northwardly by double track to Lockland Avenue in the village of Carthage; thence continuing along said avenue by double track in said village to the north corporation line thereof; and thence continuing along the present line of said railway by double track through the village of Hartwell and into the village of Lockland.

Plaintiff then alleges its title derived from different sources, reciting the litigation which ensued, and in which its title was confirmed by judicial decree, thus eliminating this question from the case at bar, alleging in said recital that the original grant made by the Commissioners of Hamilton County for the occupancy of the Carthage Pike, and especially that portion of the pike which runs through St. Bernard, was made at the special instance and request of the officers and citizens of said village, by resolution passed, February 4, 1889, and that said resolution was afterward, on the 5th day of February, 1889, re-enforced by an ordinance duly passed by the council of said village, an' known as ordinance number 275, of the ordinances of the village of St. Bernard, which ordinance granted to the Cincinnati Incline Plane Railway Company, the predecessor of the plaintiff, the right to use and occupy the streets of said village at grade with railway tracks, poles, wires, side tracks, and other appurtenances required for the construction and running of an electric road.

Plaintiff further avers, that the said electric railway line was constructed and put into operation at great cost and expense to its owner iii and through said village along the line before mentioned shortly after the action taken as aforesaid by the council of said village, by its resolution and ordinance aforesaid, and upon the faith thereof, as well as upon the faith of the grant so made as before stated by the Board of Commissioners of Plamilton County.

Plaintiff further avers, that its said railway is equipped with cars and electric appliances and motive power, and is in daily operation for the carriage of passengers between the two termini before mentioned, and that said electrie railway accomodates a large number of passengers daily, and that any interference with the maintenance of any portion thereof, and especially the portion within the village of St. Bernard, would substantially, if not wholly, destroy the usefulness and value of said railway. * .

Plaintiff further avers, that the overhead equipment of said electric railway is now and has always been of the pattern known as the singe-trolley ground return system; that the pole supports for same are now, and have always been, wooden poles of from 26 to 30 feet in length, set in the ground to a depth of 5 or 6 feet and 18 inches inside the curb line of the street; that said electric railway has been maintained and kept in operation through said village of St. Bernard ever since its first construction, and at great cost and expense of its owner, upon the faith of all of said acts with the acquiescence of said village, and its council and officers; and that all the owners of property abutting along the line of said railway, either actually consented to the construction and operation of said railway at, or prior to :hc time (he same was built, and have ever since acquiesced therein.

Plaintiff further avers, that much of the existing construction and equipment of said electric railway has been in constant, daily and continuous use for more than ten years last past, and that by reason of the wear and tear incident to such use, the road-bed, tracks, trolley-wires and other necessary appurtenances to said electric railway within said village have fallen in many places, into disrepair and require immediate restoration and repair, and that if said road-bed, tracks, poles, trolley-wires and other necessary appurtenances are permitted to remain in their present condition, the use and operation thereof will become dangerous to passengers on plaintiff’s cars through said village, and will result in irreparable injury and damage to plaintiff in respect to its said railway property.

Plaintiff further avers, that it has applied respectively to the village council of St. Bernard and to the mayor of said village, for a permit to repair and restore its defective tracks, road-beds, poles and over-head work along the line of its said electric railway within the limits [290]*290of said village; and that its said request has been refused and denied by the mayor of said village; and that its said request has also been refused and denied by the council of said village, unless this plaintiff shall replace the present equipment and construction of said electric railway within said village, with an eqoápment and construction not required by the terms of the grants of said Incline Plane Railway Company from tire Hamilton County Commissioners, and from the village of St. Bernard, and of a kind and character substantially and materially different from tlmt now in use, and substantially and materially different from that in use at any time, on any part of the line of said electric railway from its incipiency'to the present time, and from that of the original construction and equipment of said electric railway.

And plaintiff further avers, that the said village, through its council, mayor and mar-shall, defendants herein, have heretofore prevented plaintiff and still threaten to prevent, and, unless restrained by the order of this court, will prevent plaintiff from making the repairs to its electric railway within said village necessary to maintain same, and to the operation thereof, and that said interference with, and prevention of, plaintiff’s making said repairs to its electric railway, if permitted, will cause this plaintiff great and irreparable injury by the destruction of the continuity of its railway by the prevention of the operation of its railway and by the further deterioration and destruction of its railway property within said village.

To this petition the village of St. Bernard, as well as each of the other defendants, filed a demurrer, upon the grounds,

1. That the court has no jurisdiction.

2. That separate causes of action against several defendants are improperly joined.

3. That the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Ohio N.P. 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millcreek-valley-street-railroad-v-village-of-st-bernard-ohctcomplhamilt-1901.