Moore Manufacturing Co. v. Springfield Southwestern Railway Co.

165 S.W. 305, 256 Mo. 167, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 406
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 24, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 165 S.W. 305 (Moore Manufacturing Co. v. Springfield Southwestern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore Manufacturing Co. v. Springfield Southwestern Railway Co., 165 S.W. 305, 256 Mo. 167, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 406 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

WALKER, P. J.

— Plaintiff, a corporation, engaged in manufacturing in Springfield, Missouri, petitioned for a mandatory injunction in the circuit court of Greene county to compel defendant, a railway corporation, to remove its tracks, switches, and crossovers from Phelps avenue in said city, opposite plaintiff’s property, and that it be restrained from connecting its. track thereon and perpetually enjoined from thereafter constructing and maintaining said superstructures on said avenue and from running its trains, engines and cars thereon. The grounds are that such use and occupation of said avenue by defendant prevent plaintiff from enjoying free ingress to and egress from its building located on the south side of said avenue at its intersection with Washington street.

A temporary injunction was denied in the circuit court of Greene county, whereupon plaintiff took a change of venue to the circuit court of Barton county; a trial upon the merits was there had, resulting in a finding for the defendant and an appeal therefrom by plaintiff to this court.

Phelps avenue is. fifty feet wide. Long prior to the erection of plaintiff’s building thereon the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Company, for brevity called the “Frisco,” had constructed and used, and still maintains and uses, a railway track on said avenue, located eighteen or twenty feet from plaintiff’s building. In addition, the said railroad company many years ago constructed and now maintains and uses another track which crosses Phelps avenue at its. intersection with Washington street diagonally across said streets from plaintiff’s building. This is the Frisco’s main line on which it runs its passenger trains between Springfield and St. Louis. Also for many years plaintiff has maintained and now uses a spur or sidetrack from the Frisco track running along said avenue into [175]*175plaintiff’s building to facilitate tbe handling of.its shipments.

Of the proximity and use of none of these tracks does the plaintiff complain, but of defendant’s track located on the north side, of said avenue about thirty-five feet from plaintiff’s building. This track of defendant was constructed prior to the erection of plaintiff’s building -under the authority of ordinances adopted by the city of Springfield and has since been maintained and used by defendant for the transfer of freight cars, except a break in said track of about thirty feet, which has heretofore not been completed, immediately north of plaintiff’s building. This track is- used by defendant for the transfer of freight cars, when the Frisco is not using its- adjacent tracks along said avenue. The space of eighteen or twenty feet between plaintiff’s building and the Frisco tracks is much below the level of the grade established by the city, except where a passage-way over same has been made by plaintiff opposite the entrance to its building — the testimony not showing why this side of the avenue has not been improved.

All of the tracks- in question are standard gauge and there is, therefore, a.space of four and a half feet between the rails of each particular track. Between the inside rails of the defendant’s and the Frisco tracks there is a space of eight feet, and the north rail of defendant’s track is about fifteen feet from the north line of said avenue. The space, therefore, unoccupied by tracks on the avenue opposite plaintiff’s building is, on the north side, fifteen feet wide, and on the south side eighteen or twenty feet wide.

Since defendant constructed its track on said avenue it has at an expense of several thousand dollars built a retaining wall along the north side'of same and has filled and macadamized it, bringing its level up to the grade established thereon by the city. The present physical use of said avenue has existed for more than [176]*176three years, before the commencement of this suit. There is a conflict of testimony as to the extent to which the avenne is used by the general public; plaintiff’s officers .and employees testifying that the tracks thereon and their frequent use prevent travel, while many disinterested witnesses testify not only as. to the frequency of the use of said avenue as a highway, but as to its increased use since improved and brought up to the grade.

Plaintiff’s building was erected about two and one half years ago. The tracks were all on the avenue and used for like purposes as at present when the building was erected. The conditions have in no manner changed since the building was erected, except that defendant now proposes to connect the ends of its. track on the north side of said avenue. To prevent this and to require defendant to remove its tracks from said avenue plaintiff asks the interposition of a court of equity.

In a long line of decisions from Lackland v. Railroad, 31 Mo. 180, to Copper & Iron Mfg. Co. v. Manufacturers’ Ry. Co., 230 Mo. 59, 83, this court has held it not unlawful for a city to authorize the construction and operation of a steam railroad on a street and that such use is not a new servitude. The material question, therefore, for determination here, is whether such occupation of said avenue as has been authorized by ordinances, will constitute a monopoly in the use of same by defendant to such an extent as. to impair plaintiff’s rights to' ingress to and egress from its building for all reasonable purposes..

Passing without comment the criticism as to the sufficiency of the abstract in view of the requirements of section 2(M8¡, Revised Statutes 1909, we have carefully reviewed the record to ascertain if it contains substantial testimony to support plaintiff’s claim for relief.

[177]*177Phelps avenue is not a retail or residence street. Factories, foundries and other plants, including plaintiff’s, are located along same, requiring its use to a large extent, in the transfer of materials to and manufactured products from these various centers of industrial activity. The avenue, therefore, may not improperly be designated as a manufacturing street. While-the practical setting apart of said avenue for the purposes designated does not limit its lawful use as a highway, it may and in justice to the public (which is entitled to be considered as well as the petitioner) it should, influence the action of a court of equity in responding to a prayer for relief made by one who, with a full knowledge of the prior and present use and occupancy of said avenue, deliberately locates¡ thereon and rests content under existing conditions for years', before making complaint.

Preliminary to a consideration of the doctrine of' laches, or, to state it conversely, defendant’s long continued user of said avenue, under the conditions existing at the time it erected its building thereon, it is pertinent to compare the width of the unoccupied portions', of this avenue opposite said building with that of other-streets in which the courts have had under consideration similar questions to the one here involved. In Versteeg v. Railroad, 250 Mo. 61, 78, a case in which a similar action was brought seeking- like relief as herein, the unoccupied portion of the street between the railway tracks and the sidewalk was seven feet and six-inches, and relief was not granted on account of a lack of space; and in Seibel-Suessdorf C. & Iron Mfg. Co. v. Railroad, 230 Mo. 59, 78, it was held that a railroad company would not be enjoined from laying its tracks-, and operating a railroad on a public street where the-space between the sidewalk and the railroad company’s tracks or trains when in operation, was ten feet and^ six inches.

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Related

Inhabitants of Palmyra v. Morton
25 Mo. 593 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1857)
Lackland v. North Missouri Railroad
31 Mo. 180 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1860)
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Bluebook (online)
165 S.W. 305, 256 Mo. 167, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-manufacturing-co-v-springfield-southwestern-railway-co-mo-1914.