Morris & Essex Railroad v. Hoboken & Manhattan Railroad

59 A. 332, 68 N.J. Eq. 328, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 12
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedNovember 19, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 59 A. 332 (Morris & Essex Railroad v. Hoboken & Manhattan Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morris & Essex Railroad v. Hoboken & Manhattan Railroad, 59 A. 332, 68 N.J. Eq. 328, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 12 (N.J. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Stevenson, V. C. (orally.).

In the case of the Morris and Essex Railroad Company and the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company against the Hoboken and Manhattan Railroad Company and the .New York and Jersey Railroad Company my conclusion is that no proper case is presented for an injunction. I shall endeavor, as fully as I can, to indicate to counsel the main reasons which have led me to this conclusion, reserving for a written opinion, in case of appeal, a more accurate statement, with citation of authorities. I have examined, I think, all the authorities cited by counsel and some others, although, of course, it is impossible for me to cite them, and impossible for me to refer to many of them at present.

The object of the bill is to obtain an injunction, restraining the defendant corporation, the Hoboken and Manhattan Railroad Company, from exercising the right of eminent domain for the condemnation of property belonging to the complainants along the line of the route which the defendant corporation has laid [330]*330out, and which is the route of a tunnel railroad, extending, in part, from the Pavonia ferry, in a northerly direction, parallel with the Hudson river and not very far from it, through and under the entire terminal property of the complinants, consisting of a tract of, I think, about one hundred and sevent3r-five acres, to a point beyond that tract and near the Hoboken ferry.

As I recall the bill, it is an injunction bill simpliciier. It is not a bill to restrain the defendants in the unreasonable and injurious location of their route through the property of the complainants when they might, and ought to, so locate their route as to do less injury. It is not a bill to prevent the defendants from exercising the right of eminent domain in such a manner as to prevent the complainants from pursuing their corporate business and accomplishing the purposes, largely of a public nature, for which they exist and have corporate existence. It is not a bill to restrain the defendants from using that portion of the tunnel which may be called the old tunnel, extending out from the original high-water line of the river, or rather I may say extending from what is called the shaft under the river, excepting in a manner in which the original proprietors of that tunnel would be allowed to use that particular piece of land. The bill prays for an injunction which will prohibit the main defendant corporation from exercising the right of eminent domain for the condemnation of a very large portion of their route. If the defendant corporation should be so enjoined and still wished to build a tunnel route between the two points that I have indicated, counsel for the complainants, in opening the case, states and admits that it would be necessary for this defendant corporation to construct its tunnel all the way around this large tract of land at a very much greater expense than it will cost to construct the tunnel which they have located, which is practically a direct line through the terminal property of the complainants.

Upon this application, what are merely legal objections to the action which the defendant corporation, the Hoboken and Manhattan Railroad Company, is now engaged in taking, are not to be considered. A few moments ago counsel for the complainants handed me the case, which is now before me, of Jersey City [331]*331v. National Docks Railway Co., reported in 55 N. J. Law (26 Vr.) 194. I have merely glanced at this case; but it seems to be a certiorari case, and, from what I have seen of the report of it, it appears that tire principle in that case is laid down and enforced that it is a condition precedent, under the General Railroad act, to the taking of property under the right of eminent domain by a railroad company that the parties have been unable to agree. I do not exactly see with what view this case was pre^sented to me. If, in this case, there has been no failure to agree and it follows that the defendant corporation cannot exercis'e the right of eminent domain under the General Railroad act, that is a complete defence which undoubtedly will be presented to the supreme court in the certiorari suit, which is now pending. In this court we have only to deal with the equitable claims of the complainants. The complainants- in this case set up that they have an equity which can be enforced in this court and cannot be enforced in the supreme court, in which the certiorcvri suit is pending, to have an injunction, restraining the Hoboken and Manhattan Railroad Company from condemning their route through the complainants’ terminal property; and that is the question with which we have to deal.

The sole origin pf any such equity consists in, and arises from, a covenant that was made on January 10th, 1877, by a corporation now practically extinct, the Hudson Tunnel Railroad Company, by which that original tunnel company undertook to covenant and agree with the complainants in the terms which I shall read. As a matter of fact, on the date which I mentioned — January 10th, 1877 — two covenants were made by this original tunnel company, one with the complainants and one with a land company; but, inasmuch as the complainants afterwards acquired all this land affected by this covenant from the land company, and may possibly, although I do not think the fact appears, have acquired, by assignment, all the rights of the land company growing out of the covenant made by the tunnel company with it (the land company), the covenant may be, I think, conveniently dealt with as if there were but. one covenant between the Hudson Tunnel Railroad Compan)'' and the Morris and Essex and Delaware, Lackawanna and Western [332]*332railroad companies, and it be assumed that, at the time the covenant was made, the railroad companies owned all -the land affected by the two covenants.

The words of the covenant, which I am about to read, come near the end of a long instrument, executed by the Hudson Tunnel Railroad Company under its seal, which appears to have been made — was made — while, certain condemnation proceedings were pending in which the original tunnel companjr was endeavoring to acquire a right of wajr extending from the centre of the Hudson river in a westerly direction under the terminal property of the railroad companies to a point at Henderson street, which is at or near the westerly boundary of the whole terminal tract, a point quite remote from the river and quite remote from the line of the route of the Hoboken and Manhattan Railroad Company, as now laid out.

The main object of the agreement or covenant, because it was an instrument executed only by one party, appears on its face. It is recited that the tunnel company makes the agreement for the purpose of inducing the commissioners, who1 had been appointed in the condemnation proceedings, to award a less sum for the land, easement, rights and privileges which were sought to be taken than they otherwise might or would award, it being understood that the agreement was to be shown to the commissioners. A further consideration of one dollar is recited.

The provisions which come first in. the agreement may be described generally as undertaking to protect the property of the railroad companies from certain injurious effects that might accrue from the construction and operation of the tunnel; and, of course, the theory was that if the tunnel company bound itself by this covenant in such a way. as to properly indemnify the railroad companies against such possible injurious effects the damages to be allowed by the commissioners would be lessened.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Patrisco v. Nolan's Point Amusement Co.
159 A. 620 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1932)
J. Jacob Shannon & Co. v. Continental Casualty Co.
148 A. 738 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1930)
Dawson v. Pine
143 A. 89 (Camden County Circuit Court, N.J., 1928)
Abeles v. Guelick
137 A. 853 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 A. 332, 68 N.J. Eq. 328, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-essex-railroad-v-hoboken-manhattan-railroad-njch-1904.