Norwalk Truck Line Co. v. Viny

137 N.E.2d 706, 73 Ohio Law. Abs. 310, 1955 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 378
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1955
DocketNo. 648764
StatusPublished

This text of 137 N.E.2d 706 (Norwalk Truck Line Co. v. Viny) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norwalk Truck Line Co. v. Viny, 137 N.E.2d 706, 73 Ohio Law. Abs. 310, 1955 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 378 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1955).

Opinion

[311]*311OPINION

By LYNCH, J.:

Facts of the Case.

The pleadings filed in the ease, the trial brief of plaintiff, the brief of plaintiff, the brief for defendants and the reply brief of plaintiff give the facts of the case, so, for that reason, the Court will not repeat all the facts in the case but only so much as are necessary for the purpose of this Opinion.

The property involved in this case was originally owned by the Union Salt Company, which was for many years engaged in the business of mining salt through deep wells drilled down to the salt beds under the lands in the general area. The Union Salt Company owned this property prior to 1936. In 1936, the City of Cleveland was preparing to construct a roadway along the lake front and the proposed roadway was to be a memorial shore way, and this proposed roadway along the shore way, particularly from East 55th Street East, was to be constructed over ground artificially created by filling into the shallow water of Lake Erie, immediately in front of the property then owned by the Union Salt Company and other adjacent properties. This proposed boulevard would interfere with and cut off direct access by the property owners to the waters of Lake Erie.

On October 26, 1937, a Petition was filed by S. H. Squire, Superintendent of Banks of the State of Ohio, as Liquidator of the Union Trust Company. The action was against the City of Cleveland and other defendants, seeking to enjoin the construction of such high speed boulevard unless compensation was paid for the damage sustained by the littoral owners to their property, including the littoral rights appurtenant thereto. In the Squire case, No. 469,182 in the Common Pleas Court, Cuyahoga County now reported in 150 Oh St 303, by supplemental pleadings the action primarily became one in which they were seeking a declaration by the Court as to littoral rights as appurtenant to the upland bordering Lake Erie.

In view of the statements to follow, the Court is of the opinion that the successors in title to the property involved in this action should be briefly stated. The Union Salt Company sold this property to Morton Salt Company of Chicago. The Morton Salt Company of Chicago sold this property to My-Ton Corporation, which was a corporation owned by the defendants, Louis and Lenore Viny. Louis and Lenore Viny sold this property to the plaintiff in this action. My-Ton Corporation executed a lease to Norwalk Truck Line Company on June 6, 1950 (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 7). This contained an option to purchase.

The Union Salt Company, in 1943, became a party to the Squire case and then, after a change of name to the Lake Erie Salt Company, filed an Answer and Cross-Petition in the Squire case.

The high speed boulevard over this filled in land was constructed during 1936 and 1937 as a four-lane highway, passing in front of the property of the Union Salt Company, on made land north of the 1914 natural shore line. The Union Salt Company (the Lake Erie Salt Company) sought damages for the interference with the littoral rights [312]*312appurtenant to its upland property (the present land owned by plaintiff herein). The Union Salt Company sold the property to Morton Salt Company in 1944 and, by an Entry of the Court in the Squire case, had reserved to itself all claims to damages to the company and its property which had accrued up to May 31, 1944, the Journal Entry in the Squire case, on September 19, 1944, being in part as follows:

“(E) That the Lake Erie Salt Company retains and now owns each and every cause of action for monetary damages accrued on May 31, 1944 for the loss of property rights, if any, or deprivation of the use and benefit of property rights, if any, connected in any way with the construction of the lake front highway.”

The Morton Salt Company sold the property of to the My-Ton Corporation by Warranty Deed dated February 11, 1949 (Defendants’ Exhibit A in this case), so the Union Salt Company (Lake Erie Salt Company) had rights for damages accrued up to May 31, 1944, and My-Ton Corporation had claims for any damages after May 31, 1944.

During the trial of the case, there was nothing offered to show any recent interference with the taking of rights for the proposed boulevard, so as far as the Court knows, from what was presented, the taking of rights had been accomplished during the time the land was owned by the now Lake Erie Salt Company and that company is still in the Squire case, seeking compensation for its damages, the claims for which it reserved as hereinbefore set forth,-up to and including May 31, 1944.

Plaintiff’s Exhibits 9A and 9B show that a motion was filed in the Squire case for substitution of Louis Viny and Lenore Viny as parties defendant in place of the Union Salt Company on February 3, 1953, and that by Journal Entry, Louis Viny and Lenore Viny are now substituted as the owners of each and every cause of action heretofore asserted in the Cross-Petition of the Union Salt Company.

It was brought out in the trial of the case that the lessee in the Lease Agreement (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 7) had exercised its option to purchase and that there was an action for specific performance but that parties did not proceed to trial but worked out whereby a deed of conveyance was made by Louis Viny and Lenore Viny to Norwalk Truck Line Company, the plaintiff herein (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1). Plaintiff herein became the owner of this property by deed dated February 16, 1953, which was recorded in Volume 7686, Pages 439-40-41 of the Deed Records of Cuyahoga County. There are certain reservations in this deed (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1) upon which a declaratory judgment is asked and which the Court will discuss later in this Opinion.

Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2A and 2B are photostatic copies of a letter and envelope in which the law firm representing the defendants in this action notified the plaintiff herein, by said letter dated May 7, 1953, in effect, that after thirty days from the date of receipt of this notice Myron S. and Norton H. Viny will commence grading their lot next abutting the property to the north and fronting on Cleveland lake front highway to the established grade of said highway. These defendants, by this notice, were giving notice to the plaintiff that they were contemplating grading and excavating on filled in land north of the 1914 [313]*313shore line. Myron S. Viny and Norton H. Viny are sons of Louis and Lenore Viny and they are the grantees in a deed marked Defendants’ Exhibit E. This deéd attempted to convey certain property, together with all the riparian and littoral rights appurtenant to the same.

The Court is of the opinion that the defendants have failed to prove that they have any land as between the 1914 shore line and the property of the plaintiff herein, and under the decision in the Squire case the location of the 1914 shore line was fixed and there is no ownership north of the same.

After receipt of the letter, of which Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 2A is a photostatic copy, the plaintiff filed its Petition in case No. 648,764 in the Common Pleas Court of Cuyahoga County, seeking a declaratory judgment and for injunction, etc.

The evidence in this case does not disclose that any of the parties to this action or their predecessors in title in any way caused any fill to be placed in the waters of Lake Erie, nor have they, in any artificial manner, extended the shore line.

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Bluebook (online)
137 N.E.2d 706, 73 Ohio Law. Abs. 310, 1955 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norwalk-truck-line-co-v-viny-ohctcomplcuyaho-1955.