Ogle v. P. W B. R.R. Co.

8 Del. 267
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 5, 1866
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Del. 267 (Ogle v. P. W B. R.R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ogle v. P. W B. R.R. Co., 8 Del. 267 (Del. Ct. App. 1866).

Opinion

THIS was an action on the case by Thomas M. Ogle against the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company, to recover damages for injuries sustained by him in his person, his horse, carriage and harness in the overturning of his carriage while driving over the railroad track and embankment of the company across Washington Avenue in the town of New Castle, in the night time, in December, 1863, in consequence of cars left standing on their railroad track within the limits of the avenue, and so near the railroad crossing in it as to leave scarcely room for a horse and carriage to pass them on the crossing, and by which the horse was frightened and shying from them, overset his carriage down the embankment, threw him out upon the frozen ground, slitting one of his ears an inch in length and otherwise severely bruising and hurting him, and then running away with the carriage and damaging both that and the harness and himself to the amount of one hundred dollars. The company was at the time engaged in lowering the grade of the railroad at New Castle, which intercepted all travel to and from the town by the Hare's Corner's road, and the plaintiff, as well as others residing upon it were consequently obliged to drive in and out of the town by Washington Avenue and over the railroad crossing in question. The avenue is eighty feet wide, but is crossed at that place by a railroad embankment several feet above the level of it, with a carriage way twenty feet in width raised in the middle of the avenue on either side of the embankment and constructed by the company for the passage of vehicles across the railroad. Empty cars were frequently left standing both by day and night, upon a portion of the avenue, and some time nearly up to the road crossing referred to. The railroad had been originally located and constructed under the charter of the New Castle and Frenchtown Turnpike and Railroad Company in the same place several years before Washington Avenue had been opened as a public street or highway by Messrs. Tasker and Shaw, the proprietors of the land on which it had been laid out, and it now appeared that *Page 269 the railroad company under the legal titles which it had taken at the time of constructing the railroad, was seized in fee of the land at that, as well as other points upon it, to the width of the road, and was so seized in fee of it when the avenue was opened.

Booth, for the plaintiff. It was incumbent upon the plaintiff to show that the place where the injury occurred was a public street or common highway, and that he was rightfully traveling upon it at the time referred to, and that the defendant wrongfully obstructed it, in consequence of which he sustained the injuries complained of in the action. It had been proved that Washington Avenue was opened by Messrs. Tasker and Shaw, the proprietors of the land, in 1857 or 1858, as a street for the public use, and thereby dedicated it to the public use as a common highway, since which time it had been used and enjoyed as such by all persons who had occasion, or chose to use it. And such being the case, the railroad company had no right to leave their cars standing on the avenue, or within the limits of it, or any portion of it. The testimony of some of the witnesses was that they had seen their cars standing on the avenue projecting as much as twelve or fifteen feet over the line of it and into the avenue; whilst others testified that they had seen them standing there and projecting into it, to near the middle of it, it being eighty feet in width, and so close upon the carriage way as to cause horses to shy in passing them. As to what would constitute a dedication of private property to public use, it had been decided that if a street has been used by the public four or five years as a highway with the consent of the owners of the soil, the jury may presume a dedication of it by them. 4 Law Libr. 10 Jarvis v.Dean, 13 E. C. L. R. 45. And it has been held that the same may be presumed in this country after a public use of six or seven years. Barclay et al. v. Howell's Lessee, 6 Pet. 498. And a dedication by the owner of the soil for one year, will give the public a right to use it as a highway. 4 Law Libr. 10, 11. *Page 270 What will constitute such a dedication, and what will negative the idea and intention of the owner of the soil to make such a dedication of it, might be found very fully reported in the case of Johnson v.Stayton, 5 Harr. 448, from which it would be seen that where the owner opened the road without any obstruction to travel retained by him upon the road, it would constitute a dedication of it as a common highway to the use of the public.

Harrington, for the defendant. The plaintiff was bound to show that the injuries sustained by him were the direct result and necessary consequence of the negligence and misconduct of the company, or its servants, in leaving the cars standing in the place and position complained of, and also that it was not attributable in part, or in any degree, to his own carelessness or negligence; for it would become the duty of the jury to consider whether the plaintiff under the circumstances, passing the cars at night, exercised proper care and prudence, and due diligence and precaution to prevent the accident by the shying of his horse and over-turning his carriage down the embankment; because, if with proper care and prudence on his part he could have avoided the accident, notwithstanding it might at the same time have been an act of imprudence on the part of the servants of the company to leave the cars standing in such a position, he could not recover. 24 E. C. L. R. 612. 4 Harr. 443, 483, 233, 320. Ang. on Highw. 271. 11 East 60.Pierce on Am. R. Law 272. 12 Metc. 415. What would constitute negligence in such a case, was a question for the decision of the court, but whether there was such negligence in the case, was a question of fact to be decided by the jury. 4 Harr. 254, 320.Redf. on Railw. 394. 1 Amer. Railw. Cases, 420. Washington Avenue never was a public road, street, or highway. The statute provides how public roads are to be made. Rev. Code 169. The dedication of private property to public use, is of common law origin, and was an appropriation of land to some public use by the owner of it, and accepted for such use by or on behalf of *Page 271 the public. Ang. on Highw. 104. But it was in proof in the case that the authorities of the town of New Castle had refused to accept it as one of the streets of the town, and in consequence of it, that the proprietors of the soil reserve to themselves the right and privilege of closing is again at their will and pleasure. And if that was so, then it never had been dedicated to the public use in its proper legal sense, and was, therefore, not even yet a public street or common highway, for such a reservation of a private right and power at any time to enclose it again and vacate it as a common highway, was inconsistent with, and defeated its dedication to the public. Ang.on Highw. 111 sec. 139. Where a road was laid out to be used by certain persons only, but had in fact been used by the public generally for a long time, it was held by the court not to be sufficient evidence of a dedication of it to the public; and if there was no evidence that the parish had acquiesced in the dedication, it was not a public road which the parish was bound to repair. 6 E. C.L. R. 482. A dedication was insufficient without acceptance of it by the public. 37 Law Libr. 92. 2 Greenl. Ev. sec. 662. 5 Harr. 448. 4

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Related

Barclay v. Richard W. Howell's Lessee
31 U.S. 498 (Supreme Court, 1832)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Del. 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogle-v-p-w-b-rr-co-delsuperct-1866.