Ogle v. Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad

8 Del. 302
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 1, 1866
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Del. 302 (Ogle v. Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme 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. Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad, 8 Del. 302 (Del. 1866).

Opinion

Booth.

The exceptions were mainly on the ground that there was no evidence before the jury to warrant the charge as made by the Court below; and, of course, if such was the case, it could not be set out in the bill of exceptions. And as to the remaining exception, there was sufficient matter of fact disclosed in it, to exhibit the error of the charge on the point or principle of law referred to in it.

Wales, J.

I have been unable to sec the force of the first objection made by the plaintiff in error to the charge of the court below. Reduced to its simplest form, the position taken by the court was that Tasker and Shaw could dedicate their own lands to the use of the public, but had no right or power so to dedicate the lands of other persons. The statement of this principle, in the absence of any evidence to modify, change or restrict its application in this case, is sufficient to establish its correctness. The plaintiff’s counsel, in support of his exception to this part of the charge, contended that there was no evidence before the jury to show by what title the defendants held that part of the road crossed by the Washington Avenue ; [308]*308to which it may be answered that they occupied and used the locus in quo before and at the time of the alleged ohstruction, and that there was the same absence of evidence as to the right or title of Tasker and Shaw in the soil over which the Railroad was laid. On this point, therefore, I think the question of the right of way in the public across the Raiload, to the extent claimed by the plaintiff, was properly left to the Jury.

The second exception is that there was error in the charge to the jury that, after reciting the provisions of the charter of the Newcastle and Frenchtown Turnpike and Railroad Company, as found in the 8th. vol. Del. Laws, the Court did further instruct the jury, in the absence of evidence in relation to the title of the said Rail Road Company to the locus in quo, that after the lapse of more than thirty years, during all which time the company had been in the undisputed and uninterrupted possession and occupancy of these lands and used them for all the purposes of the Railroad, it was to be presumed, in the absence of all evidence to the contrary, that all the requirements of the statute had been fully complied with, and that the lands were vested in the company in fee simple, but even if they were not the owners of the soil, they had an undoubted right of way over " the lands within the boundaries of their road.

It is a familiar rule that courts are bound to take notice of the public statutes of the State, and there could not have been error in bringing to the notice of the jury, the statute referred to, nor in instructing them that the N. C. & F. Turnpike & R. R. Co. having acted under its charter for such a long period of time, it was to be presumed that all the provisions of the law granting them corporate rights and privileges, and necessary to be obeyed and complied with before such rights and privileges could be exercised and enjoyed, had been fully obeyed and performed, and that it was incumbent on the plaintiff to rebut such presumption by evidence to the contrary.

The third exception is that the Court instructed - the [309]*309jury that if they should be satisfied from the evidence that the cars were standing within the boundaries or limits of the railroad, although within the lines of what is called Washington Avenue, their verdict should be for the defendants, for the reason that the company had a right to place and leave their cars there, whether they are to be ' considered the owners of the soil, or the owners of the way. The direction of the Court, as it appears from the context of the charge, the whole of which makes a part of the record in this case, proceeds upon the ground that the defendants had the paramount right to the use of their road and had been in the constant practice of using it with their trains for many years prior to the opening of Washington Avenue, and that whatever right the public may have acquired" to pass over and across the Railroad, was subordinate to that of the defendant,or in other words, that the public had only a qualified and restricted right of way. This conclusion naturally followed the preceding instructions to the jury wherein the court stated, that under the laws of the State, the A. C. F. T. R. R. Co. had become the owners in fee of the land over which their road passed, and that without they had performed some acts by which they had divested themselves of such title, or surrendered their rights, they were still to be considered as the owners of the soil and the right of way. In my view this instruction was correct.

The last error assigned is that the court refused to charge the jury, as requested by the plaintiffs counsel, that if the defendants had permitted and consented to the public travel along the avenue to and fro over the railroad, that such permission and consent amounted to a recognition and acknowledgment by the defendants that the said"' avenue was a public highway ; and that if the defendants' had performed acts to facilitate the passage of carriages and other vehicles along the avenue to and fro over the Railroad,then that such acts amounted to a co-operation of the defendants with the owners of the land over which the Washington Avenue was laid out, in the dedication of it to [310]*310the use of the public as a highway, and that this consent or co-operation would operate as á waiver on the part of the company of any claim of their right to .keep their cars standing on the railroad at its intersection with the Avenue. This is in substance the error assigned, and it was more fully discussed before us then any of the preceding ones, the plaintiff’s counsel contending that the defendants were estopped by their own acts from denying that the locus in quo was part of a public highway.

In deciding this point we must turn to the record, and on an examination of the whole charge of the Court, the apparent error presented by the plaintiff’s counsel is removed. The plaintiff’s counsel relied much on the fact that the defendants had made embankments on each side of the Railroad to facilitate the crossing of carriages, but there is nothing in the record to show that this was doné more, or as much for the public use, than their own' convenience ; nor is the permission alleged to have been • given by the defendants to the public to cross the railroad, inconsistent with their own reserved and paramount right-to use it for their own purposes at all times and on all occasions. The defendants never abandoned the use of their road, nor can the inference be drawn from any facts presented in the record that they intended to reverse their relation to the public by yielding to the latter the paramount-use of the locus in quo, and thereby to subject themselves to a qualitied and subordinate right of way.

It must also t>e taken into consideration that it- was incumbent on the plaintiff to prove that this crossing was part of a public road or highway, and not for the defendant to establish the negative.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Del. 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogle-v-philadelphia-wilmington-baltimore-railroad-del-1866.