Pettit v. Jamestown & Franklin Railroad

71 A. 1048, 222 Pa. 490, 1909 Pa. LEXIS 900
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 4, 1909
DocketAppeal, No. 219
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 71 A. 1048 (Pettit v. Jamestown & Franklin Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pettit v. Jamestown & Franklin Railroad, 71 A. 1048, 222 Pa. 490, 1909 Pa. LEXIS 900 (Pa. 1909).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Mestrezat,

This is an action of trespass brought by the plaintiff to recover damages from the defendant for injuries which he alleges he sustained by reason of the removal of the lateral support from his land. The court directed a verdict for the defendant and judgment having been entered thereon, the plaintiff has taken this appeal.

In the year 1905 the estate of S. P. McCahnónt, deceased, was the owner of several tracts of land in Venango county, one of which lay along the Allegheny river and contained about 135 acres. By deed dated January 23, 1905, McCalmont’s executors conveyed in fee simple to F. J. Jerome, trustee, a part of this tract, being a strip adjoining and extending along the Allegheny river about 190 rods and containing 15.6 acres. The land conveyed was particularly described by reference to the location survey of the defendant’s railroad. In the description a reference is made to a map attached to the deed for a further description of the premises conveyed. Reservations were made of the oil and gas, a railroad crossing over the premises conveyed, and the right to lay pipes and oil lines under the railroad. By deed, dated November 28, 1905, Jerome conveyed the same land to The Jamestown & Franklin Railroad Company, the defendant in this action, which prior thereto had located a railroad over it.

After the sale to Jerome, McCalmont’s executors sold the residue of the tract of which the Jerome land was a part to [493]*493Joseph Pettit, the plaintiff, and conveyed it to him in fee by deed dated February 10, 1906. Subsequent to this purchase by Pettit, the defendant company constructed the railroad upon the strip of land which it had acquired from Jerome. The plaintiff alleges, as his cause of action, that in the construction of the road, the defendant “removed or caused to be removed the lateral support of plaintiff’s land lying and being on the side of the hill adjacent to defendant’s proposed line of railroad, to such an extent, and in such a manner that the surface of the earth on said hillside cracked or opened, and slid down the hill, carrying with it derricks, machinery and other appliances placed thereon by plaintiff, and used by him in the production of oil therefrom, and destroying the oil wells thereon and the fixtures and fittings therein.” It seems that the strip of land purchased by Jerome and now held by the defendant company lay along a steep hillside extending from the Allegheny river above and beyond the defendant’s premises, and that outside of the defendant’s land the plaintiff was operating extensively for oil and had put down several wells. In the construction of the railroad it was necessary to make several deep cuts and excavations in the premises, and the plaintiff claims that in doing so the defendant caused the hillside, a part of his land, to slip and slide down the hill towards the river and carry with it his oil wells and other property.

There is no allegation of fraud, accident or mistake in the execution or delivery of the deed by McCalmont’s executors to Jerome, nor is it claimed that it does not express the agreement of the parties relative to the land conveyed. No attempt has been made by either party to reform it so as ,to make it express a different intention or a different purpose. It must, therefore, be taken to be the contract of the parties, and as such it must speak for itself and determine their rights. Hence the single question in the case is whether the title acquired by the Jerome deed justifies the defendant company in digging and excavating on its own premises in constructing its road so near to the plaintiff’s land as to remove the lateral support, and thereby cause the plaintiff’s land to subside and fall into the excavation. The trial judge held that it was apparent [494]*494from the evidence in the case that the strip of land was purchased by Jerome as trustee for the defendant company for the purpose of constructing a railroad thereon, and that the deed conveyed the premises to Jerome and released the defendant company from all damages, including the withdrawal of lateral support occasioned by the construction of the railroad. On this ground the learned judge directed a verdict for the defendant company.

The court below in its opinion refusing a new trial says: “If the damages had been assessed under the statute clearly the probability of the injury now complained of would have been considered and the assessment would have covered it.” The theory of the learned judge seemed to be that the premises were acquired by Jerome for a right of way of a railroad, that the grantors knew this fact and that the deed took the place of condemnation proceedings. In other words, the learned judge regarded the deed by which the premises were conveyed to Jerome as vesting in the grantee the same title and relieving him from damages to the same extent as condemnation proceedings instituted under the statute by a railroad company for the assessment of damages. In this we think the court was in error.

The defendant company does not claim to occupy the strip of land by virtue of. the authority conferred by eminent domain. It unquestionably had the right to enter upon and condemn the strip of land for the purposes of its railroad. In doing so it had the right to appropriate a strip of land sixty-six feet in width and a greater width at cuts and embankments for the use of its railroad. The statute confers this power upon railroad companies. It recognizes the necessity in various parts of the state of deep cuttings and embankments in order to make a proper location. While, therefore, the statute confines the company to a width of sixty-six feet at grade for its road, it confers authority to take a greater width where cuts or fills are necessary to make the statutory width at grade. While this authority is conferred on railroad companies, the statute manifestly regards the appropriation of the extra width as a “taking” under the constitution and requires due compensa[495]*495tion to be made for it in the assessment of damages. The general railroad act of 1849 is broad in its provisions and confers on the railroad company the authority to take the necessary land, not only for its roadbed but also for its depots, warehouses, offices, etc., and “for any purpose necessary or useful in the construction, maintenance or repairs in said railroad.” It also confers authority upon the company “to take, excavate and embank, make, grade and lay down and construct the road.” But the owner of the land is fully protected by the statute which requires the railroad company to make “compensation proper for the damage done or likely to be done to, or sustained by any such owner,” and this includes compensation not only for the strip of land sixty-six feet in width at grade, but for the additional width taken at cuts and fills. Any present or future injury which the owner may sustain by the construction of the road must be compensated for by the company. It is not only the damage which presently results from the construction of the road, but also that which is “likely to be done” thereby that is the measure of the owner’s compensation for the injury done him. It will therefore be observed that a railroad company, under eminent domain proceedings, may appropriate for its use a strip of land of the statutory width, and also when necessary, may take a greater width at cuts and fills, but compensation must include damages for the additional ground taken.

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Bluebook (online)
71 A. 1048, 222 Pa. 490, 1909 Pa. LEXIS 900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pettit-v-jamestown-franklin-railroad-pa-1909.