Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad v. Wilmington City Railway Co.

8 Del. Ch. 134
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 15, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Del. Ch. 134 (Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad v. Wilmington City Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad v. Wilmington City Railway Co., 8 Del. Ch. 134 (Del. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

The Chancellor:—

The complainant operates a line of railroad from the City of Philadelphia to the City of Baltimore and beyond which crosses the State of Delaware. It passes through the city of Wilmington and crosses Third and Fourth Streets at grade, both of said streets having been common highways established and maintained at the expense of the City of Wilmington, long before the company complainant was incorporated, or in fact any other railroad company in this country.

At a short distance below the railroad crossing there is a bridge over the Christiana River, known as the Third Street Bridge, serving as a means of communication with an outlying portion of the city known as South Wilmington, as well as with the adjacent country and the neighboring City of New Castle.

The respondent operates a street railway in the city of Wilmington and upon some country highways adjacent thereto, by electricity, under what is known as the trolley system, and has laid street railway tracks along Third Street to the complainant’s railroad, both on the northerly and southerly side. Its purpose is to cross complainant’s road with its street railway where complainant’s road crosses Third Street, thus connecting with its tracks already laid across the Third Street Bridge and in South Wilmington.

Respondent’s charter, granted in 1864, provides that it may “cross any track of any railroad company now incorporated, or hereafter to be incorporated, Provided that it conform to the grade of the track to be crossed”.

The complainant filed a bill in equity to restrain the proposed crossing. Upon the presentation of complainant’s bill I granted a rule to show cause why the preliminary injunction prayed for in said bill should not be awarded, with a restraining order until the determination of the rule.

[140]*140The bill was subsequently amended and the restraining order modified in accordance therewith.

The amended bill, in addition to the usual prayers for subpoena, answer and further relief' prays as follows: .

“2. That the said defendant, and its successors, its officers, employees, workmen, agents, deputies and attorneys may be restrained by the injunction of this Honorable Court, from again stretching or extending its trolley wires across the tracks of the said complainant on said Third or Fourth Street in said City of Wilmington, and from operating, or attempting to operate its said present or any projected line of street railway across the tracks of said complainant, at Third or Fourth Street, in said City of Wilmington, with the use of electricity as a motive power.

“3. And also, that a preliminary injunction may be issued from this honorable court, to restrain the said defendant, and its successors, employees, workmen, agents, deputies and attorneys, from again stretching or extending its trolley wires across the tracks of said complainant, on said Third or Fourth Street, in said City of Wilmington, with the use of electricity as a motive power, or otherwise howsoever in like manner, until the further order of the Chancellor.

The respondent has filed its answer fully meeting and denying all the equities of the bill; affidavits have been presented and read on both sides, and the questions involved argued upon the motion for a preliminary injunction.

The complainant does not claim any property rights as abutter or owner in fee which will be affected by the proposed crossing, and only shows in itself the right to cross Third and Fourth Streets, previously existing highways, in such a-manner as shall preserve to the public the use of the streets under the well known common law rule, that where a steam rail-' road crosses a street or public highway, as in this case’, it takes its right subject to the right of the public to use the street in a reasonable and lawful manner. ■

As was said by Judge Houston in McCoy vs. P. W. & B. R. R. Co., 5 Roust. 609, decided in 1879, “as Fourth Street was then, and long has been before the company was started [141]*141or the railroad. was - constructed by it, a common highway established and maintained at the expense of the City of Wilmington, there can be no question in this case that the •people of the city and the public in general had a paramount right to the use and enjoyment of it as such, as well where it was intersected and crossed by the railroad as in any other part of it.” The status- of the Third Street crossing is identically the same.

It appears from complainant’s bill and affidavits, and it is not denied by the respondent, although it denies the necessity of-so many tracks and so much shifting, that in consequence of the- great volume of complainant’s business, it uses seven lines of railroad track at the crossing of Third Street and eight lines at the crossing of Fourth Street:

That the business and traffic necessitates the passage of about forty-five ■ passenger trains north and fifty passenger trains south, and of about thirty-three freight trains north and south every twenty-four hours over said crossings:

That the necessary local shifting of cars and trains over .•said crossings causes the passage of about three hundred and •fifty trains or parts of trains every twenty-four hours, so that the total average passage of trains, or parts thereof over said crossings does not fall short of four hundred and seventy-five during every- twenty-four hours.

And this crowding of its right of way at the Third and Fourth Street crossings, and the consequent dangers and "difficulties attending, the use of Third and Fourth Streets as public highways; is urged by complainant’s counsel as in itself a reason for the exercise of the extraordinary powers of the Court of Chancery and the granting of an injunction in this case.

The only cases cited, however, that could by any construction support such a contention, are under Pennsylvania statutes, expressly investing the courts with special powers to prevent grade crossings.

In the case of the Pennsylvania R. R. Co. Appellant vs. Braddock Electric Railway Company, 152 Pa. St. 125, 25 Atl. 783, the Court recites the Pennsylvania statute as follows: [142]*1421 ‘ When such legal proceedings relate to crossings of lines of railroad by other railroads, it should be the duty of the courts of equity of this commonwealth to ascertain and define by their decree the mode of such crossing which will inflict the least practical injury upon the rights of the company owning the road intended to be crossed; and if in the judgment of such court it is reasonably practicable to avoid a grade crossing, they shall by their process prevent a crossing at grade.”

But in this State there is no such legislation. The powers of the Court of Chancery and the rules governing its action in this behalf have not been extended or modified by any general legislation, and I am not aware of any principle in law or equity in accordance with which the difficulties and dangers attending the use of Third and Fourth Streets as public highways at the points where they are crossed by the complainant’s railroad, which are caused by the multiplication of the complainant’s tracks and trains—by its increased use of its right of way—could be considered by the Court of Chancery as a reason for enjoining any use of the streets across the complainant’s right of way, which is a legitimate use of those highways and not an additional servitude or easement.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Del. Ch. 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-wilmington-baltimore-railroad-v-wilmington-city-railway-delch-1897.