Recco v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co.

32 S.E.2d 449, 127 W. Va. 321, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 96
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1944
DocketCC 692
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 32 S.E.2d 449 (Recco v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Recco v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co., 32 S.E.2d 449, 127 W. Va. 321, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 96 (W. Va. 1944).

Opinions

Riley, Judge:

Dominick Recco and Mary Recco, by bill in chancery, filed in the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, sought to compel The Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company to remove barriers obstructing a railroad crossing in the Town of Hansford, Kanawha County, West Virginia, and to rebuild, reestablish and thereafter maintain the crossing pursuant to a covenant contained in a deed dated March 25, 1870, from Sarah K. Hansford and others to defendant’s predecessor in title, Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company, wherein the grantee covenanted “to build and maintain a good crossing with cattle guards”. Plaintiffs demurred to defendant’s answer and filed their written motion to strike certain designated portions therefrom. The circuit court overruled the demurrer and motion, decreed the answer to be unobjectionable with reference to the reasons assigned in the motion to strike and, on its own motion, certified here the questions arising upon said motion and demurrer.

The following allegations appear in the bill of complaint:

By deed dated March 25, 1870, Sarah K. Hansford and fourteen others granted to Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company, defendant’s predecessor, a right of way for railroad purposes through their farm of 490 acres. The deed of conveyance provided that the “company is to build and maintain a good crossing with cattle guards * * The grantee thereafter constructed a grade crossing, located approximately sixty feet “west of the westerly side of what is presently known as 12th Street in” the Town of *323 Hansford, and maintained it until February, 1942, when the defendant railway company obstructed it by erecting barriers across the roadway at each entrance to the crossing and destroying that part of the roadway which passed over defendant’s railroad tracks and right of way, which plaintiffs contend is in violation of defendant’s covenant contained in the deed of March 25, 1870.

In 1921 plaintiffs acquired title to Lot 11 of Block 20; and by deeds of conveyance dated 1934 and 1937, respectively, they were vested with title to Lots 14, 15 and 16 of Block 23 in the Town of Hansford. These lots are part of the acreage through which Sarah K. Hansford and others gave the railroad company the right of way. Plaintiffs assert that due to the obstruction of the crossing which afforded “plaintiffs and others similarly situated, with a good and sufficient means of ingress to and egress from said Town”, their mercantile enterprises, established and operated on said property, have suffered a loss of trade from former customers who are now doing “their trading and buying at other and more accessible stores”, and that tenants in buildings owned by plaintiffs and situate on said lots have had their businesses so adversely affected by defendant’s conduct that the operator of a barber shop surrendered the premises leased to him, a tenant operating a restaurant has demanded a reduction in rental, and another tenant conducting a beauty parlor has complained that the volume and profits of her business have declined to such an extent that she “may surrender the premises now occupied by her”; and plaintiffs complain that such obstruction has caused serious, severe, substantial and continuing injury and damage to plaintiffs and their property, and to .the value and rental value thereof.

Plaintiffs assert, and defendant denies, that the covenant to build and maintain a good crossing with cattle guards is a covenant running with the land. Defendant’s answer avers that the condition of its predecessor’s agreement was “in reality at that time a condition to build and maintain a farm crossing for the use and benefit of the owners of such farm”, that many years ago the farm was *324 subdivided into lots, and that with the “establishment and building up of the Town of Hansford” the crossing became and was used as a public crossing, for many years past under the jurisdiction of the State Road Commission of West Virginia as a part of the public road system, during which period it was not appurtenant to or for the benefit of any particular lots acquired by various purchasers of lots in the subdivision of the 490-acre tract and, therefore, the railway company denies that “under existing circumstances” plaintiffs are entitled to the benefit of said covenant.

Defendant admits that it barricaded the crossing and removed the roadway, but says that the crossing had become a dangerous one “by reason of the increased use thereof by the residents of the Town of Hansford and by the public generally passing up and down the Kanawha Valley through the Town of Hansford, and also by reason of the increased traffic on the tracks of this respondent passing over-said crossing”, and because thereof defendant and the State Road Commission of West Virginia, a corporation, entered into an agreement on December 25, 1940, by which the crossing was to be vacated and closed upon completion of a grade separation project which would permit the public to pass over defendant’s tracks without being subjected to the delays and dangers incident to the use of said grade crossing; and that pursuant- to such agreement and subsequent to the “completion of the contract”, the Road Commission requested defendant to barricade the crossing, with which request defendant complied; and that, through inadvertence, a formal order abandoning and closing said crossing was not entered until December 30, 1943.

The first defense of the railway company, that the covenant is personal and does not run with the land, is contrary to the decision of this Court iñ Lydick v. The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, 17 W. Va. 427.

In defense of the sufficiency of its answer, defendant argues that the covenant is no longer effectual, since the original purpose for which the covenant was created has *325 ceased to exist and that defendant is entitled to develop such fact. Its argument is premised upon the assertion that the original crossing was for farm purposes. Although the deed containing the covenant discloses that the land, through which the railroad right of way was established, was a farm, it may or may not be true that at the time the covenant was made, the only use to be made of the crossing related to farm purposes. We think this factor to be immaterial. In Hennen v. Deveny, 71 W. Va. 629, 77 S. E. 142, it was stated that “The words of the covenant are the primary source, from which the intention must be gathered. * * * There is nothing in the language of Burns’ deed to the trustees of the church which, in the slightest degree, indicates a purpose to limit the duration of the easement.” We are cited to Uhl v. Ohio River R. Co., 47 W. Va. 59, 34 S. E. 934, in which a covenant to make a good crossing and build cattle stops was construed to mean “the customary farm roadway”. In that case the land owner sought to use the crossing for piping natural gas to his residence and the Court, though giving the covenant a limited-purpose construction, implied a way of necessity. Judge Brannon objected to the narrow construction on the ground that the crossing “was for use for any purpose which might thereafter be called for in the conveyance from the land of its products * * *”. The view expressed by Judge Bran-non’s dissent finds support in the rule stated in 17 Am. Jur.

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.E.2d 449, 127 W. Va. 321, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/recco-v-chesapeake-ohio-railway-co-wva-1944.