Royal Elkhorn Coal Co. v. Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co.

114 F. Supp. 341, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3970
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedJuly 17, 1953
DocketNo. 232
StatusPublished

This text of 114 F. Supp. 341 (Royal Elkhorn Coal Co. v. Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Royal Elkhorn Coal Co. v. Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co., 114 F. Supp. 341, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3970 (E.D. Ky. 1953).

Opinion

SWINFORD, District Judge.

This is an action in ejectment with a claim for damages for the wrongful occupation and use of a right of way by the defendant company on what is known as a spur track up Fraziers Creek in Floyd County, Kentucky. The property involved is approximately 3300 feet in length and 60 feet wide, except for a distance of 400 or 500 feet in which it is 100 feet in width.

The facts are briefly these: the plaintiff acquired the property in question between the years 1918 and 1924 from various parties by deeds of conveyance and for a valuable consideration. The plaintiff expended several thousands of dollars for grading and building a track over this right of way from the main line of the defendant railway company to the plaintiff’s mineral holdings up Fraziers Creek, a tributary to Left Beaver Creek in Floyd County, Kentucky.

The plaintiff, its successors and lessees used this track intermittently for the purpose of transporting the -coal from its mining properties until 1936. At that time the remote lessee, the Autocrat Coal Company, stopped the mining of coal and dismantled and disposed of its equipment which included the rails and ties on the spur track. It is established by the proof that the reason for the cessation of operations was economic and not the fact that the coal properties had been exhausted of the merchantable and minable coal.

The right of way grew up in bushes and weeds; there were buildings and houses, either wholly or partially, built upon it; fences were placed across it and it gave the general appearance of being entirely abandoned by the owner.

In 1945 the defendant company, in order to make accessible to market the coal from various coal companies which was being mined up Fraziers Creek, went upon this right of way and took deeds and conveyances from the persons who were living upon or adjacent to the property and who claimed some ownership or asserted some right to the property. For these conveyances the defendant company paid a valuable consideration. It thereafter built a spur track at a cost of approximately $35,-000 which was a part of a larger expenditure of $171,000. The latter figure covered the entire track laying and development into the coal fields of this immediate section.

In this proceeding the plaintiff reasserts its claim to title to this property. It files with its pleadings and offers in evidence the deeds and conveyances from the various persons who in 1918 to 1924 actually had or claimed to have title to the property. It asks that it be placed in possession and that the defendant be ejected as a trespasser without right or color of title.

The defendant in its answer alleges title in itself by reason of warranty deeds of July 5, 1945 from Douglas Hayes and Lizzie Hayes, his wife; Sam Martin and Nora Martin; Myrtle Turner and Joe Turner; Paul Horn and Vela Mae Horn; Ed Allen and Mallie Allen; and by deed of June 28, 1945 from J. F. Howell and Beuna Howell et al.; and on October 1, 1945 from Florence Sizemore Martin et al., for all of which it paid a valuable consideration.

It is contended further as a defense that Douglas Hayes, John Hall and Glenn Spradlin are now the owners of all but five shares in the plaintiff company and that all of these parties are residents of Floyd County, Kentucky, and live either adjacent to or in the general locality of the right of way in question; that they were present and had full knowledge that the defendant company was building the track over this right of way and that they made no objection to the building of the track; that, in fact, one of them, Douglas Hayes, assisted in acquiring the right of way and that the plaintiff is therefore now estopped from claiming title.

[343]*343The defendant further contends as an absolute defense that the right of way was abandoned by the plaintiff in 1936, nine years before the defendant entered upon the right of way and that the subsequent conduct of the plaintiff, its stockholders and officers is a bar to the relief sought.

As a further defense the defendant alleges and offers proof to the effect that the land in question is of little value as a right of way to the plaintiff but that it is an absolute necessity for the public and that as a public service corporation it should not be evicted or ejected from all or any part of the land in the record described.

I will consider these defenses in the order named. The first question which suggests itself in considering the question of title to real estate, which is reflected by the records of the county court in which the land lies, is: Why did the defendant ignore the title of the plaintiff? The defendant went to considerable trouble and evidently expended some money in acquiring title from people who did not have the title, but made no effort to contact or negotiate with the Roya'l Elkhorn Coal Company. It should be pointed out that the Royal Elkhorn Coal Company was at that time (1945) owned by non-residents of the State of Kentucky. All of these stockholders and officers lived in Ohio and, according to the testimony of Mr. C. E. Tibbals, in the northern part of Ohio, which was hundreds of miles from the property in question. If courts are to lightly consider record titles to real estate and favor those who ignore such records, all non-resident owners will be in danger of losing their titles and not even knowing of it for many years. It is a well established principle of law, and one which courts should rarely depart from, that the ownership of real estate by a duly recorded deed or will is one of the most jealously guarded securities a person can have and he may come and go at will with no fear that his title will be interfered with and with an understanding that he does not have to periodically appear and assert and reassert such vested right.

The fact is that this title was in the plaintiff at all times and if deeds were made to the defendant company by those who did not have the title, then the defendant company acquired nothing by the deeds.

It is well established that in actions of this kind the plaintiff must stand on the strength of its title and not on the weakness of the title of those against whom it claims. The defendant contends that the plaintiff has wholly failed in this; consequently, it is necessary that we consider the source of title on which the plaintiff relies.

A study and examination of the maps and exhibits in the light of the record of evidence reveals that the boundary claimed by the plaintiff was acquired by it from separate sources. This may be identified as the Sizemore Heirs tract, the Elkhorn Coal Corporation or Douglas Hayes tract and the Day-Hall tract.

The Sizemore Heirs tract was acquired by deed of January 4, 1918 to the plaintiff, Royal Elkhorn Coal Company, and identified in the record as Plaintiff’s Exhibit 4.

The Elkhorn Coal Corporation or Douglas Hayes tract was acquired by deed of conveyance of January 1, 1924 from the Elkhorn Coal Corporation and identified in the record as Plaintiff’s Exhibit 3.

The Day-Hall tract or parcel was acquired by deed of conveyance of April 23, 1917 from John Hall et al. to David Armstrong and W. W. Tibbals and is identified in the record as Plaintiff’s Exhibit 5. This tract was later acquired by the Royal Elk-horn Coal Company by mesne conveyances when it obtained its corporate charter in 1918.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 F. Supp. 341, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3970, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/royal-elkhorn-coal-co-v-chesapeake-ohio-ry-co-kyed-1953.