South Branch Railroad v. Parker

41 N.J. Eq. 489
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 41 N.J. Eq. 489 (South Branch Railroad v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
South Branch Railroad v. Parker, 41 N.J. Eq. 489 (N.J. Ct. App. 1886).

Opinion

Bird, V. C.

The complainants, certain railroad corporations and their receivers, filed their bill of complaint, and ask thereby for an injunction requiring the defendant to remove the posts and boards constituting a fence erected by him across what they claim to be a street, and also the dwelling-house now being erected by him on a portion of said street, which they charge is a public street, running to and from their tracks.

The complainants own a railroad running into the village of Flemington, at which point they have passenger and freight depots. Prior to their purchase of the right of way, John G. Reading had opened a street over his land, fifty feet wide, from the south end of the defendant’s lot to Church street, over lands Avhich he afterwards conveyed to the railroad company, and had made one or more conveyances of parcels of his land adjoining on said street, and described them as bounded thereon and thereby, showing an intention to dedicate so much of his land to the public use as had then been designated for that purpose by removing fences and fixing the boundaries by the erection of fences from the south end of defendant’s lot. It is alleged that it was the intention of John G. Reading to extend the said street northward, over the lot now OAvned by the defendant, to Mine street, [491]*491but he did not do so, as the proof shows, at the time he opened it from the south end of said lot. But it is clear that the street had been opened and a conveyance made calling for it as a street before the railroad company took their title.

It is an important fact that the railroad company accepted a deed from John G. Reading for the right of way across this street, with full covenants of warranty. It is likewise important that they at once made a cut through said street, and laid their tracks across it. It is admitted that these acts completely obstructed the travel over the alleged street. In July, 1864, the company commenced running their trains, and its patrons delivering to it their produce as freight. It is insisted that many of them used the lot now owned by the defendant in passing to and from the depot of the complainants with their horses and wagons.

In the year 1884 the defendant became the owner as tenant in common of the lot over which the Avay in dispute is said to have been acquired. In 1885 he became the owner of the entire fee, and very soon thereafter erected a fence on the south end, thereof, and also commenced the construction of a house, which was enclosed, roofed and plastered at the time of the filing of the bill. These are the structures upon the part of the defendant which the complainants pray this court to compel the defendant to remove.

In brief, then, the complainants claim that John G. Reading dedicated a strip of land running north and south from Mine street to Church street, and opened it as a street, including therein the lot now opened by the defendant at the northern end thereof, and that he made conveyances, calling for a street thereon, and that after the construction of their road all that portion of the said street south of their road was abandoned, but they insist that all that portion north, not only to the defendant’s lot, to which place John G. Reading had opened it as a street, but also all of the defendant’s lot, was used by the patrons of the railroad as they pleased.

Another important fact should be noted. That is, John G. Reading never was the sole owner in fee of the defendant’s lot, [492]*492but held it in common with another. They purchased it in 1860. But the complainants urge that the work of dedication was nevertheless complete because it was immediately thrown open as part of said street, and that if it was not so thrown open, then there has been an uninterrupted adverse user for more than twenty years.

Still another fact must not be lost sight of. That is, that when John G. Beading and his cotenant acquired the title to the defendant’s lot in 1860, there was secured by deed a right to an open alley-way twelve feet wide over this and the adjoining lot on the east, to which easement each lot contributed one-half.

It is important also to bear in mind that within a period of twenty years application was made for the appointment of surveyors to lay out this very strip of land, all the way from Mine street over the lands of the defendant and of the complainant (crossing their tracks of course), and over the lands of John G. Beading, to Church street. It is admitted that the surveyors were appointed, and made a return, laying out a public road over the alleged street. But the railroad company filed a caveat against recording the return, and succeeded. Immediately after-wards it erected a water-tank ten or twelve feet in diameter, about in the centre of what they claim John G. Beading intended as a public street, and also of what the surveyors returned as a public road.

Two questions are presented: First, was there an act of dedication, which included the lot of the defendant, of which the complainants can take advantage? and second, if not such dedication, has there been an uninterrupted adverse user of the whole of the defendant’s lot as- a public street, or of any certain and well-defined portion of it, for over twenty years ?

First, the complainants can claim nothing by any covenants, references or descriptions, under which they have title to the lands covered by the alleged street, or adjoining the same. The contrary thereof, rather, is the effect of their deed with its full covenants of warranty. By the acceptance of such a deed they ignore or repudiate the existence of a street which they now claim had, before that time, been solemnly dedicated to public use, [493]*493and with reference to which private individuals had made purchases. Not only this, but the railroad, as has been said, was so constructed as to render the use of the street impossible. Still more than this, when the public, in a formal manner, according to law, appealed to the courts to have this street made a public highway beyond a peradventure, and it is declared by the public authorities to be necessary to open it as a highway, the railroad company not only resisted it so as to defeat the public desire, but at once erected a water-tank in the proposed way, a substantial and permanent structure, and an effectual barrier to the use of the land as a street. And this tank stands on the north side of the tracks of the complainant’s road, and on the very land which, by their bill, they claim was dedicated to the public use by John G. Reading. Are those acts consistent with their present demand ? "Would it be equitable for the court to allow the complainants to destroy or obstruct so much of this street as may suit their convenience, and claim the benefit of the residue under the original act of dedication as against all the world ? In other words, do the complainants come into court with clean hands, and are they entitled to a favorable hearing ? I think not. I conclude that the complainants, having by their deed accepted a conveyance of the fee of the land over which the way is alleged to have been dedicated, and having obstructed such way by the construction of their road and the erection of a water-tank within the limits of such way, are estopped from calling upon a court of equity to declare that the balance of said street was dedicated to public use, and from asking the aid of such court to enjoin others from obstructing it.

I say the complainants are estopped. • I speak only with reference to them. I make no mention of the rights of others, either at law or in equity.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 N.J. Eq. 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-branch-railroad-v-parker-njch-1886.