Southern Ry. Co v. Vann

142 Tenn. 76
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 142 Tenn. 76 (Southern Ry. Co v. Vann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Ry. Co v. Vann, 142 Tenn. 76 (Tenn. 1919).

Opinion

Me. Chief Justice Lansden

delivered tlie opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought by the Southern Railway Company to have its rights declared under two certain deeds executed to it for railway purposes by Thomas D. Arnold. The pleadings present the question of whether the railroad company is entitled to 100 feet on each side of the center line, of its main line, or whether it is only entitled to enough land for a main line and a switch track. The defendants claim the lands through Arnold, and their answer makes the issue just stated. There is also a question of estoppel, which will be referred to later.

Arnold made two deeds to the complainant’s predecessor in title,.one dated March 18, 1853, and the other dated March 29, 1858. The material parts of the deed dated March 18, 1853, are as follows:

“This indenture, made and entered into this second day of March, in the year 1853, between Thomas D. Arnold, of the county of Green and state of Tennessee, of the one part, and East Tennessee & Virginia Railroad Company of the other part, witnesseth that the said Arnold, for the consideration of the benefit conferred upon the public, as well as myself, I have by these presents bargained and conveyed, and do hereby bargain and convey, into the said East Tennessee & Virginia Railroad Company, and their successors in office during the continuance of said road, the right [79]*79of way through my tract of land, situate and lying' in the county aforesaid, and containing about seventy acres, being in the Greeneville district, and a part of it within the corporation of the town and adjoining the Hawkins road on the Northeast, and the Wyley’s Mill road on the Southwest and to include the right of way as laid down and located by the company at this time, — feet on each side of the center of said road; and the said company, by themselves, their agents or contractors under them, shall have full power and authority to enter upon the said land, and to build and construct the said road, by the removal of earth, rock, timber, and any and everything which may be necessary to remove to make a perfect and complete railroad according to the provisions of the charter of said company, shall have good right and title to the land hereby conveyed for a right of way, and shall have, hold, and enjoy the same as long as the same may be used for the purposes of a railroad, and no longer, and I will hereby warrant and defend the title to the same ’ against the lawful claims of all persons, and I do further convey to the .said company a sufficient quantity of ground anywhere on the line of said road on my said tract of land for the purposes of a depot and for nothing else, and no building shall be erected thereon except it be indispensable to the depot; and if said road shall at any time, cease to be used as a railroad, or the said depot should be changed or cease to- be used,” then the ground hereby conveyed for the right of way, as well as for a depot, with all the houses and other appurtenances and fixtures, shall-revert to me and my heirs forever.”

[80]*80This deed was executed before any work,' was done in Greene county towards the construction of the railroad. But afterwards a question arose in the minds of some of those interested as to the exact meaning of the references in the foregoing deed to the depot site. To clarify this, and to make his meaning plain, Gen. Arnold executed the following deed dated May 29, 1858:

“Whereas, heretofore, to wit, upon the second day of March, 1853, I was requested by Dock Samuel B. Cunningham, Major John McGaughey, and others, stockholders and directors of the Bast Tennessee & Virginia Railroad, to make a deed conveying to the company the right of way through my lands within the corporate limits of Greeneville, and also for a depot and depot purposes, assuring me that if I gave them the right of way and land for the depot I would lose nothing in the end p and, being thus assured, I made a deed to the company as requested, giving them full scope and verge for both right of way and also for a depot and depot purposes.
“And whereas, sundry carping and discontented persons in the company and out of it have found much fault and have questioned my sincerity, the arrangements and the deed which Dock Cunningham accepted as all he wished or desired, and I understand that Dock is still well satisfied with the arrangement, but others are not, and say I endeavored to make one too indefinite, and that they desire a more limited and definite boundary; and whereas, I am a man of peace and conciliation, and also a warm friend of the road and the present board, and being very anxious to produce harmony and fraternal* feeling to the end that [81]*81the business of said road may go on prosperously and successfully, I have agreed to narrow down and modify my former deed, and said company through their president accepting this modification in writing; that is to say, I agree that the company may occupy under the deed I made the following boundaries for a depot and depot purposes:
“Beginning at a stake on the outside rail of the side track one hundred and seventy-six feet from ni'-southwest line or line running between myself and Ephraim Davis, therewith said rail three hundred and two feet to a stake by the side of the rail, then at right angle to the railroad to a stake one hundred and seventy-nine feet, then three hundred and two feet parallel with the said track to a stake, then to the beginning.
“This ground was laid off by Mr. John Ingle, Esq., Daniel Kennedy, and Dock Cunningham was present, and I also was present, and one and all agreed to it as a final settlement of the depot questions, with additional agreement that the house is to be one hundred and forty feet long, and if it is not that long then ten feet off of each end of this lot is to be dropped by the company and to revert to my use and benefit. And I further agree that on the southwest end and west of the track there is to be a wagon road along the track and as near the track as it can safely be. I also agree that the ground occupied by the woodhouse or the temporary depot that is there now, and also the land remain vested in the company as by my deed referred to above. I also agree to open a street on the line occupied by the turntable and the bed of the road, is to [82]*82of the railroad lot west of the depot, fifty feet wide and running clear through my land, the company agreeing that half of that street shall be on the depot grounds as far as they go, the right to all else under said deed is hereby relinquished to said Arnold and his heirs forever. I do further agree that the company, if it shall desire it, shall at all times have the privilege of loading stock from my wagon yard at the northeast of my ground adjoining the road. The company providing the necessary platform and other appliance for loading from said yard.”

The East Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia Railroad Company was the immediate predecessor of complainant. It was chartered by chapter 120, Acts of 1847 and 1848, and in section 23 thereof it was provided that the railroad company should have a right of way of 100 feet on each side of the center of the road, unless-a contract with the owner of the land specified a different amount. The language of the charter upon this point is as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
142 Tenn. 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-ry-co-v-vann-tenn-1919.