State ex rel. Sumner v. Toledo Railway & Terminal Co.

1 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 513, 1903 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 203
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 19, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 513 (State ex rel. Sumner v. Toledo Railway & Terminal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Sumner v. Toledo Railway & Terminal Co., 1 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 513, 1903 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 203 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

This is ian action in quo warranto brought against the defendant ■to oust it from a -certain right of way and test its right to appropriate land' for a certain track. The question involved is -whether the defendant company has authority to appropriate a right of way, u-pon which it proposes to construct a track to connect its main line with a certain industry or industries, adjacent to its line, -or in the neighborhood o-f its line, in order that the defendant may transport its ears and engines to and from such industries. It appears from the pleadings and evidence in the case that the defendant is about to construct a track some 5,500 feet in length— .a little over a mile — -running from the main track to the Toledo Furnace Company, so called, and as claimed by the defendant .with the intention of extending it a short distance beyond the furnace company to -the Craig shipyard and the wharves and docks •along the river front in that neighborhood.

The relator claims that the track, about to be built is not a si-de-traek, but that it is to be used for a private purpose, and that,. [514]*514therefore, the railroad company has- not the power to appropriate and condemn land for this purpose; that it can only acquire it by purchase. It is well established that the right of eminent domain, the right to appropriate property, does not extend to cases where it is to be taken for a private purpose. The relator says in his petition:

“Paragraph 5. Relator is informed and believes 'and so charges the fact to be that the strip of land harass said north half of said east quarter of said northeast quarter of said Section 32 in the city of Toledo', so sought to be appropriated in said action 2374, is idtesigned by said defendant to be used as a part of a right of way for a track to connect the main track of defendant with the plant of the Toledo Furnace Company, which is a private corporation ; that the use to which said strip of land is to be appropriated ■is a private use and that defendant has no right of eminent domain to so appropriate said land for said use; that defendant seeks to appropriate said strip of land neither for side-tracks, nior for depots, nor for workshops, nor for round-houses, nor for water stations, nor for material for construction, nor for right of way to 'enable it to construct or repair its road, nor for aqueducts, nor for drains, nor for the railroad described in its articles of incorporation.
“Wherefore, said prosecuting attorney says that the defendant has no right to exercise the power of eminent domain to appropriate -the strip of land, or any part thereof, described in paragraph four hereof, nor to prosecute said action 2374 in the Probate Court of Lucas County against Laura P. Mitchell, Emily P. Hastings and Rutherford H. Platt, or either of them.”

The defendant in its answer with reference to paragraph five of the relatoris petition, says:

“5. For answer to the allegations of paragraph number five of said petition, defendant says that the right of way sought to be acquired amid appropriated in said action 2374 in said probate court, is designed by defendant to be used, and is necessary as a part of the railroad of the defendant company, for a side or spur-track, connecting the main track of 'the defendant with the plant of the Toledo Furnace Company and other industrial plants located, and to be located, upon the line of the track so proposed to be constructed; that the use to which said strip of land is to be appropriated is not a private use, but a public use iu connection with defendant’s main line of railroad for the purpose of reaching said Toledo Furnace Company and other industries located and to be located on said side or spur-tracks; and that the same is to be devoted to a public use by the defendant as a common [515]*515carrier of persons and property for all who desire to and' can. use the same upon the same terms and conditions; and the construction, maintenance and operation of said side or spur-track to said Toledo- Furnace Company -and other industries is for the purpose of using the same in connection with, and as a part of, the railroad described in defendant’s articles of incorporation.”

A supplemental answer was filed -on the day of the trial, shortly before the trial was commenced, setting up:

“That since -the filing of its original answer herein, to-wit, on or about the twelfth day -of November, 1902, the stockholders of the Toledo Railway & Terminal Company, at a meeting of said stockholders duly called f-o-r that purpose, determined to construct a -branch track or line from the main line of said company’s track, commencing 'at a point on said main .line on the easterly side of the Maumee river, in Toledo, Lucas county, Ohio-, six hundred and thirty-seven (637) feet northeasterly of the center line of Consaul street, measured along the center of the right of way of said main line, and extending from said point in a northeasterly direction to a point of connection with the railroad of the Maumee Connecting Railroad Company, said point being westerly of Wheeling street and northerly -of Front street in said city of Toledo-, so as to connect said branch line with said railroad of the Maumee Connecting Railroad Company, and -also with the railroad of the Wheeling & Lake Erie Railway Company near said point, and so as to connect said -branch line with the place or places lying northerly of Front street, westerly of -the main tracks o-f the Wheeling & Lake Erie Railway Company, southerly of the Maumee river, and easterly of the line between the property o-f the Toledo Riverside Railway Company and the property of -the National Malleable Castings Company.
“That thereupon, -and on the same date as last aforesaid, this defendant caused a copy of said resolution, duly acknowledged and certified by the directors and officers of defendant -according to larw, to he filed in the office of -the Secretary of State of the State of Ohio.
“Defendant further says that’the branch line aforesaid is identical in its location, and the property necessary to appropriate for said branch line is the same as- the line and property described in its original answer herein, and that it is necessary in the construction of said branch line to 'appropriate and use the same property described in its original answer.”

This supplemental answer was filed by the defendant, and these steps taken apparently with the intention o-f meeting the case if [516]*516the court should be of the opinion that the track about to be constructed was not a side-track, but a branch track.

The relator demurred to this supplemental answer, upon the ground that a railroad 'company has not the power to condemn and appropriate property under the right of eminent domain, for a branch track; but it was claimed if they desire the property for that purpose, they must purchase it. This demurrer was informally overruled at the time of the trial, with the reservation, however, that the court might consider it further and decide it in the final determination of the. case. Thereupon the relator filed a reply to the supplemental answer. Testimony was offered to sustain the claims of the parties, and, upon the trial of the case, the defense, whether required to do so or not, assumed the burden in offering testimony.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 513, 1903 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-sumner-v-toledo-railway-terminal-co-ohiocirct-1903.