Sterling National Bank & Trust Co. of New York v. Charleston Transit Co.

27 S.E.2d 256, 126 W. Va. 42, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 61
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1943
Docket9371
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 27 S.E.2d 256 (Sterling National Bank & Trust Co. of New York v. Charleston Transit 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
Sterling National Bank & Trust Co. of New York v. Charleston Transit Co., 27 S.E.2d 256, 126 W. Va. 42, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 61 (W. Va. 1943).

Opinions

Kenna, Judge:

' This proceeding was instituted in the Circuit Court of Kanawha County by Sterling National Bank and Trust Company of New York, trustee, against Charleston Transit Company, Charleston-Dunbar Traction Company, Charleston Interurban Railway Company, and others, for the purpose of enforcing the alleged liens securing certain special assessment paving certificates issued by the City Council of the City of Dunbar upon a right-of-way thirty feet in width and about two thousand, six hundred feet in length, parallel to and abutting upon Dunbar Avenue from Industrial Avenue to the eastern boundary line of the City of Dunbar, and to reduce to decretal judgment the principal amount represented by the certificates in question, together with interest from the due date of the first of a consecutive series of certificates, none of the certificates having been met and the section of the charter under which they were issued containing an accelerating provision. From decree entered on the thirty-first day of December, 1941, by which the lien was held valid and enforceable and a decretal judgment rendered against the named defendants in the amount of $17,668.78, this appeal was allowed, the cost of the same pavement having been before this Court as a charge against the same interests in the cause of Herbert C. Heller & Co. v. Charleston-Dunbar Traction Co., 112 W. Va. 299, 164 S. E. 853, in which it was held that the certificates then involved were unenforceable, the finding being based upon a question that will be presently discussed.

We are under the impression that the exhaustive assignments of error present the questions for decision in a manner that will permit them to be disposed of as included in the discussion of not more than four major topics, the subdivisions of which we regard as unneces *45 sary to note, as we do the mechanics of their presentation to the trial chancellor.

Several years before the incorporation of the City of Dunbar, the Charleston-Dunbar Traction Company was organized, and, as a part of its system, acquired the right-of-way in question by virtue of two conveyances, the first in 1911, and the second in 1913. In April, 1921, the Legislature granted its original charter to the City of Dunbar. Subsequently, in the same year, the Charleston-Dunbar Traction Company executed a ninety-nine year lease of the Dunbar street car system including the right-of-way in question, to Charleston Interurban Railroad Company, the latter company covenanting to discharge all taxes upon the property leased. On April 23, 1925, the charter of the City of Dunbar was amended in a way that will be hereinafter referred to.

On August 13, 1928, the City of Dunbar contracted with Luigi Lemma for the paving of Dunbar Avenue from Industrial Avenue to its eastern boundary line, and on December 21st, imposed upon the owners of land abutting upon that street what yrill be referred to as the original assessment for the purpose of defraying its cost. In July, 1929, the first certificate to become due being in default, Herbert C. Heller & Company instituted a chancery cause for the purpose of enforcing in full the liability thereby represented with the result that the certificates were held unenforceable in the Heller case, so that, in October, 1932, Herbert C. Heller & Company petitioned the Dunbar City Council under the terms of the amended city charter then in effect to impose a reassessment upon the owners of the right-of-way in question with the result that in the following January the reassessment was laid in the name of Charleston-Dunbar Traction Company under the holding in the Heller case, in spite of the fact that the Charleston Interurban Railroad Company was then operating an interurban transportation system upon lines traversing the right-of-way under a ninety-nine year lease.

*46 In 1933, the Charleston Interurban Railroad Company and its two subsidiaries, as they had then come to be, Charleston-Dunbar Traction Company and Kanawha Valley Traction Company, had become involved financially to an extent that those interested believed required their reorganization. This was done in a non-adversary chancery proceeding instituted against the three corporations by Roxalana Land Company in the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, the ultimate outcome of which proceedings was the transfer and conveyance of their entire holdings to Charleston Transit Company, no provision being made in that proceeding for discharging the indebtedness represented by the paving certificates forming the basis for this proceeding.

The principal question here involved, we believe, and that upon which the greatest number of assigned points of error turn is: Can the right-of-way of a street railway company under the specific wording of the charter of the City of Dunbar be subjected to a special assessment covering its pro rata part, on a front footage basis, of the cost of paving a public highway or street upon which that right-of-way abuts? The charter, speaking of the abutting property, provides that “such owners and lots be assessed”, so that consequently it becomes necessary to determine whether the word “lots” as so used is inclusive of a right-of-way, and if so, whether the occupant thereof under a ninety-nine year lease can be regarded as its “owner”. We have no hesitancy in replying affirmatively to both queries. There have been many cases before the courts of this country for the purpose of dealing with assessments of this kind, proportioned on the basis of the abutting front footage, and while there is some conflict in the holdings, there is no doubt that the clear weight of authority, including the Supreme Court of the United States, sustains the assessment of rights-of-way, some of them described as lots. Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Barber Asphalt Paving Co., 197 U. S. 430, 25 S. Ct. 466, 49 L. Ed. 819; 116 Ky. 856, 75 S. W. 269; Town of Clayton v. *47 Colorado & So. Ry. Co. 51 F. (2d) 977, 82 A. L. R. 417, and note; Minneapolis etc. Ry. Co. v. City of Minot, 51 N. D. 313, 199 N. W. 875, 37 A. L. R. 211, and note. See also, Choctaw etc. Railroad Co. v. Mackey, 256 U. S. 531, 41 S. Ct. 582, 65 L. Ed. 1076.

As to who can be regarded the owner, we are confronted at the outset with construing that term in connection with the context, and with the subject matter to which it relates. That being so, it seems to us quite clear that it is not confined to the fee simple title, but that, speaking generally, it necessarily includes any title which would confer a complete right of user during the estimated life of the contemplated improvement, which, in this case, is the pavement of a street, the life of which would be spent many years before the expiration of a ninety-nine year lease. True, this Court’s opinion in the Heller case refers inferentially to the fact that the lessee under this identical lease was not properly proceeded against as the owner of the right-of-way, but that the ownership was held by Charleston-Dunbar Traction Company, as the lessor.

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.E.2d 256, 126 W. Va. 42, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sterling-national-bank-trust-co-of-new-york-v-charleston-transit-co-wva-1943.