Stoutimore v. Q., O. K.C.R.R. Co.

256 S.W. 121, 215 Mo. App. 194, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 159
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 256 S.W. 121 (Stoutimore v. Q., O. K.C.R.R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stoutimore v. Q., O. K.C.R.R. Co., 256 S.W. 121, 215 Mo. App. 194, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 159 (Mo. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

This is a suit in equity wherein an injunction was sought to prevent defendant from filling up, closing, or obstructing a certain underground crossing for stock connecting two segments of a farm owned by plaintiff and, further, to require defendant to remove such obstructions as already have been placed therein by defendant. The facts are as follows:

In 1897, the Kansas City Northern Connecting Railway Company constructed a line of railway through Clinton County, Missouri, and over the lands of one Thomas Stanton, the right of way cutting an eighty-acre tract owned by him into two parcels. On January 1, 1897, the said railroad company executed a first mortgage on all property it then owned or to be thereafter acquired. On March 25, 1897, Thomas Stanton and wife, in consideration of $450 cash, conveyed by warranty deed a right of way one hundred feet in width across said lands. The following clause appeared in said deed: "The grantee herein shall construct on the land conveyed an undergrade crossing of its railroad for hogs and small calves for the use and convenience of the grantors." The railroad company constructed its railroad upon the right of way so purchased from Stanton, and pursuant to the above quoted clause in the deed, constructed, at a small draw, a bulkhead trestle about twelve feet in length and five to six feet in height. Wing fences were built from the right of way fences to a connection with the trestle so that stock might use the undercrossing.

On May 20, 1901, the U.S. Circuit Court for the Western District of Missouri entered a decree on a judgment *Page 196 foreclosing the mortgage executed by the Kansas City Northern Connecting Railroad Company on January 1, 1897, under the terms of which decree all of the property of said railroad covered by said mortgage was transferred to the Kansas City, Peoria Chicago Railway Co., and on July 1, 1902, the last named company conveyed it to defendant herein.

On March 17, 1920, the heirs of Thomas Stanton conveyed the eighty acres of land in question to plaintiff herein, consisting of "the North half of Northeast quarter, section 13, Township 56, Range 32, less the right of way of the Quincy, Omaha Kansas City Railroad Company crossing the land." Plaintiff herein thus became the owner of the eighty acres above described, and which was divided into two parcels, as above indicated. The segment thus separated from the main body of land consisted of approximately thirteen acres.

Some years before the institution of this suit and while Thomas Stanton still owned the land, the wing fences above described were removed and other fences constructed along the right of way, thus preventing access of stock to the crossing. On December 13, 1921, twenty-one months after plaintiff acquired title to the land, defendant put into the draw under the trestle a tile about four feet in diameter, and filled the opening around the tile with dirt so that no stock could pass under the trestle, and almost completely, though not quite, filling the space. On December 15, 1921, before the space was entirely filled and the timbers removed, plaintiff began this action for a preventive and mandatory injunction. Upon the service of summons defendant ceased to proceed with its destruction of the crossing.

The petition states the facts practically as given above, plaintiff declares herself without adequate remedy at law, and prays a perpetual injunction as above indicated. The answer denies that plaintiff is entitled to the permanent injunction for the reasons (1) that defendant is not bound by the agreement between Stanton *Page 197 and the Kansas City Northern Connecting Railroad Company in regard to the passageway, (2) that plaintiff had not become entitled to the enforcement of such agreement; (3) that defendant had filled and closed the passway prior to the filing of the petition herein and service of summons, and (4) that plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law.

The case was tried October 2, 1922, and on December 12, 1922, the court entered a decree in plaintiff's favor perpetually enjoining defendant from continuing the obstruction of said crossing and directing the removal of all dirt and other material operating as an obstruction of said crossing for the passage of hogs and small calves. During the progress of the trial and at the close of plaintiff's evidence, defendant declined to introduce any evidence. Whereupon counsel for defendant sought a declaration of law in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, which was by the court refused. Defendant appeals to this court.

The errors charged are, (1) that the court should have found for defendant and dismissed plaintiff's bill; and (2) that no mandatory injunction should have been issued.

In support of its contention, defendant urges that the clause in the deed whereby defendant agreed to construct an undergrade crossing "for the use and convenience of grantors," limits the obligation of the grantee and the use of the crossing to the grantors, for the reason that the clause does not include the word "heirs," and that the heirs of Stanton, the grantor, took no rights under said clause, and therefore could convey none to plaintiff. If defendant is right in this contention, of course this appeal is terminated thereby.

It is plaintiff's contention on this point that this clause in the deed was as much a part of the consideration as the cash payment of $450, and therefore a covenant running with the land. We accept this theory of the case. True, as argued by defendant, the deed from *Page 198 Stanton to the Kansas City Northern Connecting Railway Company does not convey the fee to the entire eighty acres of land to the latter, but it must be admitted that it does convey the fee to the right of way one hundred feet in width. We accept plaintiff's view that the grantee in said deed, and as part of the consideration therefor, did agree to construct and maintain the undergrade crossing, as described therein, perpetually, and that this is a covenant running with the land.

It is further urged by appellant that as defendant took its title to the right of way in question through the Kansas City, Peoria Chicago Railroad Company and the latter by purchase at the foreclosure sale under the mortgage executed by the Kansas City Northern Connecting Railway Company on January 1, 1897, and that as the said mortgage was executed prior to the conveyance from Stanton to the Kansas City Northern Connecting Railroad Company, the deed from the Kansas City Northern Connecting railroad did not impose that undertaking on defendant as grantee in said deed.

We cannot accept this position as sound. It might be otherwise had the foreclosure preceded the execution of the deed to the right of way from Stanton to the Kansas City Northern Connecting railroad. We have almost a counterpart of the case at bar in Stilwell v. Railroad, 39 Mo. App. 221. The distinction between the two is that the Stilwell case was an action at law sounding in damages, while the case at bar is an equity case seeking an injunction. In the Stilwell case the point of contention was that an easement for a roadway was reserved as was the under passage way for stock herein. The court in the Stilwell case fully discussed, in a majority opinion, all the questions involved herein, saying (l.c. 225, et seq.):

"The theory of the defendant is, that the clause in the deed from Ford to the St. Louis, Hannibal and Keokuk Railroad Company, in which the company agreed and contracted with Ford, as a part of the consideration for *Page 199

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Bluebook (online)
256 S.W. 121, 215 Mo. App. 194, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoutimore-v-q-o-kcrr-co-moctapp-1923.