Street Railway Co. v. West Side Street Railway Co.

12 N.W. 643, 48 Mich. 433, 1882 Mich. LEXIS 856
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 12 N.W. 643 (Street Railway Co. v. West Side Street Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Street Railway Co. v. West Side Street Railway Co., 12 N.W. 643, 48 Mich. 433, 1882 Mich. LEXIS 856 (Mich. 1882).

Opinion

Campbell, J.

Complainant sued defendants to restrain them from building a street railway on a line which is Maimed in the bill to be within the exclusive right of complainant.

It appears that in 1864 a company was incorporated under the statute for the incorporation of Train (which is a clerical mistake for Tram) Railways. This was done under the amendatory act of 1861, which for the first time .allowed such companies to be created for the purpose of building street railways. Laws 1861, pp. 11, 12. This statute required the consent of the towns or cities to be given, and confined the companies to using the streets on “'such terms and conditions as the said authorities may from time to time prescribe.”

The articles designated the proposed route of the railway to be from the Detroit and Milwaukee depot to Jefferson avenue through such streets as the common council should designate, to be continued through such other streets and roads .as should be thereafter designated, and also to the Godfrey plaster bed.

In 1863 power was given to such companies to make mortgages which should be effective to cover the superstructure built or to be built and the corporate rights on any right of way which the company should have obtained. The same statute provided for filing with the Secretary of State additional certificates for the extension of roads beyond the original routes. Laws 1863, pp. 33, 34.

On October 11,1864, the council of Grand Rapids granted to the company just organized exclusive permission to lay a single track on certain streets named in the ordinance [436]*436between the termini named, '“and through such other streets and avenues in said city as may from time to time be fixed and determined by the common council of the city of Grand Rapids, and assented to in writing ■ by said corporation,” subject to a proviso that in case of a failure by the company to accept any new route in writing in 30 day» the council might give the privilege to any other company, with power to cross tracks. The company was at liberty to' build a double track at any time within 5 years, with the consent of the council. Other provisions were made, which are not now important ; among which were rules to prevent interference with ordinary highway purposes.

Immediately after this, a mortgage was made and bonds issued to raise money to build and equip the road, which was put in operation in due time. This mortgage was foreclosed in chancery, and the property seems to have been bid-off in the name of George S. Frost, in December, 1869. The sale was-confirmed on the 29th of January, 1876.

On the 30th of December, 1869, Mr. Frost and certain-other associates organized the company which is complainant in this suit for the purpose of succeeding the old company in the rights and franchises purchased on the foreclosure. On the 30th of December, 1869, the common council of Grand Rapids passed an ordinance which, after reciting the former ordinance of 1864 and the transfer of interests,, granted to complainant similar exclusive rights to those; granted to the old company.

This present incorporation was had under a statute of' 1867 entitled “An act to provide for the formation of street railway companies.” Laws 1867, p. 46, which, as amended, is chapter 77 of the Compiled Laws of 1871-Section 15 of this statute authorized companies organized-under it to acquire at judicial sale or otherwise the property and rights of previously-existing street railway companies, and hold them on the same terms. The act also by its language brought all existing companies within its conditions,, and compelled all future companies to conform to it.

It was made a question on the argument whether com[437]*437plainant ever accepted in writing the ordinance of December, 1869, as contemplated by section 13 of the act of 1867. That section does not require the written consent of the company except as a condition precedent to building railways. It is questionable whether it would apply to the purchase, under section 15, of an existing road so long as no new road was to be built, and as no change could be made of that kind without new permission and a written acceptance of the new route, we do not feel sure that any such acceptance became important. But as there is testimony strongly tendnig to show a written acceptance, and ' the council lias always recognized complainant as having full rights, we do not think it important to further discuss that point.

We may assume, then, that complainant possesses whatever rights could be claimed under either of the ordinances of 1864 or 1869. But as defendants claim these rights have been more or less modified by subsequent failures to accept new and changed lines of road, these changes require attention. By section 14 of the statute of 1867 the authorities of any city are forbidden to deprive any company of privileges conferred by ordinance and accepted. And this immunity is as applicable to new companies acting where old ones have declined to act, as to the original companies.

On the 27th of May, 1878, permission was given to the West Side Street Kail way Company, of Grand Kapids to build a road along Scribner street, and such other streets, etc., as should be thereafter designated by the council. This was done in pursuance of a failure of complainant to build on the requirement of the council, made February 1, 1875. The route required, which was on such failure allotted to the defendant and to another company, covers several streets or parts of streets which need not be now enumerated. In August, 1873, complainant had expressly waived the right to build from Monroe street,, at its intersection with Division, to the fair grounds on the southern limits of the city, and- this route was also given to a different company.

[438]*438The case also shows that no double track was built, and that complainant objected on demand to build one for reasons which we need not dwell on. It also shows orders to* build on Ionia street, and on certain parts of Pearl and Division streets, which have not been complied with so far as appears.

On the 3d of March, 1819, the council required complainant to build a railway along certain streets named from the intersection of West Bridge and Scribner streets to the Detroit & Milwaukee Railroad crossing on Oakes street. This complainant failed to do, and on the 23d of June the route was allotted to defendant. In September, 1880, the ordinance allowing defendant to build the route was amended in certain particulars whereby complainant claims .certain portions of streets were covered which complainants had not been asked to build on, and a part of Monroe street-was occupied, although complainant has always had a track on that street.

The bill was filed in May, 1881, to restrain defendant® from building on the lines not included in the demand on complainant, and on Monroe street, and on a final hearing: was dismissed.

The case is brought before us in a very unsatisfactory way, without maps or other data to enable us to understand the full bearing of some of the questions of fact. But enough appears to satisfy us that the case in no way depend® on any of the constitutional questions upon which counsel have spent much of their arguments, and we do not propose to discuss them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 N.W. 643, 48 Mich. 433, 1882 Mich. LEXIS 856, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/street-railway-co-v-west-side-street-railway-co-mich-1882.