Toledo, B. G. & So. Trac. Co. v. Sterling

19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 227, 9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 200
CourtWood Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 227 (Toledo, B. G. & So. Trac. Co. v. Sterling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wood Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toledo, B. G. & So. Trac. Co. v. Sterling, 19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 227, 9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 200 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

WILDMAN, J.

This case is not of much money consequence, for the amount involved is very small — only .$100 besides the costs; but the plaintiff in error, the traction company, seems to deem it of some importance as likely to result in a definition of the rights and liabilities of electric railway companies with reference to the moving of buildings along streets and across the tracks of the companies.

Much argument has been made before us as to the nature of such use of the street, and we are disposed to accept the view of counsel for plaintiff in error that the moving of a building upon a street is not an ordinary use, nor one, the right to which can be exercised at all times and without license from the proper authority.

The ease presented to us was brought by Mr. Sterling, the present defendant in error, against the traction company. In his petition in the court below, he alleged that on November 17, 1904, he was attempting to move a dwelling house owned by him across the railway tracks owned and operated by the defendant traction company, the present plaintiff in error, in the village of Yan Burén; that he had crossed a portion of said track when the defendant by its agents and servants in charge of a work car belonging to the defendant unlawfully, wilfully and maliciously ran said car into the truck of the wagon upon which said house was loaded, causing the house to drop, and damaged it in the sum of $100, and he asks for judgment in that sum.

The case was tried below to a jury, and resulted in a verdict in favor of Sterling.

The defendant, with some denials of the allegations in the petition, including a denial that it unlawfully, wilfully and maliciously ran this car into plaintiff’s house, by way of cross petition asserted that the plaintiff, in moving his house upon the tracks of the defendant, recklessly, carelessly and maliciously tore down and misplaced the feed trolley wires over and along the tracks of the defendant company, and blockaded said tracks and caused the cars of the defendant to cease running for a period of ten or more hours, to the great delay, hindrance and inconvenience of the defendant, the traveling public and the passengers upon defendant’s ears, to the damage of the defendant in the sum of $1,000, for which the defendant agked judgment. The claim in the cross petition did not prevail in the court below.

As already indicated, the use of a highway by persons in moving [229]*229a building, is an extraordinary use, and one subject to reasonable restrictions. In the case before us, the plaintiff testified as a witness, as shown by the record, that prior to the moving of this house he obtained a permit from the mayor of the village of Van Burén.

At the time of the trial, it was stated that this permit had been lost, so that he was unable to introduce it in evidence. The testimony as to this matter came under objection, but was permitted by the court and an exception was taken by the defendant company. We think that the evidence was properly received. While the use of the highway for the purpose, described is an extraordinary use, it is still one which may be made lawful by license from the proper municipal authority, subject to the restrictions imposed by such authority.

Succinctly, we may state, as was said by Chief Justice Shaw, substantially, in the case of Day v. Green, 58 Mass. (4 Cush.) 437, that no man has a right to move a house along a public street; but it may be done under license from a municipal corporation, provided reasonable care is used to prevent the obstruction of the street. It is contended here, and with some show of authorities, that, where a municipality has granted a franchise to an electric railway company to construct and operate its railway along a public street, the municipality has thereby vested in the railway company a right which cannot be qualified by any action of the municipality; that is to say, that the municipality cannot subsequently impair that franchise or withdraw it, or grant to any other person a right to interfere with it. Probably this in a sense, is true, and yet the franchise itself is qualified to a certain extent. The right of the public to use street crossings over railway tracks is always implied or understood to remain in the public, notwithstanding the granting of the franchise for the construction and use of the tracks along the highway.

It is not necessary for us to determine, however, whether against the will of the railway company the village of Van Burén could grant a privilege to any person to move a house across the company’s tracks, in view of the fact that an arrangement was, by the undisputed proof, entered into between the company through its general manager and the plaintiff below, Mr. Sterling, for the crossing of the company’s tracks by the plaintiff Sterling with his house. We deem the ruling of the court below in the admission of the testimony of Sterling that he had been permitted by the municipality to move his house upon the street, a proper ruling. We think so because in the first place he proved the loss of the document which he describes, so that he might be permitted to give its contents if the original permit would have been proper; and [230]*230in the next place he had a right to show that he was not a mere trespasser upon the highway, that he had been given by the municipality such rights and all the rights which it had power to give to any person traveling upon the highway in this manner and so to use the highway at the point where it intersected and crossed the defendant’s tracks.

Whether it was necessary for Mr. Sterling to make- this showing is perhaps not of any great consequence. We feel that in any event it was not prejudicial to the defendant. There is some conflict of evidence as to the precise arrangement which was made between Sterling and Mr. Smith, the general manager of the defendant company. They have both given their versions of the conversation had between them prior to the attempted moving of the house across the tracks. In substance, Mr. Sterling testifies that Mr. Smith gave him authority to move the house without any qualification other than that he should apprise the company of the time when he desired to move it, and that he should pay the expense of disconnecting or moving the wires of the defendant company so as to enable him to cross with his house. He says he inquired whether the company would ask payment for bringing its work car and men to the place where the track was to be crossed and was informed that they would not make that requirement.

Mr. Smith, on the other hand, testifies that he notified Sterling in this conversation that the company required that crossings of this nature should be made in the nighttime when the electric current could be cut off and the wires disconnected without danger, and also that Mr. Sterling would be required to pay the entire cost of disconnecting the'wires or so moving them as to enable the crossing to be made, including the cost of bringing the work train and crew there.

I have not, of course, attempted to give the testimony of either of these witnesses in their exact phraseology, but have endeavored to give the substance of their statements as nearly as I can recall them. The issue as to this arrangement, as with all other matters involved in the case, was submitted to the jury, and we may fairly assume that the jury found in favor of the plaintiff, accepting the version given by the plaintiff below.

Neither Mr. Smith nor Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 227, 9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toledo-b-g-so-trac-co-v-sterling-ohcirctwood-1906.