Toledo Electric Street Railway Co. v. Toledo & Maumee Valley Railway Co.

10 Ohio C.C. 168
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ohio C.C. 168 (Toledo Electric Street Railway Co. v. Toledo & Maumee Valley Railway 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
Toledo Electric Street Railway Co. v. Toledo & Maumee Valley Railway Co., 10 Ohio C.C. 168 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Scribner, J.

This is an appeal from the judgment rendered in the case in the court of common pleas. The plaintiff is a street railway company, created and organized under' the statutes of this state, and certain ordinances adopted by the council of the city of Toledo. It is duly authorized to construct and operate, by electric power, upon and over certain designated streets within said city, its several lines of street railway, and has been engaged in conducting this enterprise for several years last past. The Toledo Consolidated Street Railway Co. is a corporation of like character, created in substantially the same manner, invested with similar powers, and engaged in operating its several lines of street railway within said city. The first named company, by proceedings in appropriation duly instituted and prosecuted in the courts of Lucas county, acquired certain rights in specific portions of the lines of railway of the Consolidated company. The nature of these proceedings, and the rights thereby acquired, will be hereafter more particularly noticed. The Toledo & Maumee Valley Railway Co. is a railway corporation, duly created and organized, authorized to construct and operate, by electric power, upon certain terms and conditions, a line of railway extending from or through the city of Toledo to the village of Perrysburg, in Wood county. Its line of railway has been duly constructed, and has been in operation since August 10, 1894. Its powers, so far at least as they concern this controversy, are mainly derived from the acts of May 17, and May 21, 1894, O. L.. Vol. 91, pp. 285 and 379. On June 1, 1894, this company and the Consolidated company entered into a contract, by the terms of which, among other things, a traffic arrangement between these two companies was provided for, and the railway cars of the Maumee Valley company were to be run over certain specified tracks of the Consolidated company. Some of these tracks included portions of those ap[170]*170propriated by the plaintiff, as before mentioned, and are used in carrying out the terms of said contract, without any provision for compensation to the plaintiff for such use. The petition filed herein sets forth, in detail, the facts above briefly stated, and the plaintiff insists that the use so made, without compensation, of the tracks particularly embraced in its appropriation proceedings, is in violation of its constitutional rights, and it prays an injunction to restrain such unlawful interference with its property, until steps are duly taken whereby compensation shall be secured to the plaintiff.

The plaintiffs counsel, in their briefs and arguments, state with' precision, the grounds upon which they base their claim. It is argued by one of the counsel for plaintiff, that by virtue of the proceedings in appropriation, set forth in the pleadings and in the evidence, the plaintiff company became invested with a joint ownership of the railroad property condemned — joint ownership with the Consolidated company, the company which originally constructed and operated the railway, portions of which were so condemned. It is claimed bylplaintifPscounselthatthe plaintiff company acquired not only the right to use and operate portions of the line of railway of the Consolidated company, but actually became invested with an ownership, to the extent of an undivided one-half of the portions condemned of the property of that company. The associate counsel for the plaintiff states his proposition in this form :

What property did plaintiff have, then, in the streets of Toledo, which defendant is averred to be using ?
1. Overhead constructions at the intersection of Adams and Summit, Jefferson and Summit, and Jefferson and St. Clair. These constructions consist of wires and poles put into the street for the purpose of communicating electrical power for the propulsion 'of cars. At other intersections, plaintiff claims to .have some of the property in the construction as originally put in by it.
The property put in by the plaintiff was placed in the three intersections named, with its own money, and the property in that portion is absolutely its own.
[171]*171“2. The right to use jointly and equally with the Consolidated, the tracks and other structures in Summit street, from Adams to Perry street bridge, in Monroe street from Summit to Ontario, and in Adams from Summit to Michigan.
“This right was obtained in certain coudemnation proceedings in the probate court, with which this court is familiar. For it the plaintiff, with the right to use certain other property, paid the large sum of $34,000.00.”

It is in this form that the claim of ownership on the part of the plaintiff is asserted and set forth. Further on, the proposition upon which the plaintiff more especially insists in urging its right to interfere with the traffic arrangement between the defendant and the Consolidated company, is stated. It is in this language :

“ Under the averments in the pleadings, it appears that the Toledo Electric Street Railway Co. had acquired, by appropriation, the right to jointly use with the Consolidated company, the tracks and structures of the other, in the city of Toledo. This right was one for which the Electric Street Railway Co. paid a large sum of money. The right thus acquired was an easement. It is a property right which is protected by the constitution. Any impairment of its value is a taking, for which compensation must first be made in proceedings in appropriation. The additional use to which the new company puts the tracks is such an impairment.”

That is to say, briefly summarized, it is claimed that the appropriation by the plaintiff company of the right to operate and run its cars over certain portions of the tracks and railway structures of the Consolidated company, is property, and that any interference with that right, any impairment of its value, is the taking of property from the plaintiff company, for which, under the constitution, compensation must first be made; and that the grant made by the Consolidated company to the Toledo & Maumee Valley Railway company, by which that company is.permitted, or any arrangement by which the Consolidated compsxy undertakes itself, to transport the cars of the Maumee Valley company over its tracks in the city of Toledo, including the portions of tracks the use of which was acquired by the [172]*172plaintiff is an impairment of the value of the property condemned, and to that extent, the taking of the property condemned, for which compensation must be made.

Let us look for a few moments to what is shown by the record of the appropriation proceedings upon which this claim is based. I turn first to the record of the proceedings in appropriation before the probate court, instituted March 12, 1891. .1 find in the petition in that case, among other things, these averments: the plaintiff, there referring to an ordinance passed by the common council of the city of Toledo, March, 27 1882, under which the plaintiff company first acquired its right to operate its lines in the city of Toledo, says :

“Said ordinance also granted authority to David Robinson, Jr., trustee, his successors or assigns, to occupy, according to-law and ordinance, so much of existing railroad tracks upon the above named streets, as is necessary for the successful operation of said electric railroad therein.”

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio C.C. 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toledo-electric-street-railway-co-v-toledo-maumee-valley-railway-co-ohiocirct-1895.