Toledo & Indiana Traction Co. v. Toledo & Chicago Interurban Railway Co.

86 N.E. 54, 171 Ind. 213, 1908 Ind. LEXIS 115
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1908
DocketNo. 21,046
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 86 N.E. 54 (Toledo & Indiana Traction Co. v. Toledo & Chicago Interurban Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toledo & Indiana Traction Co. v. Toledo & Chicago Interurban Railway Co., 86 N.E. 54, 171 Ind. 213, 1908 Ind. LEXIS 115 (Ind. 1908).

Opinions

Jordan, C. J.

The appellant Toledo & Indiana Traction Company and appellee are corporations organized under the laws of the State of Indiana pertaining to the incorporation of street-railway companies. Appellant company was organized January 21, 1907. On January 1, 1907, appellee instituted this proceeding in the Dekalb Circuit Court against certain landowners, by filing a complaint in the office of the clerk of said court and taking the steps required [215]*215under sections one and two of an act entitled “An act concerning proceedings in the exercise of eminent domain.” Acts 1905, p. 59, §§1, 2, §,§929, 930 Burns 1908. The action was commenced to condemn and appropriate for the right of way of appellee’s railroad certain lands situated in Dekalb county, Indiana. These lands were described in the complaint. On January 25, 1907, Schuyler C- Schenck, Jacob M. Longneeker, and the Toledo & Indiana Traction Company made application to the court to be made parties défendant in said proceeding, claiming to have and hold an interest or title in and to each of said several tracts and parcels of real estate sought to be condemned by this proceeding. This application the court sustained, and said parties were made defendants. On April 13, 1907, all the parties to the action appeared before the court, and appellee, upon leave, filed an amended complaint, naming therein as defendants, along with others, said Schuyler C. Schenck, Jacob M. Longneeker and the Toledo & Indiana Traction Company,'the appellants herein. This amended complaint, among other things, alleged that Schenck and Longneeker, at the time of the commencement of the action, and for a long time prior thereto, were, and ever since said time continuously have been, nonresidents of the State of Indiana; “that whatever interests in or title to any real estate claimed or owned by appellant Toledo & Indiana Traction Company had been acquired by it by conveyance from said Schenck and Longneeker since the commencement of this action ; that the Toledo & Indiana Traction Company has not now, and never has had, any officer or agent within the State of Indiana; that said company was not incorporated nor in existence at the time of the commencement of this action, nor was it incorporated until January 21, 1907; that immediately after its incorporation, and when accepting said conveyance from Schenck and Longneeker, it had knowledge that the plaintiff was seeking and intending in this action to appropriate and condemn for its right of way each of the [216]*216tracts of land now claimed by said Toledo & Indiana Traction Company.”

To the amended complaint appellants filed ten separate objections against the right of appellee to condemn a part of the lands described in the complaint in which said appellants claimed an interest. Upon the motion of appellee the court struck out all of-the objections except the fourth, fifth, seventh, eighth and ninth, and thereupon the case was submitted to the court, upon the complaint and the remaining objections. The principal reasons upon which appellee based its motion to strike out the tenth paragraph of appellants’ objections were: (1) that the facts therein stated were not sufficient to constitute a good defense; (2) that the facts stated in said objections were not sufficient to constitute a good objection to the complaint.

On the hearing, the court entered an interlocutory order that appellee was entitled to have the lands, claimed to be owned by appellants, condemned for a right of way, upon the payment of damages, and appointed appraisers to assess the damages. Prom this interlocutory order appellants prosecute this appeal, and assign as errors that the Dekalb Circuit Court erred in sustaining appellee’s motion to strike out appellants’ objection number ten, and that the court erred in finding for the plaintiff and entering an interlocutory order appointing appraisers. Appellants found their argument in this appeal upon the alleged error of the court in striking out paragraph ten of their objections. The material facts therein alleged are, in substance, as follows: Prior to October, 1906, defendants Schenck and Longnecker were, and ever since have been, the principal and controlling stockholders of the Toledo & Indiana Traction Company, an Ohio corporation, which owned and operated an electric interurban railway.between Toledo and Bryan, in the state of Ohio. Being so interested in, and owning and operating said interurban line, Schenck and Longnecker, about October 1, 1906, acting for themselves and the stockholders of the [217]*217Toledo & Indiana Traction Company, decided to extend the line of that company along and adjacent to the right of way of the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Company from Bryan, Ohio, to the town of Waterloo, Dekalb county, Indiana, a distance of twenty-six miles, said line to be selected, surveyed and purchased by said Sehenck and Longneeker. In pursuance of such decision and arrangement said Sehenck and Longneeker proceeded to have surveyed and staked out said proposed line from Bryan to Waterloo, in the doing of which they expended $2,500. In furtherance of their decision Sehenck and Longneeker proceeded to purchase land along the designated route, to the width of sixty-six feet in most instances, but varying in width at some points, on account of conditions existing. The title to all said right of way was conveyed to said Sehenck and Longneeker, as trustees, no beneficiaries being named, they being named in the deed as S. C. Sehenck and J. M. Longneeker. For a valuable consideration to be paid by them, they purchased and received conveyances from the following-named codefendants. (Here the names of the persons from whom the land was alleged to have been purchased are given, together with the descriptions of the lands so purchased.) All of said real estate was conveyed to Sehenck and Longneeker, as trustees, their successors, heirs and assigns, together with the privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, to be used only for railroad purposes, and the same was conveyed upon the conditions that the grantees, their successors or assigns, should, within a period of eighteen months from the date of .the respective deeds, commence the construction of a railway from Bryan, Ohio, to Waterloo, Indiana, and complete the same within three years from said date, otherwise said conveyances should become null and void and of no effect, and the property granted and conveyed by said deeds should revert to the original grantors. ’ All of said conveyances were made and executed at various dates prior to the commencement of proceedings [218]*218by the plaintiff in this behalf, and prior to plaintiff’s having determined upon and surveyed the route designated in the amended petition, and subsequently to October 1, 1906. Said Schenck and Longnecker, and their associates, in good faith accepted the conveyances of real estate for railway purposes, with the intention of constructing the line of railway, from the village of Bryan to the town of Waterloo, along and upon said route, and were able to build and construct said railway along said line. Said Schenck and Longnecker, and their associates, proceeded with diligence to purchase and acquire title to all of the right of way along the designated line, and to acquire the real estate hereinbefore described, the same being more than eighty per cent of the mileage of the proposed railway between the towns of Butler and Waterloo, prior to the commencement of this proceeding.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 N.E. 54, 171 Ind. 213, 1908 Ind. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toledo-indiana-traction-co-v-toledo-chicago-interurban-railway-co-ind-1908.