Toledo & Maumee Valley Railroad v. Toledo Traction Co.

5 Ohio N.P. 443
CourtLucas County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. 443 (Toledo & Maumee Valley Railroad v. Toledo Traction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toledo & Maumee Valley Railroad v. Toledo Traction Co., 5 Ohio N.P. 443 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

MORRIS, J.

This is a motion made by the defendant to dissolve a preliminary injunction granted on the filing of the petition in the case. The matter has been submitted on the pleadings and the evidence, and it was agreed that a final decree may be entered at this time.

A caso involving nearly all of the questions in issue here was recently before this court, between the same parties, and in view of the findings of the court in that case, which has since been affirmed, substantially, by the circuit court, (15 C. C., 119), I do not think it necessary to discuss the issues or the evidence at any very great length.

The plaintiff claims that in violation of the terms of its contract with the defendant, entered into June 1st, 1894, the defendant is wrongfully refusing to receive and carry over its tracks in this city, certain cars and passengers which the defendant is bound to so receive and carry under the provisions of that contract. The 'defendant denies that it has violated its contract in any respect, but charges that the plaintiff, acting in col[444]*444lusion with the Bowling Green Railroad Co., a suburban railroad operated by electricity between the villages of Bowling Green and Perrysburg, in Wood county, and in violation of its contract has tendered cars and passengers of the Bowling- Green company to defendant, in order that it may carry such Bowling Green cars over its line in the city of Toledo. The defendant has refused such cars and passengers, and it claims that it has refused to carry none others, and that it intends to continue to - so refuse,because, as it is claimed, under this contract with the plaintiff it is not _ obliged to receive this traffic. The plaintiff by reply denies that the traffic so tendered by it to defendant is that of the Bowling Green company, and it claims in this connection that said traffic is that of the Maumee Valley company, and is embraced within the terms of its contract with the defendant.

These issues in substance were before the court in the former case, and at that time the court was required to consider, and did consider, the contract now in question, and to determine the rights of the parties under that contract, in so far as they were embraced in the issues and evidence of that case. It was claimed at that time by the defendant that under its contract with the plaintiff, a suburban street railway, tne plaintiff, .could not make traffic arrangements with another suburban company like the Bowling-Green road, and thereby get its passengers and cars from such other road, and earry them over its line to the tracks of the defendant, and compel the defendant to take such cars and passengers, and furnish the power and equipment necessary for the transfer of these cars. It was contended that the contract only required the defendant to take such traffic as org-inated on the line of the belt road which was originally contemplated between the parties, which was constructed between this city and the villages of Maumee and Perrysbury. It was contended in this case, however, and it is now contended, that under that contract the defendant was bound to receive and carry all cars and passengers that might be run over the plaintiff’s road; that there was no limit, within reasonable bounds, on the character or amount oE the traffic which the defendant was compelled to receive upon its lines in Toledo.

The circuit court held in that case that the contract in question could not be so construed as to prevent the plaintiff, the suburban railway company from receiving a reasonable amount of traffic from another suburban line subsequentlv constructed, where such additional traffic requires no additional car service, and a ‘perpetual injunction was. allowed, restraining the defendant from obstructing its tracks to prevent the use of its tracks by such cars, and from refusing to receive certain cars of the Maumee Valley company and their traffic, obtained from the Bowling Green road, and passing over the tracks of the defendant.

The record and evidence in the former case has been offered in evidence in this case, so that in reviewing the evidence in this case we have been compelled to look through the record, and determine, not only the nature of that controversy, but the findings of the court with reference to it. And the first question that naturally suggests itself, under the circumstances, is, whether there is in principle any material difference between the two cases. If there is not, it is claimed that the relief granted in that case, the decision of the court upon the facts and the law, will bind ns in this ease. If this case does not differ in some material respect from the former case, so that the facts involved and the question there decided can be distinguished from this, that case should be followed at this time.

Now, while the plaintiff claims that this case is on all fours with the former ease, so to speak, in so far as its facts and controlling legal principles are concerned, the defendant claims that the cases are substantially different, or rather, I should say, that they are essentially different in two important respects. That is to say, first, in this case it is conceded that the cars in question are in fact the cars of the Bowling Green company, purchased by it, owned by it; while in the former case, it seems to have been found that the cars then in controversy were in fact the cars of the Maumee Valley, company. And in the second place, it is contended that in this action the Bowling Green company is shown to be in fact engaged in carrying- on a street railway business on the tracks of the Traction Company, without its consent and against its will and protest; while in the former case there was no evidence of this fact.

As to the first proposition it is urged, and I think fairly, that the fact that the cars objected to were the property of the Maumee Valley company, seemp to have been recognized, especially by the circuit court, as a circumstance in that case of considerable importance, in determining the right of the plaintiff to have those cars which were then in question carried by the defendant over its road. Aüd the question now is, what importance, if any, that tact can havs in connection with this ease. Conceding for the sake of argument that the question of the ownership of the ears in controversy was, as defendant insisted, decisive in that ease, let us consider its bearing upon the facts and circumstances of this case, where it is conceded that the cars now objected to actually belong to the Bowling Green company. In the former case, as appears from the evidence and admissions of the parties on the hearing — and it was conced[445]*445ed that at least while in the service of the Bowling Green road, the three Maumee Valley cars then in question were rented to the Bowling Green road; and though the terms of that lease were not in evidence, the circuit court seemed to have assumed, and perhaps correctly, that such lease would terminate directly such cars came upon the Maumee Valley tracks and under its control and management, as provided in its contract With the Bowling Green company, and such rental or lease would only become again operative when the dominion of he Maumee Valley company over these cars on either passage around the belt ceased.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio N.P. 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toledo-maumee-valley-railroad-v-toledo-traction-co-ohctcompllucas-1898.