Tudor Boiler Mfg. Co. v. I. & E. Greenwald Co.

16 Ohio C.C. Dec. 556
CourtHamilton Circuit Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Ohio C.C. Dec. 556 (Tudor Boiler Mfg. Co. v. I. & E. Greenwald Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hamilton Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tudor Boiler Mfg. Co. v. I. & E. Greenwald Co., 16 Ohio C.C. Dec. 556 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The arguments and briefs of counsel have substantially disposed of all questions involved herein, excepting three, which are:

First. Whether or not plaintiff can maintain this suit for an injunction.

Second. Whether or not the Tudor Boiler Manufacturing Company had abandoned this easement; and

Third. Whether this easement had been extinguished by the adverse possession of the I. & E. Greenwald Company.

On the first point, a majority of the court is of opinion that the issue involved herein ought not be tried in a court of chancery, unless the clearest necessity therefor appears. We have no doubt that a court of equity has a right to entertain this action, but it does not follow that plaintiff can maintain the same as a matter of right, and we are not satisfied as to the propriety of the court entertaining it.

The issues triable herein are first, that the abandonment, which turns up the issue of fact of the intention of the Tudor Boiler Manufacturing Company. This is an issue of fact peculiarly appropriate to an action at law, and triable to a jury. The issue of adverse possession turns upon the existence or nonexistence of the essential facts necessary under the laws of Ohio to constitute adverse possession. These issues of fact are likewise appropriate to a suit at law, and triable to a jury. All of these issues go to the question of title, and courts of chancery rarely assume the burden of questions of title, and even where equitable remedies are necessary, a court of chancery usually relegates parties to a [558]*558determination of questions of title to a court of law before affording equitable relief.

It is claimed that the right to maintain this action herein rests, upon the expediency of avoiding a multiplicity of suits. This is a ground upon which a court of chancery may entertain actions which otherwise would be legal in their nature, but this is an appeal to the grace of a court of equity to take up and try matters admittedly legal in their nature. In order to invoke this intervention of a court of chancery, there should be a showing of the probability of a multiplicity of suits, and then ifr is for the court, upon finding such probability, to extend its grace, or not, as it deems wise in the interest of equity and justice. It is an appeal to the jurisdiction of the court of equity wherein the plaintiff admits that he has no standing as a'matter of right. In the ease at bar, the court finds no reason to believe that there will be a multiplicity of suits at law. On the contrary, we are of opinion that if the issues involved herein were once fairly submitted to a jury under proper instructions from a judge of a court of law and the plaintiff prevailed, it would end this controversy.

We are of opinion that plaintiff ought not to appeal to a court of equity to try these issues until it has established its title by at least one; action at law. The court does not come to this conclusion through any unwillingness to sustain the burden of deciding these issues, but because it feels that this cause turns upon such close and evenly balanced issues of fact that a satisfying determination of the same can only be reached by a submission to a jury. We are therefore of opinion^ that the plaintiff herein is not entitled to maintain this proceeding, and that an injunction should be denied, at least for the present, and that plaintiff should be required to first establish its present right of title, by at least one action at law.

Lest, however, we should be mistaken in this conclusion, the whole court has preferred to consider the essential questions submitted. The question of abandonment is purely one of intention on the part of the Tudor Boiler Manufacturing Company. This intention can only be ascertained from all the declarations and the aets of the parties coupled with the surrounding circumstances. The first significant fact is the nonuser by the Tudor Boiler Manufacturing Company, for a period longer than twenty-one years — clearly from 1857 to 1879. During this: time, without conflict in the testimony, the Tudor Boiler Manufacturing Company did not use this right of way in question. Nonuser for t.bia long period of time may or may not be sufficient to indicate an abandon[559]*559ment. In Nail & Iron Co. v. Furnace Co. 46 Ohio St. 544 [22 N. E. Rep. 639; 5 L. R. A. 652], it is held by the Supreme Court:

“If nonuser of such road may work an abandonment of it, the nonuser must be shown to have extended over a period of twenty-one years. ’ ’

Hence, nonuser, for a period of over twenty-one years, may itself be a sufficient fact from which to find the intention of abandonment. The nonuser for this period, however, may be accompanied by other facts- and circumstances which either weaken or strengthen it. In the case at bar we have the fact that un January 17, 1876, at a meeting of the directors and stockholders of the Tudor Boiler Manufacturing Company,, at which Mr. Isaac Greenwald was present, action was taken to notify the I. & E. Greenwald Company that the Tudor Boiler Manufacturing Company claimed the opening of a forty foot strip, running from their highway to Eggleston avenue, the rear of the ground purchased by them from Niles & Company, and they required said street to be opened. This is evidence tending to contradict any intention of abandonment. It does not -appear, however, that any formal action was taken to notify the I. & E. Greenwald Company — that they merely relied upon the fact that Mr. Isaac Greenwald was present, and was a member of the Tudor Boiler Manufacturing Company — and no formal steps were taken to open said street at law, and no physical action was taken to open said street in fact. It might be said, as to a third person, a ease “where actions spoke louder than words.” This is especially so, for at that time the relation existing between the Tudor Boiler Manufacturing Company and the I. & E. Greenwald Company was of the utmost cordiality, and it was to the interest of both these that these relations be maintained.

Subsequently, by resolution of the Tudor Boiler Manufacturing Company, the I. & E. Greenwald Company was charged one dollar per annum for the use of this right of way, and this annual charge of one dollar was paid for a number of years thereafter, in the course of mutual accounting of business transactions. This payment of one dollar per annum began in the year 1879. As set out in the brief for plaintiff, evidently the only value this payment has is that it “illustrates the-past, ’ ’ it being admitted that had the Tudor Boiler Manufacturing Company, by this time, lost this right of way by abandonment, such payment could not recreate it. As an illustration of the past, this annual charge has not the significance that it would -have if it stood alone. It is so involved in other business transactions of large proportion — a settlement of which was mutually desirable — that not much point would be made-of a small item of this kind, and among business men,'if it be yielded,, it might be for the purpose of buying peace.

[560]*560As opposed to these circumstances, we have the fact that the Tudor Boiler Manufacturing Company erected an office building directly across the end of this forty foot strip; and by this building of its own construction, effectually shut itself off from access to the same, and from any use of the easement now claimed by it.

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16 Ohio C.C. Dec. 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tudor-boiler-mfg-co-v-i-e-greenwald-co-ohcircthamilton-1904.