Village of Ottawa v. Ohio Electric Railway Co.

13 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 561
CourtPutnam Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 561 (Village of Ottawa v. Ohio Electric Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Putnam Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Village of Ottawa v. Ohio Electric Railway Co., 13 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 561 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

In this action the village of Ottawa sued to recover from the Ohio Electric Railway Co. the sum of $364 for lighting street crossings. The court of common pleas sustained a demurrer to the petition as not stating a cause of action. The plaintiff not desiring to plead further brings the case into this court on error.

The Ohio Electric Railway Co. is an interurban electric railway company operating its ears by electricity on tracks through the village of Ottawa. By Section 3762, General Code, it is provided that:

“When deemed necessary by council of a municipality .to have a * * * railway, located in whole or in part in such corporation * * *- or any portion thereof, lighted, the council shall pass an ordinance for that purpose,” etc.

But it is claimed that this does not apply to street railways and that interurban railways are street railways and, hence, it does not apply to them.

[562]*562This contention is based upon a very indefinite exception as to street railways contain'ed in the old Section 3309a and which apparently has been repealed and is not now found in the corresponding sections of the General Code, 8801-2-3 and 4.

It is also claimed that at the time of the enactment of the original sections, 2494, Revised Statutes (now 3762, General Code, et seq.), interurban railroads did not exist and hence the statutes relating to the lighting of steam railways could not apply to interurban roads.

A third claim is made that by Section 9122, General Code, “such companies shall be subject to the regulations provided for street railways and have all the powers, in so far as they are applicable, that other street railway companies possess,” and that being thus classed as. street railways, they can not be also classed with railroads, i. e., steam railroads.

With reference to this last claim it may be said that it is very doubtful whether this section applies, or was intended to apply, specifically to interurban railways. It is also evident that the provision-that “such companies shall be subject to the regulations provided for street railways” would not’of itself prevent their being subject to other regulations which might include such regulations as usually apply to steam railways.

But the term “such companies” as used in Section 9122, General Code, apparently refers to the companies mentioned in Sections 9115, General Code, and 9117, General Code, which relate solely and specifically to street railways, 9115 referring exclusively to street railways within a municipality and 9117 extending to such street railways, the right to extend their operations outside of such municipalities, and neither Section 9115 nor Section 9117 nor Section 9122, which refers only to such street railways, can have of themselves any necessary application to interurban railways.

An inspection of the statutes relating to electric railways shows at once that many of them were enacted at a time when interurban lines were unthought of.

The new General Code makes a distinction between street railways.- and interurban railways in Sections 3778-3780, inclu[563]*563sive, these statutes having been passed since the interurban traffic became an important one.

But in our opinion, the statutes which are relied on as proving that interurban lines must be- invariably treated as street ear lines do not justify such an assumption, nor do the decisions of courts bear out this contention.

It is undoubtedly true that in certain respects interurban roads do bear a close resemblances.to city street railways.

As a rule — though by no means an invariable rule. — their cars run singly, not in trains composed of numerous cars.

They are now usually propelled by electricity which happens just now to be the favorite motive power in propelling street cars.

They usually, in entering and passing through cities and villages, traverse the streets as do street cars — while steam lines do not universally do so — though they often do so.

But in many other respects the interurban lines more closely resemble steam lines.

Their traffic is over long distances and from city to city — not as street cars, confined to one city or village, or its immediate vicinity.

Their cars travel at a rate of speed rivalling and sometimes exceeding even the highest speed attained by steam- lines and in fact in some portions of the country the steam lines are substituting electricity, for steam as a - propelling .power, thereby practically becoming electric interurban lines. (They are specifically authorized to do this by Section 8758,. General Code.)

Then too, it is now a common practice for interurban railways to run baggage ears and freight cars and frequently to couple two or moré of such ears together — just like the trains on the steam lines. Thej^ have special cars for carrying live stock and for other heavy freight, for express traffic and for other purposes, no longer confining their business to the transfer of human passengers; and frequently these cars are combined into trains, a practice which is daily becoming more common, indicating a gradual but distinct change in the character of the interurban business,

[564]*564The high rate of speed attained by electric interurban cars and the increasingly heavy cars now universally in use give to such cars a momentum which makes it increasingly difficult to bring them to a stop within a short distance.

In all of these respects the heavy interurban lines are more nearly year by year approximating the character of the steam lines, and any judicial classification which had its origin in conditions prevailing fifteen or. even ten years ago must now be viewed with caution because of the complete change of conditions. The courts are bound to recognize this process of development, and they are doing so. In our own state this is distinctly apparent.

In the case of Massillon Bridge Co. v. Iron Co., 59 O. S., 179, our Supreme Court held that the statutes of this state relating to railroads are separate and distinct from those relating to street railroads, and the word “railroad” in Section 3208 and in Section 1 of the act of March 20, 1889 (86 O. L., 120, Section 3231-1 Bates’ Statutes, General Code, 8376) does not include street railroads. (These statutes relate to laborer’s liens.)

. And on page 186 Judge Burket says that “the statutes as to railroads do not apply to street railroads unless made to do so by clear inference.”

While that decision related to a road that was -called a street railroad, it in fact was an interurban line between Tiffin and Fostoria. But at* that time the interurban traffic was in its infancy, and the line in question at that time and even at the present time had all of. the characteristics of a street railway and few of those of the modem interurban lines except the one fact of running between two different towns.

The later case of Greene v. Woodland Ave. St. R. R. Co., 62 O. S., 67, holds that Section 6478, Revised Statutes, General Code, 10239 (which related to suits before a justice against a railroad company), had no reference to a street railroad company, but that case had no reference to an interurban railroad company and is not in point.

The case of Cincinnati, Lawrenceburg & Aurora Electric St. R. R. Co. v. Lohe, Admr., 68 O.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-ottawa-v-ohio-electric-railway-co-ohcirctputnam-1910.