Wees v. Coal & Iron Railway Co.

46 S.E. 166, 54 W. Va. 421, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 139
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 46 S.E. 166 (Wees v. Coal & Iron Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wees v. Coal & Iron Railway Co., 46 S.E. 166, 54 W. Va. 421, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 139 (W. Va. 1903).

Opinion

McWhORTER, PRESIDENT :

Perry II. Wees, Jesse W. Godden, Charles E. Mylius, Philip G. Harper, and W Harrison Coberly presented their hill in equity to the judge of the circuit of Randolph count]'' against the Coal & Iron Railway Company, alleging that said company was engaged in the construction of a railroad southward from the city of Elkins to a point on Greenbrier River'in Pocahontas county; that plaintiffs were land owners, owning land along or in the vicinity of the said line of railroad on or near the Shafer’s Pork of Cheat River in Randolph cotinty, said railroad running through a part, of the lands of plaintiffs Wees, Godden and Harper and near the lands of plaintiffs Mylius and Coberfy, and alleged that there were a large number of other land owners similarly situated with reference to said railroad as the plaintiffs and that plaintiffs’ suit should be held and treated as a suit brought on behalf of the plaintiffs and all others who were similarly situated who would come into the suit and contribute to the cost thereof; that a public road had been established many years ago from a point within what are now the corporate limits of the City of Elkins, southward to the Dry Pork of Cheat River in said county and commonly known as the “Seneca Road,” and maintained as such public road for more than twenty years and probably for more than fifty years by the authorities of Randolph county, at considerable expense in repairs from year to year; that some six years prior to the filing of their bill the county court of said county at a heavy expense constructed a steel or iron bridge across said Shafer’s Pork of said ri rer on the line of said public road and the plaintiff Harper, after the erection of said bridge relying on the permanency thereof, purchased a farm on which the same was located, which farm lies on both sides of said river and he expected to use raid public bridge so as to receive the full benefits of said farm; that about one-half in value and productiveness of said farm was on each side of said bridge and the farm was much more valuable with the use of said bridge, than if the same were destroyed; that plaintiff Mylius after said bridge had been erected purchased a small parcel of five or six acres of land on the south side of said river near the end of said bridge and erected a store house thereon at a total expense to himself of about a thousand dollars and engaged in [423]*423the mercantile business and with said bridge remaining had good prospects of having a successful business, but with said bridge destroyed his prospects of success were greatly injured; that there had been a public road established by said county court leading up the northern side of Cheat River from said Seneca road from near the northern end of said bridge and that plaintiffs Wees and Godden were the respective owners of farms located on this road and while it had not yet been entirely completed it was so far completed that the said plaintiffs were able to use the same in getting to and from their said farms from Seneca road, and the new road was the only practicable way of getting to and from their said farms; that the defendant, without any authority, whatever, from the said county court o.r from the land owners entered upon the said “Seneca road” at a number of places, and took the same at other places crossing over the said road and for several miles of the distance, particularly some two or three miles below said bridge destroyed the said road to such an extent that the same was not safely passable for teams, stock, or persons, and were then diligently employed laying their tracks on what it had made its road bed utterly destroying a large part of said public road and making it impassable and unsafe and injuring the substance of the value of the land of plaintiffs and largely decreasing the value of said lands; that defendant had not restored the road so taken by it to its former condition, or so as not necessarily to impair its usefulness; that defendant had also taken and destroyed the said public road leading up Shafer’s Pork from said Seneca road so that plaintiffs Wees and Godden and all other persons similarly situated had no practicable way to get to and from their farms which were located on said road which defendant had destroyed without permission from the county court or land owners, and had made no road equally convenient in lieu of the same; that the defendant in the construction of its road in cutting timber from its right-of-way above said bridge felled a large part of said timber into said Cheat River and a flood having come in said river washing said timber down against said bridge and destroyed it and that defendant should be required to restore it; that defendant by reason of the taking of said county roads and destroying said bridge without the authority of the county court or the plaintiffs and other persons [424]*424was guilty of such an obstruction of said roads and such irreparable damage to the plaintiffs and each of them and to the public as amount to a nuisance, and that it should be inhibited, restrained, and enjoined and by mandatory injunction required to restore said roads and each of them and the bridge to their former usefulness; that as the said roads and bridge were located there was standing south of said bridge many millions of feet of merchantable timber, the natural place to market which, when sawed into lumber was on the railroad near the northern or western end of said bridge and plaintiff Mylius was the owner of a. large part of said timber; that unless said bridge was restored he would have to haul his said lumber about two miles down said river before he could cross the said river to the said railroad and there were many other land owners similarly situated, who also had timber which they would, at some time want to market and to not restore the bridge would entail upoD these timber owners loss upon the value of their timber, which loss was wholly conjectural, unliquidated, and not thereby subject to an action at law, and prayed for a mandatory writ of injunction requiring defendant to restore both of said public roads to their former usefulness or state, or to such state as not to unnccesarily impair their usefulness or to make an equally convenient road in lieu of each of said roads and restore said bridge in as good condition as before it was destroyed, or erect an equally as good new bridge and provide plaintiffs and each of them as.-good public rights-of-way to their land as they had before defendant injured and took said roads and as good a bridge across the said river at the same location as the bridge destroyed, and that -defendant be inhibited from further obstructing said roads with its tracks, engines, and cars until it had restored said roads, and for general and special relief.

On the 28th of June, 1902, the judge granted an injunction as prayed for but with the exception that it should not be construed to prevent the defendant from proceeding with its work of constructing its raiload if it proceeded to restore the public roads mentioned in the bill, as rapidly as practicable.

The defendant, on the 8th day of July, 1902, gave notice to the plaintiffs that on the 18th of July, in the town of Grafton, it would tender its answer to said bill before the judge of said court, and move the judge to dissolve the injunction awarded by [425]*425him.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.E. 166, 54 W. Va. 421, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wees-v-coal-iron-railway-co-wva-1903.