Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Louisville N. R. Co.

81 So. 44, 202 Ala. 542, 1918 Ala. LEXIS 478
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 29, 1918
Docket3 Div. 335.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 81 So. 44 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Louisville N. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Louisville N. R. Co., 81 So. 44, 202 Ala. 542, 1918 Ala. LEXIS 478 (Ala. 1918).

Opinions

SOMERVILLE, J.

Complainant files its bill of complaint: (1) To quiet its alleged title to a right of way’for its telegraph line continuously along defendant’s railroad right of way from the Tennessee line through Decatur, Montgomery, and Mobile to the Mississippi line; (2) for a writ of assistance or other proper writ to put complainant in possession of its alleged right of way on the west side of said railroad line between Montgomery and Decatur, and on the east side thereof between Hurricane and Mobile, and on the west side thereof between Decatur and the Tennessee line; (3) for a writ of injunction pendente lite restraining defendant from interfering with or taking possession of the telegraph lines at present operated by complainant on the east side of the railroad between Decatur and Montgomery, and on the west side between Hurricane and Mobile, and on the east side between the Tennessee river and the Tennessee line, until conqplainant has been put in possession of its alleged right of way on the opposite sides of said railroad, and has been given an opportunity to shift its poles and wires to its said right of way from their present positions; and (4) for a writ of injunction, temporary and perpetual, restraining defendant from in any way interfering with complainant’s use of its alleged right of way now occuified between Hurricane and Montgomery, and between Mobile and the Mississix®i line.

To exiitomize the case made by the bill: Complainant is operating a continuous telegraph line along defendant’s said railroad line from Tennessee to Mississippi; complainant’s several predecessors acquired a continuous right of way for a telegraph line along this railroad, which complainant acquired from them by purchase and conveyance or lease; complaint, under these titles, peacefully occupies and uses this right of way between Montgomery and Mobile (except a short distance between Hurricane and Mobile, where its line is on the opposite side), and between Mobile and Mississixipi; neither it nor any predecessor has ever occupied or used its right of way on the left side between Montgomery and Tennessee, for the reason that complainant already occupied and used a right of way on the east side under a contract with defendant, made June .18, 1884, and which exxured before this suit was filed; complainant has never abandoned any part of its right of way as acquired by condemnation, and did not by its acceptance of a grant from defendant in June, 1884, nor by a previous grant in May, 1880, under which it operated its entire line, estop itself from asserting its true title and rights upon the expiration of those agreements, as against its grantor, the defendant railroad company.

The allegations and prayers of the bill of comxolaint required that it be considered in two distinct aspects: (1) As a statutory bill to quiet title to complainant’s alleged right of way; and (2) as a bill to protect complainant against any interference by defendant with its possession and use of said right of way.

[1] 1. As a statutory bill to quiet title, defendant contends that it is fatally defective in that it fails to show such actual or constructive possession in complainant as is necessary to support the bill, although, with respect to that part of the line now in use between Montgomery and Mobile, it is alleged that complainant is in peaceable possession and enjoyment under its alleged right acquired by condemnation by its xwedecessor, the American Union Telegraph Company. Exhibit E to the bill shows a contract between eomxdainant and defendant, made in June, 1884, by which “the railroad company, so far as it legally may, heréby grants and agrees to assure to the télógraxíh company the exclusive right of way” over all of the railroad company’s roadways; and the prefatory recital is:

“Whereas, the operation of the telegraph company’s lines along the various railroads owned, controlled, or operated by the railroad company has boon conducted under the provisions of an agreement between the parties hereto, dated May 14, 1880, which agreement provides that it may be terminated after 1st July, 1885.”

This contract covered, by specific reference, the Mobile & Montgomery Railway, then leased by defendant, and also the rest of the railroad lines here concerned.

The bill shows that the American Union Telegraph Company secured an order of condemnation for its right of way over the Mobile & Montgomery Railway on May 1, 1880, and alleges “that said A. U. Telegrapih Company entered upon the right of way 'of the said M. & M. Railway Company and erected a line of telegraph poles and wires on the left or east side thereof”; that on January 19,1881, the said telegraph company sold and conveyed to complainant all of its telegraph lines, including this right of way; and that since said time complainant has been, and is now, in the possession and enjoyment of *547 said easement. The bill further shows that defendant leased the Mobile & Montgomery Railway prior to 1880, and purchased it in 1898.

Defendant’s theory is, that the contract of June, 1884, established between the parties the relationship — the quasi relationship at least — of landlord and tenant, in such sense as to estop complainapt from thereafter denying the superior right and title of defendant in and to the right of way thus acquired by complainant. We think this contention is sound, and that the doctrine of estoppel applicable to ordinary tenants is applicable here, whether complainant was in possession of its alleged right of way under claim of right at the time of defendant’s grant in 1884, or whether it then and therefore acquired such possession.

The law governing cases like this was discussed and stated in the case of Blankenship v. Blackwell, 124 Ala. 355, 362, 27 South. 551, 553 (82 Am. St. Rep. 175). Said the court:

“There can be no serious doubt of the correctness of the following propositions: (1) The acceptance of a lease by one in possession works no estoppel in any case where such acceptance was induced by fraud, mistake, * * * duress, or other improper means by the lessor; and that (2) in the absence of fraud, mistake, misapprehension, duress, or other improper means upon the part of the lessor, the acceptance of such a lease by one in possession works no estoppel after the term has expired.”

See, also, Crim v. Nelms, 78 Ala. 607; Farris v. Houston, 74 Ala. 167; Camp v. Camp, 5 Conn. 291, 13 Am. Dec. 60; Taylor on Land. & Ten. § 707.

In Farris v. Houston, supra, Brickell, C. J., observes:

“There are various exceptions'to and qualifications of the rule, which are of as much importance as the rule itself, and which must be observed in the administration of justice between landlord and tenant. A plain mistake of facts constitutes one of the exceptions. The tenant may show that he attorned to the landlord, ■ or accepted a lease from him, under mistake, and in ignorance of the true state of the title, and that the title was in himself, or out of the lessor.”

The specific question here presented is fully discussed by Judge Freeman in Ms note to Camp v. Camp, 13 Am. Dec. 60, 68. He says:

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Bluebook (online)
81 So. 44, 202 Ala. 542, 1918 Ala. LEXIS 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-louisville-n-r-co-ala-1918.