Whalen v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad

76 A. 166, 112 Md. 187, 1910 Md. LEXIS 106
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 12, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 76 A. 166 (Whalen v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whalen v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 76 A. 166, 112 Md. 187, 1910 Md. LEXIS 106 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal brings before us for the second time the covenant which constitutes the cause of action in the present con - troversy. It came here first in a bill for its specific performance in the case of Whalen v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co., reported in 108 Md. 11. We having declined to grant the relief there asked for, the present suit at law was instituted in the Baltimore City Court to recover damages for an alleged breach of the covenant.

The railroad company as defendant below demurred to the declaration and the Court sustained its demurrer whereupon the plaintiffs appealed from the judgment for costs entered on the demurrer.

The declaration alleges that on May 5th, 1848, the railroad company by an indenture, of which profert is made, covenanted for the consideration therein mentioned with Thomas B. Dorsey and his wife their heirs and assigns “to construct and maintain a turnout and siding at Dorsey’s Bun on the main stem of said railroad, to take up and set down at said siding by- the passenger cars of said company all persons going to and from the farm now occupied by the said parties of the first part and to leave at said siding to be unloaded any car in which any article or articles weighing at least three thousand pounds shall be laden for said parties and on which the cost of transportation shall have been paid at the place of lading.”

*196 It is further alleged iu the declaration that the plaintiffs (appellants) have hy mesne conveyances become seized of a large part of the land', owned and seized by the said Dorsey and wife at the time of the execution of the deed of 1848, and are entitled as the assigns of Dorsey and wife to enjoy the, benefits of the covenants of that deed.

It is then averred that the railroad company from the year 1848 to the year 1901 has been abiding by and performing the covenants of said deed, in thaf it has been operating its passenger and freight trains over the right of way the deed described, and constructed and maintained a turnout and siding at Dorsey’s Bun on the line of its main stem, and took up and set down at the siding by its passenger cars all persons going to and from the said farm and delivered there all freight shipped thereto; but in the year 1901 the railroad company constructed a cut off on its main stem by virtue of which a large part of the right of way over the plaintiffs’ land was abandoned, and it discontinued the turnout and siding at Dorsey’s Bun and refused, and still refuses, to take up and set down at that place by its passenger cars persons going to or from the farm, and that by reason thereof the plaintiff has sustained great damage in the several respects set forth in the declaration. There is no allegation that the railroad company fraudulently made the cut off and change of location in their main stem which resulted in the abandamnent of the structures and stopping place at Dorsey’s Bun, nor was any such contention made at the hearing of the appeal.

In the suit for specific performance in 108 Md'. we held, upon the authority of many cases then cited, that the covenant now in question constituted” a valid contract binding, upon the railroad company when entered into, and at that time capable of being specifically enforced, and that it ran with the land and enured to the benefit of the plaintiff as an assignee of a portion of the land. We declined to grant the specific performance and also the injunction asked for in that case, because, in our opinion, the railroad company had *197 the right and power to make the cut off which it did. and the consequent alteration of the line on its main stem, “for the purpose of straightening the lines and reducing its grades and thus improving its service to meet its obligations to the public and also to increase'its earning capacity for the benefit of its stockholders.” We further said in that connection that, “the very purposes of its creation forbid that it should be tied to the same location forever.”

We concluded our opinion in that case by saying: “’Whether the plaintiffs are entitled to compensation in damages for the abandonment by the defendant of the turnout and siding and train service, so long maintained by the appellee at that place, this Court is not now called upon to determine but we are all of the opinion that the relief prayed for in the bill of complaint must be denied, and that the appellants must be left to seek redress for any injury which they may have sustained by such abandonment in a Court of law.”

Having decided in the equity suit that the covenant was valid and that it enured' to the benefit of the present plaintiffs, we are now called upon to consider whether an abandonment of the turnout and siding at this late day, resulting from a lawful change by the railroad company of the line of its main stem, constituted a breach of covenant for which an action at law for damages will lie. The covenant being a written contract its construction is a matter for the Court.

In order to arrive at the real purpose and meaning of the parties to a contract the Court, according to the accepted canons of construction, considers the language employed, the subject-matter and the circumstances under which it was made.

Considering the language used in the covenant before us, it is to be observed, that while it distinctly provides for the construction and maintenance of the turnout and siding on Mr. Dorsey’s land and the stopping of the cars at that point it is entirely silent as to the duration of the maintenance of those structures or that service. We cannot yield our assent to the contention of the appellant that the word “main *198 tain” ordinarily means to maintain indefinitely or forever. Its meaning in that respect depends upon the context in which it appears and the subject-matter to which it relates. There is plainly no specific or positive provision in the covenant touching the duration of the time during which the covenanted acts are to be done or privileges furnished.

In Texas & Pac. R. R. Co. v. Marshall, 136 U. S. 393, the Texas & Pacific Eailroad Oo. had covenanted, in consideration of the donation to it by the town of Marshall of $300,000 and sixty-six acres of land, to establish its eastern terminus at the City of Marshall and to construct there its main machine shops and car works. In one of the letters by means of which the contract was made the expression “permanently establish” the terminus, etc., occurred but in the others the word permanently did not appear. The money was paid and the land conveyed to the railroad company and it established its eastern terminus machine shops and car works at Marshall but after having maintained them there for eight years began to remove them to other places. The City of Marshall applied for an injunction to prevent their further removal. The H. S. Circuit Court, to which the application was made, granted the injunction but the case was reversed by the Supreme Court of the Hnited States.

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Bluebook (online)
76 A. 166, 112 Md. 187, 1910 Md. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whalen-v-baltimore-ohio-railroad-md-1910.