Rodgers v. Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne & Chicago Railway Co.
Rodgers v. Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne & Chicago Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
In this ejectment both parties claim from Benjamin Dilworth as the common source of title. At the conclu-' sion of the testimony a verdict was directed for the defendants. At the time the learned trial judge affirmed defendants’ point for binding instructions, he gave no reason for so disposing of the case, but subsequently, in the opinion overruling plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial, the reasons are stated at length.
The Ohio & Pennsylvania Railroad Company, to whose rights the appellees have succeeded, was incorporated by Act of April 11,1848, P. L. (1849), 754, and by its charter was authorized to entér upon any land and appropriate as much, thereof as might be deemed necessary for its corporate purposes. Nothing is said ip the act as to the width of a strip of land that it was so authorized to take. A portion of its proposed road was located through lands of Benjamin Dilworth, and on May 5, 1850, he granted to it by deed “the full and perfect right of way through and over said lots or lands” for its railroad purposes. With the grant indefinite as to the width of the right of way, what did the railroad company take under it? It clearly had the right to appropriate land of such width as its board of directors, in the exercise of their honest judgment, deemed necessary for the future as well as for then existing railroad purposes: Railway v. Peet, 152 Pa.. 488.
The Ohio & Pennsylvania Railroad Company was not able to agree with the owners of lands immediately east and west of the Dilworth tract, and, within ten days from his grant to it, condemnation proceedings were instituted by it for the assessment of damages to be paid to those owners. The record of the condemnation proceedings, properly admitted in evidence to show what the railroad company then regarded as a necessary width for its right ■of way, established the fact that, at the time Dilworth executed his grant to it, it claimed and obtained, by proper adverse proceedings, from the adjoining owners,
At the time appellants’ predecessors acquired title it appeared from the acts of the appellees upon'the ground that they claimed title to land lying between the center line of its road and a line forty feet distant therefrom on each side. When these appellants acquired their title in 1900, this was manifest to them, and there was no evidence that, from 1884 down to. the time this action was
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Rodgers v. Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne & Chicago Railway Company
- Cited By
- 10 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Eminent domain — Eight of way — Brant—Width of right of way —Construction—Intention. 1. Where a deed to a railroad company conveys “the full and perfect right of way through and over said lots or lands” for railroad purposes, but does not designate or specify the width of the right of way, the railroad company has the right to appropriate land of £uch width as the board of directors in the exercise of their honest judgment deem necessary for the future as well as for then existing railroad purposes. 2. Where in such case a few days after the conveyance the railroad company in eminent domain proceedings condemned a right of way on either side of said grant eighty feet in width and connecting with the grant, and filed a description of the lands taken by it in the condemnation proceedings with the clerk of the Common Pleas Court as required by its charter, it thus indicated to the grantor in such deed just what the width of the right of way through his intervening property would be and thereby became entitled to a right of way eighty feet in width under such deed. 3. In an action of ejectment brought by the record owner of the land through which the right of way was granted for a part of the land in the possession of the railroad company and included within the eighty-foot right of way, where it appeared that the full width of eighty feet was unused from the time of the conveyance in 1850 until 1883, and that thereafter the railroad company occupied the full width of eighty feet until the action was brought in 1911, that no claim in opposition to the right of way had theretofore been presented, and that the possession of the railroad company was manifest to plaintiffs at the time when they acquired title, defendants were not estopped to claim title to a right of way eighty feet in width under its grant and the court properly directed a verdict for defendants. 4. In such ease where it appeared that the railroad was built upon an embankment, the lower court properly decided that the right of way could not be restricted to the level top of the eighty-feet wide embankment, but also carried with it necessary slopes, although such slopes extended in some places forty feet beyond the eighty-foot right of way. 5. Where in such ease it appeared that there was some part of the land described in the writ to which plaintiffs were entitled but where the limits of such land were not described in the testimony and did not appear in the case, the court properly refused to permit recovery for a fractional part of the land described in the writ.