199 A. 261 | Vt. | 1938
The plaintiff has purchased from the State of Vermont, the owner of the West River Railroad, the rails, rail accessories and ties on the greater part of the length of the railroad, and seeks to enjoin the defendants, separate owners of lands through which the railroad passes, from interfering with the removal of such rails, accessories and ties. The bill alleges that some of the defendants have notified the plaintiff that they claim that the right of way and materials upon their lands belong to them, and that they have forbidden the plaintiff from entering upon the railroad right of way to remove the rails and materials; that all of the defendants have erected signs forbidding the removal of any material from the right of way; that some of the defendants have threatened to do violence to the employees, agents and servants of the plaintiff if they enter their lands to remove such property; that some have placed barriers and obstructions upon the right of way; and that one defendant has removed certain of such rails outside of the right of way. No concerted action upon the part of the defendants is charged. The bill also alleges that the State of Vermont has not abandoned the rights of way or easements which it acquired from the West River Railroad Company, and has never abandoned the rails and other chattels thereof. The defendants jointly and severally demurred to the bill of complaint. In the final decree the demurrer was overruled, the bill adjudged sufficient, and the temporary injunction made permanent, from which the defendants have appealed.
The principal ground of demurrer argued here is that there is no equity in the complaint because the plaintiff has a full, *472 adequate and complete remedy at law. This necessitates a determination as to whether the property in question is such that the plaintiff has an adequate remedy in replevin or trover.
We agree with the defendants that the tracks, railroad structures and other railroad equipment do not become a part of the realty and may be removed by the railroad company or its assigns on abandonment of the right of way, or within a reasonable time thereafter. Jones v. SouthernR.R. Co. (5th Cir.), 285 Fed. 19; Northern Central R.R. Co. v. CantonCo.,
All of the above cases, either directly or by inference, treat lawfully erected railroad superstructures as chattels. In several they are said to be trade fixtures or in the nature of trade fixtures. In Snow v. Smith,
The ordinary trade fixture may serve a useful purpose as an appurtenance to the land upon which it is built, but that portion of this railroad located upon the land of any one of these defendants, disconnected from other parts of the road, cannot be operated and will be useless as a railroad, nor can it serve any useful purpose as an appurtenance except for its "junk" value.
Under the allegations of the bill we have no hesitation in holding that as between the parties the rails, etc., sought to be removed are chattels, and, with regard to the right of removal, we approve the position taken in Talley v. Drumheller, supra, where it is stated: "The defendant was not bound to remove the rails within any specified time. So long as no claim of title to them was made by the plaintiffs, no objection raised to their remaining upon the right of way, no notice given to remove them, and no act done by the plaintiffs which would bring home to the defendant notice that the plaintiffs intended to assert ownership over them, the defendant had the right to assume that the status quo of the rails remained unchanged." Reverse the parties and we may have the situation here. It must be recognized that railroad superstructures cannot be removed until the railroad ceases operations as such, and that as a practical matter these superstructures may not be conveniently removed and disposed of at all times. Yet, if the owner of the reversion demands the removal of such superstructures, the railroad must remove them in a reasonable time thereafter.
As the rails, etc., are chattels, the plaintiff can resort to replevin or trover and cannot resort to equity if either of these remedies is as practical and as efficient to the ends of justice as the remedy in equity. Heath v. Capital Savings Bank Tr. Co.,
If there were only one party defendant we should be disposed to hold that the remedies at law are adequate. Replevin was used in NorthernCentral R.R. Co. v. Canton Co., supra. As said by Judge Isaac F. Redfield in Preston v. Briggs,
But here we have five defendants, all similarly situated, where there is only an issue of law involved which is determinative of the rights of all the parties. Under such circumstances we think that a separate suit at law against each defendant affords the plaintiff an inadequate remedy, as well as putting the State to the expense of affording the plaintiff five separate trials where one determination is adequate.
We said in Town of Sharon v. Anahama Realty Corp.,
See, also, Town of Manchester v. Town of Townshend,
Professor Pomeroy in his Equity Jurisprudence, 4th ed., sec. 245, reduces all possible conditions in which a multiplicity of suits can arise to four classes. His fourth class is: "Where the same party, A, has or claims to have some common right against a number of persons, the establishment of which would *475 regularly require a separate action brought by him against each of these persons, or brought by each of them against him, and instead thereof he might procure the whole to be determined in one suit brought by himself against all the adverse claimants as co-defendants." In discussing the cases which properly fall within this and his third class he says (section 269a) that "the weight of authority is simply overwhelming that the jurisdiction may and should be exercised, either on behalf of a numerous body of separate claimants against a single party, or on behalf of a single party against such a numerous body, although there is no `common title,' nor `community of right' or of `interest in the subject-matter,' among these individuals, but where there is and because there is merely a community of interest among them in the questions of law and fact involved in the general controversy, or in the kind and form of relief demanded and obtained by or against each individual member of the numerous body."
This text is commented upon favorably in Hale v. Allinson,
Professor Chafee, in "Bills of Peace with Multiple Parties," 45 Harvard Law Review, 1297, is equally strong for this sort of equity jurisdiction although he thinks that Professor Pomeroy has overstated his authorities. Both have reviewed numerous cases supporting their respective positions.
In Cloyes v. Middlebury Electric Co.,
Decree Affirmed.