Atlantic Coast Line Railroad v. Bunting

84 S.E. 1009 | N.C. | 1915

WALKER and BROWN, JJ., dissent. Civil action to enjoin erection of a brick building on defendant's right of way, heard on return to preliminary restraining order.

On the hearing the restraining order was made permanent and enjoining defendant from further proceeding with the building, whereupon defendant excepted and appealed. Our decisions are to the effect that a railroad right of way, when once acquired, may be occupied and used by the company to its full extent, whenever the proper management and business necessities of the road may so require, and the company is made the (580) judge of such necessity. McLean v. R. R., 158 N.C. 498;Earnhardt v. R. R., 157 N.C. 358; R. R. v. Olive, 142 N.C. 257. And further, that to "the extent that the land covered by the right of way is not presently required for the purposes of the road," the owner may continue to occupy and use it in a manner not inconsistent with the full and proper enjoyment of the easement. Lumber Co. v. Hines, *668 126 N.C. 254; R. R. v. Sturgeon, 120 N.C. 225. Both positions will be found stated and approved in the more recent cases of Coit v. Owenby,166 N.C. 136, and Hendrix v. R. R., 162 N.C. 9; and it is further established in this State, both by statute and precedent, that when the company has acquired and properly entered on the enjoyment of its easement, the further appropriation and use of the right of way, as indicated, may not be destroyed or sensibly impaired by reason of the occupation of the owner or other person. Revisal, sec. 388; Beattie v. R. R., 108 N.C. 425;R. R. v. McCaskill, 94 N.C. 746.

A correct application of these principles to the facts in evidence, about which there is no substantial dispute between the parties, is, in our opinion, against the ruling of the court below on the question presented. From these facts in appears that plaintiff is now operating a railroad through or by the town of Bethel, and that, under its various charters, its right of way extends for 100 feet each way from the center of its track; that formerly the town was some further away, but soon after the completion of the road, about 1885, the business portion was moved towards the southern side of the track and a substantial block of business buildings, including a bank, two hotels, and some large brick stores, were erected along said track and fronting the same, leaving a space of 65 feet between said buildings and the track, which space was used as a public street known as Railroad street, the principal business street of the town, and had been since the before-mentioned date, 1885; that plaintiff, owning one of the lots on this street, had bought an old warehouse from the company and placed it on the lot and had used it as a business house or warehouse for several years, till the fall of 1914, when he tore it down with intent to erect on the lot a brick business building, this being substantially in line with the buildings already along the street and situate, for some distance, on plaintiff's right of way.

In making our present decision, we must not be understood as holding that, under usual or ordinary circumstances, the owner of property, subject to such an easement, would be justified in building a permanent brick structure on the plaintiff's right of way; but there is nothing in this record which shows or tends to show that plaintiff company has any present purpose of putting in a double track or that the proposed building will tend to interfere with the proper and efficient operation (581) of the road, or that it will sensibly increase the hazards incident to its operation, and, in the absence of some such evidence, we must hold, as stated, that on the facts presented there is nothing to indicate that the proposed building or its contemplated use will in any way tend to interfere with the "full and proper enjoyment of plaintiff's easement," the test suggested in Coit v. Owenby, supra, and the *669 authorities cited in its support. It was only a business building in line with the other buildings on the block, and, so far as appears, it did not even sensibly increase the obstruction to the view, at times desirable for the safe operation of plaintiff's trains.

The case of Coit v. Owenby, supra, was cited on the arguments as authority for the position that, on the facts in evidence, the plaintiff might have some proprietary interest in that portion of defendant's lot on the right of way which it might rent or lease for warehouse or other business purposes to some patron of the road. Owing to the fact that the testimony on that point in Coit v. Owenby, supra, was somewhat obscurely stated in the case on appeal, the decision may, in some aspects of the evidence, permit of such an interpretation, and we deem it well, therefore, to say that, in the case referred to, the Court never intended to hold that a railroad had the right to rent out the right of way to an individual for strictly personal or private business purposes. The decision was made to rest on that aspect of the testimony which permitted the interpretation and tended to show that the right of way had been let to a patron of the road as a terminal facility for receipt and shipment of freight, and it was held that the company might do this to the extent that it did not interfere with the facilities for serving the public.

A railroad company would not be permitted to sell or farm out any portion of its right of way to an individual for any purposes extraneous to its chartered rights and duties.

We find there was error in the judgment rendered, and, on the record, the same must be

Reversed.

WALKER and BROWN, JJ., dissent.

Cited: Tighe v. R. R., 176 N.C. 244; Howard v. Mfg. Co., 179 N.C. 120;Griffith v. R. R., 191 N.C. 87; Wearn v. R. R., 191 N.C. 579.

(582)