Brown v. Title Guaranty & Surety Co.

232 Pa. 337 | Pa. | 1911

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Brown,

The route of the Pittsburg, Binghamton & Eastern Railroad Company, as surveyed and laid out, ran through lands of the appellee. He accepted its bond, with the appellant as its surety, to secure the payment of the damages to which he might be entitled. The condition of the obligation was as follows: “If the said Pittsburg, Binghamton & Eastern Railroad Company shall pay or cause to be paid unto the said John H. Brown such amount of damages as the said John H. Brown shall be entitled to receive, in consequence of the location and construction of said railroad after the same shall have been agreed upon by the parties or assessed by and under the provisions of the acts of the general assembly, in such case made and provided, whether the same exceed the amount of the penalty in this bond mentioned, or not, without fraud or further delay, then this obligation to be null and void; otherwise to be and remain in full force and effect.” Some months after the bond was given to the appellee he and the railroad company agreed, in writing, that the value of the land and the damages to his property by reason of the location and construction of the railroad through and over it amounted to $5,500, and the agreement provided that upon the payment of the said sum, with interest, he would execute and deliver a deed to the railroad company for the right of way and the land occupied, free and clear of all incumbrances. The unsuccessful contention of the appellant in the court below, renewed here, is that the agreement of the appellee with the railroad company, made without notice to or consent by it, released it from liability on the bond, because “the amount agreed to be paid by the railroad company included not only the dam*341ages contemplated by the bond, but, in addition thereto, the value of the land itself, which, for the consideration agreed upon, the obligee agreed to convey to the railroad company in fee simple.”

The appellant is engaged in the business of becoming surety. It assumes its undertakings for a consideration and the rule of strietissimi juris which applies to an individual surety is relaxed as to it. “ The trend of all our modern decisions, federal and state, is to distinguish between individual and corporate suretyship where the latter is an undertaking for money consideration by a company chartered for the conduct of such business. In the one case the rule of strietissimi juris prevails, as it always has; with respect to the other, because it is essentially an insurance against risk, underwritten for a money consideration by a corporation adopting such business for its own profit, the courts generally hold that such' a company can be relieved from its obligation for suretyship only where a departure from the contract is shown to be a material variance. ‘ The doctrine that a surety is a favorite of the law, and that a claim against him is strietissimi juris does not apply where the bond or undertaking is executed upon a consideration by a corporation organized to make such bonds or undertakings for profit. While such corporations may call themselves “surety companies” their business is in all essential particulars that of insurance. Their contracts are usually in the terms prescribed by themselves, and should be construed most strictly in favor of the obligee:’ 32 Cyc. 306, and the authorities there cited in support:” Young v. American Bonding Company, 228 Pa. 373. See also City of Philadelphia v. Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland, 231 Pa. 208, decided at present term.

The appellant’s contract of suretyship with the appellee was that it would pay him, if the railroad company did not, the amount of damages to which he might be entitled in consequence of the location and construction of the railroad, after said amount had been agreed upon by him and *342the railroad company or assessed under the provisions of the statute. The appellee and the railroad company agreed “that the value of the land and the damages to the property by reason of the location and construction of the railroad through it” amounted to $5,500. If the agreement had stopped there, it is to be assumed that the appellant would not be questioning its liability on the bond, for this agreement was simply what viewers would have been required to find and report, if they had been appointed to assess the damages. Sec. 11 of the general railroad Act of February 19, 1849, P. L. 79, provides that it shall be the duty of the viewers, inter alia, “to estimate and determine the quantity, quality and value” of the lands taken or occupied, and “to estimate and determine whether any, and, if any, what amount of damages has been sustained.” The sole question to be determined is whether the agreement to convey the land in fee to the railroad company was a material departure from what was contemplated by the terms of the appellant’s bond. If it was not, the appellant has not been prejudiced, and cannot, therefore, successfully contend against its liability.

If an entire lot of ground, and not merely a portion of it, is taken for railroad purposes, the value of the entire lot at the time of the taking determines the amount of damages: Spring City Gas Light Company v. Pennsylvania Schuylkill Valley R. R. Co., 167 Pa. 6. No allowance is made for any reversionary interest in the owner, for the fee, subject to the easements or right of way, is absolutely worthless: Junction Railroad Company v. Philadelphia, 88 Pa. 424. The interest acquired by a railroad company under the right of eminent domain, while not a fee, is not a mere easement or right of way. It is more. It is the right to the actual and exclusive possession of the property at-all times and for all purposes except where a way crosses it: Pittsburgh, Ft. Wayne & Chicago Ry. v. Peet, 152 Pa. 488; Reading v. Davis, 153 Pa. 360; Dilts v. Plumville R. R. Co., 222 Pa. 516. “Such title is sometimes called an easement., but it is a right to exclusive possession, to fence in, to build *343over the whole surface, to raise and maintain any appropriate superstructure including necessary foundations and to deal with it within the limits of railroad uses as absolutely and as uncontrolled as an owner in fee. ... It would seem to be rather a fee in the surface and so much beneath as may be necessary for support, though a base or conditional fee, terminable on the cesser of the use for railroad purposes. But whatever it may be called it is in substance an interest in the land special and exclusive in its nature:” Mitchell, J., in Pennsylvania Schuylkill Valley R. R. Co. v. Reading Paper Mills, 149 Pa. 18. Land taken from an owner under the right of eminent domain for railroad purposes has no further practical value to the owner, in view of the rights of the railroad company in it and over it, and che records may be searched in vain to find where anyone has purchased as a thing of value the ultimate reversionary right of the owner of the fee upon the cesser of the railroad company’s use of the land, and, therefore, it is that, though only an easement is taken for the public use, no deduction is made, in practice, in the assessment of damages for the reversionary right: Pierce on Railroads, 159. While authorities in support of this need not be multiplied, one directly in point may be cited. In Murray et al. v. County Commissioners, 53 Mass. 455, a turnpike road was changed into a public one, and the owners of the fee in the bed of the turnpike claimed that the land reverted to them on the discontinuance of the road by the turnpike company, and asked for the appointment of a jury to assess their damages as if the road were being originally laid out. In holding that they were entitled to no damages, Shaw, C. J., in delivering the opinion of the court, said: “The proprietors have already been paid for a perpetual easement over their land, for all the actual uses and purposes of public travel; a payment commonly estimated in practice at the value of the land itself.”

The agreement between the railroad company and the appellee as to the amount of damages to which he was entitled was substantially such as is contemplated by the act *344of 1849, and the covenant of the appellant was to pay the damages so ascertained and agreed upon. If the railroad company got a deed for the land, it acquired nothing in effect under the same that it had not acquired in the exercise of its right of eminent domain, and for what it so acquired the appellant agreed to pay, if it did not. In giving the deed the appellee did nothing to the prejudice of the appellant.

Both assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.

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