92 A. 917 | Md. | 1914
The bill of complaint which was filed in this case contained four prayers for relief; the first was for the correction in the record of a plat, constituting a part of a deed dated March 15, 1907, and the propriety of such correction was conceded by the answer; the second was to require the specific performance of a covenant contained in the deed of March 15, 1907; the third, for compensation to the plaintiffs for the violation of the covenant, and the fourth, for general relief.
The material facts in the case are that: "The Baltimore and Annapolis Short Line Railroad," which will hereinafter be referred to for sake of convenience as "The Short Line," was prior to the 15th of March, 1907, operating an electric railroad between Baltimore and Annapolis, and its route in part was along and over a right of way which had been acquired from the plaintiffs, or their predecessors in title. In the year 1906 and early part of 1907, the construction of an electric railway between the cities of Baltimore and Washington *266 and Annapolis was begun by a corporation which had been formed for that purpose, bearing the name of the Washington, Baltimore and Annapolis Electric Railway Company. The route to be followed by this road, as laid out by the engineers, involved a double crossing of the tracks of the Short Line, as they existed at that time. Negotiations were entered into between the W.B. A. Ry. Co. and certain members of the Linthicum family which culminated in certain conveyances bearing date March 15th, 1907. The effect of these was to shift the location of the Short Line tracks a little to the south and east of the projected route of the W., B. A. Ry. Co. over land which was acquired from the Linthicum family, thus enabling the W., B. A. Ry. Co., partly over the former right of way of the Short Line and certain additional land acquired from the Linthicums, to construct a route avoiding a crossing of railway tracks by one road over the other. This arrangement was consummated by two deeds, one a conveyance from Laura E. Linthicum, W. Hampton, M. Delmah and Seth Hance Linthicum to the Terminal Real Estate Company, of the land for the right of way to be used and occupied by the Short Line under its re-location; and the other from the same grantors to the W., B. A. Ry. Co. of the additional land needed by that corporation for the construction of its railway; this deed was executed for an expressed consideration of $1,450, and the performance of the covenants and conditions contained in the deed, the two most important of which related to crossings and the establishment of a platform station. The covenant with regard to the crossings was that the railroad company was "to immediately construct and maintain three crossings of not less than 20 feet on the surface over its right of way and over the Baltimore and Annapolis Short Line Railway at the places indicated on the plat hereto attached and crossing said right of way on the property hereby conveyed and on the property conveyed by the parties of the first part to the Terminal Real Estate Company of Baltimore City by deed of even date herewith, with easy approaches thereto of not more than 4% *267 grade and with a roadbed of not less than 20 feet wide in good condition." In the deed of the same date from the same grantors to the Terminal Real Estate Company, the grantors reserved "to themselves, their heirs and assigns over the described lot a private crossing 20 feet wide at the point shown upon said plat," referring to the plat attached to the deed to the W., B. A. Ry. Co. The rights, and of course restrictions upon those rights, so granted to the Terminal Real Estate Company passed by conveyance from it to the Short Line.
The W., B. A. Electric Ry. Co. became insolvent, and was directed to be sold under a decree of the Circuit Court of the U.S. for the District of Maryland. At this sale the property was purchased on behalf of a corporation bearing the name of the W., B. A. Railroad Co., a corporation having practically the same executive officers as the insolvent Railway Company, but with some changes of stockholders and bondholders from those of the Railway Company.
By an agreement made between Wade Hampton and Seth Hance Linthicum and either the Railway or Railroad Company, of the three crossings covenanted for in the deed of March 15th, 1907, two were consolidated to make one crossing 40 feet in width, in place of two of 20 feet each, and the third crossing has never been constructed by either the Railway or Railroad Company. It is for the specific performance of the covenant in its relation to this third crossing that this present bill was filed, with the alternate prayer for an award of compensation should the Court refuse a decree for specific performance.
The Short Line was not made a party to this proceeding, and the defendant urges this omission as a defense to the present action. This contention is closely connected with another, viz., the covenant contained in the deed is not a covenant running with the land, and that by reason of the sale of the Railway Company's assets, the merely personal covenant of the Railway Company is not binding upon the Railroad *268
Company, and that, therefore, the plaintiffs have no enforceable right against the defendant as to its own right of way, nor can they require of it the construction of a crossing over the line of another company which is not a party to the proceeding. As to the latter proposition the legal position is that under the doctrine in Spencer's case, 5 Coke, 16, and which has been recognized and adopted as the law in most jurisdictions in this country, a covenant to run with the land must have relation to something already in existence, and that where it relates to something to be done in the future, it is a personal covenant merely and not a covenant running with the land. It is undoubtedly true that in the strict, technical sense the covenant contained in the deed from the Linthicums to the Railway Company was not a covenant running with the land, but as was said in the case of Wood v. Stehrer,
In view of the weight of authority it cannot now be held that the covenant between the Linthicums and the W., B. A. Railway Co. is not obligatory upon its successor, the Railroad Company. *269
Nor is there greater force in the contention as to the omission to make the Short Line a party. The entire transaction of March 15th, 1907, was one arranged by the W., B. A. Ry. Co. for the purpose of facilitating the construction of its line, the deed to the Terminal Company made an express reservation of a private crossing, which was binding upon its assigns and, therefore, binding upon the Short Line, and the obligation imposed by the deed to the W., B. A. Ry. Co. being likewise binding upon its successor, remains a subsisting obligation until performed or released by agreement of the parties, or the satisfaction of an award of compensation for non-performance. The rule applicable here is that laid down in Joy v. St. Louis,
The lower Court dismissed the bill in this case practically upon two grounds: the uncertainty of the contract, and the public service character of the Railroad Company. With neither of these conclusions is this Court able to agree. There is a well recognized distinction between crossings intended for the use of the general public and those which are private crossings, and Courts will refuse to grant an order in regard to a public crossing where it is deemed that public interest is better subserved otherwise, while they will require such performance with regard to that which is matter of private concern only. So in Whalen's case,
With regard to the uncertainty of the contract, the conditions set out in the deed of March 15th, 1907, are connected with a strip of land which is fully described in the deed and shown on a plat annexed to the deed and recorded or intended to be recorded with the deed, as an integral part of it, upon which plat the crossings provided for in the covenant are also shown. The grade for the crossing and the approaches to it are specified, and it is not essential that the deed or covenant set forth that the crossing shall be at, under or above grade. In the case ofSpeer v. Erie R.R. Co., the agreement was that the Railroad Company would give the grantor a suitable and convenient crossing where the grantor might direct, and this was held to have been sufficiently definite. No objection can, therefore, be successfully set up as to the maintenance of the present bill for specific performance upon the ground of uncertainty in the contract.
But it is not every agreement, no matter how precise, definite and certain its terms may be, which a Court of Equity will require to be specifically performed. The remedy of specific performance is one to be awarded or refused by an Equity Court in the exercise of a sound judicial discretion, and "if to enforce specifically an agreement would do one party great injury and the other comparatively little good the chancellor will not require its execution." McDowell v. Biddison,
This leads to a consideration of the facts with a view to determining the reasonableness of requiring a specific performance *271 of the covenant of the deed. Under the covenant the crossing to be provided was to have been constructed with approaches having a grade of not more than 4%. Upon one side of the road it was the apparent intention of both parties that the approach should extend to the public road or boulevard, which at the point of this agreed private crossing was distant only some 25 feet from the line of the right of way of the Short Line, while on the other side, to the west of the W., B. A. line, after a slight depression for a ditch, there was a hill rising quite abruptly for a considerable distance. Whether it would have been possible before any grading at all had been done to construct an approach from the Boulevard to the eastern side of the tracks of the Short Line, at the specified grade of not exceeding more than 4%, is not entirely clear, but the impression gained from all of the evidence is that it would not. If this is correct then the literal performance of the covenant was impossible, both at the time of its being entered into and has been continuously ever since. The insertion of the requirement that the crossing and approaches should not have a grade exceeding 4% seems to have been largely guess work by the parties, not the result of accurate engineering calculations. If the defendant's predecessor saw fit to enter into covenants thus carelessly, it could not have been permitted to set up as a defence its own inattention or negligence in so important a matter, as constituting an impossibility of performance, and its successor can in this regard stand in no stronger or better position. The testimony shows that the W., B. A.R.R. road-bed at the point designated for the crossing was approximately a foot higher than the road-bed at that point of the Short Line before the W., B. A. was built, and also that the W., B. A. road-bed at the same point was slightly higher than the road-bed of the Short Line. It is apparent, furthermore, that for a grade crossing, an approach from the Annapolis Boulevard would involve a grade of about 8%, double that specified in the covenant, a grade highly undesirable for teams having to cross the railway, while on the west side no distance for the approach was *272 named, or necessarily resulted from the natural configuration of the ground, but it clearly appears that by reason of the depression already alluded to, an approach with a grade of 4% for a short distance at least could have been constructed. That which is insisted upon by the plaintiff is that specific performance can be had in either one of two ways: a depression of the tracks of both the Short Line and the W., B. A., to an extent which would give a 4% grade; or an elevation of those tracks and the putting in of an underneath crossing, so that the grade would have come within the provisions of the covenant. It is of course true that as a mere engineering proposition either of these could be done; but it is also true that either the elevation or depression of the tracks would have to be distributed in both directions for a considerable distance, and with roads in operation, as both of these are, the cost by either method would be very great. This cost is variously estimated at from $20,000 to $100,000, for the depression of the tracks, and from $6,700 up to an indefinite amount, for the elevation of them.
The purpose to be served by the installation of the crossing is the development, for suburban residences, of a track of 58 acres belonging the the plaintiffs, having a present probable value of a little in excess of $15,000. What its value might be under a scheme for suburban development is largely problematical and dependent upon a wide variety of contributing elements. It will thus be seen that the cost of awarding a decree for specific performance would involve an expenditure upon the part of the defendant of an amount nearly equal to, if not greater than, the value of the interest of the plaintiffs in their land, and thus the case falls within the line of cases which hold, that specific performance should not be decreed, where the injury to one party is as great or greater than the benefit to accrue to the other.McDowell v. Biddison,
The contention of the defendant is, that if the plaintiffs have any remedy, that remedy is by an action at law for damages for a violation of the covenant, and that it cannot *273
be asserted in the present case in equity; and reference is made to the fact that prior to the insolvency of the W., B. A. Ry. Co., a suit at law for damages had already been instituted by the plaintiffs. It is of course true that as between the original parties to the agreement, the plaintiffs would have had a right to proceed either at law for damages, or by bill in equity for specific performance; but we are not now dealing with a case between the original parties to the contract, and while it is not necessary to now decide, it is by no means clear that an action at law would give the plaintiffs the relief to which they are entitled. It has long been recognized in this State that where in a proper case, equitable jurisdiction has once attached it will be retained to the end, to give the parties seeking its aid full relief, even as to matters with regard to which it would not originally have had jurisdiction. Popplein v. Foley,
With regard to the second element of damages, the estimates varied considerably, from $650 to $9,000 — the plaintiffs themselves placing the damages at $6,000, while their expert witnesses gave higher figures. The case presents practically the same elements as are involved in a condemnation case, namely, the determining upon conflicting evidence of what is fair and just compensation, and the important question is, how shall this determination be made? The Court of Equity having jurisdiction of the subject-matter, may of course, in the exercise of its customary jurisdiction, fix the amount of compensation to be paid. In some cases an issue has been directed to be framed for submission to a jury for the determination of the damage; but in England the more usual course has been to direct an inquiry in Chambers, as to the sum to be awarded or allowed, and this is for the reason stated by Mr. Frey in his work on SpecificPerformance, sec. 1314, that "It seems desirable that the assessment of damages should, wherever practicable, take place at the trial, without any separate inquiry, for otherwise the parties are virtually put to the expense of two trials of the same question. In one case, Cornwall v. Henson, 1900, 2 Ch. 290, 305, the damages were assessed by the Court of Appeal; but that apparently is the only case in which an appellate Court has undertaken to decree damages or compensation, and the better practice would seem to be that such compensation should be assessed and decreed by the chancellor upon evidence adduced before him, either during the progress of the trial of the case or upon special inquiry after determination that the case presented is a proper one in which to allow compensation.
A considerable amount of the testimony in this case was with regard to a crossing suggested by Colonel Wickes, an *275 engineer placed on the stand by the plaintiffs. His proposal for a crossing was to construct it as a grade crossing, over the rights of way of the two railroads, and then upon the eastern side, or side toward the boulevard, instead of making the approach a continuous straight line with the crossing, to curve it and bring it down to the boulevard with a 4% grade, thus slightly extending the length of the approach, and so enabling the stipulated grade to be obtained. That presented a proposition, however, which appears to have been entirely novel to the parties to this proceeding at the time when it was presented, and is not one which the Court can decree, for the reason that it would amount to a new contract between the parties, involving a very different method of approach, and which, however it might commend itself to the parties as a possible solution of an unfortunate situation, is not a matter upon which their minds had ever met, and the Court can not, under a bill for specific performance, make a contract for the parties other and different from that which they themselves had made, and then decree its enforcement.
From what has been said it follows, that the decree of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, from which the appeal in this case was taken, must be reversed, and the cause remanded for the ascertainment by the Chancellor of the compensation proper to be awarded to the complainants for the deprivation they have suffered, and will continue to suffer, by reason of the non-construction of the crossing; such determination to be made upon the evidence already taken, but with leave to either party to take further proof, if they so desire, upon the question of the amount of compensation to be awarded, and with the opportunity to them, if they shall so agree, to adopt a crossing in the manner suggested by the witness Wickes, or such other form as the parties hereto may agree upon.
Decree reversed and case remanded for further proceedings inaccordance with this opinion, with costs to the appellants. *276