171 Mo. 187 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1902
Plaintiff sues in ejectment for a strip of land in the city of St. Joseph, measuring twelve by forty feet, shown on the following diagram:
The answer of defendant first' denies all of the allegations of the petition, and then pleads: that in October, 1889, the respective owners of lots 1, 2, 3, and 4, of whom was plaintiff as owner of lot 3, solicited defendant to construct its track through the alley, which defendant agreed to do, provided it was permitted permanently to occupy a right of way of ten feet across the rear of the lots named for a switch track for loading and unloading purposes pertaining to those lots, to which the owners of the lots, plaintiff included, agreed, and thereupon they and others owning lots in that block petitioned the common council of the city and obtained permission by ordinance for defendant to lay its track * through the alley on condition that the defendant should pave the alley; that relying on that agreement defendant paved the alley as required, and constructed its track through the same and a switch track along the rear ten feet of the lots mentioned, all of which was done at great expense to defendant, and completed February 25, 1890, and defendant has ever since maintained the same as a permanent part of its railway; that upon the construction of the track on those lots the owners of lots 1, 2, and 4 constructed large and valuable buildings designed for handling heavy goods to be .loaded and unloaded at such houses through the facilities furnished by that track; that the construction .and maintenance of the track greatly increased the value of the lots and its removal would impair the same; that ever since February 25, 1890, defendant has maintained its track on the rear of plaintiff’s'lot, claiming the right to so maintain it as a part of its permanent railway, and that plaintiff’s cause of action has not accrued within ten years.
The cause was tried by the court without a jury. The evidence for the plaintiff tended to show that he owned the fee to lot 3 and was in possession of all of it except the strip of ten feet in question,-which was in possession of defendant and occupied by its switch track; that no representative of the defendant conferred with him about putting in the switch, the only persons-who talked to him on the subject were Mr. Donovan and Mr. Podvant; that he had notified defendant té move its track before this suit was begun.
On cross-examination of the plaintiff he testified that Donovan and Podvant, one owning the adjoining-lot on the north, the other on the south, asked him to-agree to let the railroad occupy this strip; he at first refused, but afterward agreed to it; then he signed the-petition to the common council, asking for the passage of the ordinance allowing the defendant to lay its track through the. alley, and after the defendant had constructed its tracks through the alley and along this strip' in the rear of their lots, plaintiff, Donovan and Podvant erected buildings on their lots respectively, conforming them to the situation made by the railroad tracks. Before that time plaintiff’s building had covered his whole lot from street to alley, 40 feet wide and 140 feet long, but after the railroad came plaintiff tore down his old building and erected a new one 130 feet, long, joining with Donovan on the north and Podvant on the south in party walls, each 130 feet from street to the strip occupied by the railroad. Donovan, Podvant, and the man north of Donovan erected on their lots buildings conformed to the switch, and designed for carload freight business, and had each ever since been conducting a considerable business by carloads by means of that switch.
The testimony on the part of defendant tended to show as follows: Donovan was the promoter of the project. He conceived the idea that it would be to the advantage of the owners of property in that block to
The plaintiff asked the following’ instruction, which the court refused:
“The court, sitting as a jury, declares the law to be as follows: If in the fall of 1889 plaintiff, .being the owner of lot 3, block 54, original town, now city of St. Joseph, Missouri, consented orally that defendant .company might construct a switch or open spur of its railroad on and across the east twelve feet of said lot for its own use and for the especial use and benefit of a few property-owners or their tenants in said block fifty-four, and that said spur or switch was not used nor intended to be used for any other purpose, and if the plaintiff is, and ever since said date has been the owner of said lot and the part thereof described in plaintiff’s petition, then plaintiff had the right, at any time thereafter to require defendant to remove said spur or switch and surrender to him the possession of the parcel of ground sued for, and the finding and judgment should be for the plaintiff. ’ ’
At the request of defendant the court gave the following :
“The court declares the law to be that if, on or about October, 1889, John Donovan, Jr., requested the defendant to extend its railroad track from Messanie street to Sylvanie street along the alley running north and south through the middle of blocks 54 and 55 of the original town of St. Joseph, and was informed by the agent of defendant in the matter that it would do so, provided he and other property-owners in said two blocks would secure for it the right of way over ten feet off of the east end of lots 1, 2, 3 and 4 in said block for the laying of a track for service purposes and would secure the consent of the city to the laying of the track along said alley, and the plaintiff thereupon expressed to said Donovan his consent to give said right of way over the land described in the petition, of which consent said Donovan notified defendant’s agent, and the property-owners in said block secured the passage and*195 approval of the ordinance in evidence, and defendant thereupon, relying on said consent, constructed the track along said alley and across said-ten feet of ground without objection on the part of plaintiff, and paved said alley with cedar blocks, all at a cost of about $4,000, and has since maintained said track and used the same until ‘the bringing of this suit, and the said lots 1, 2, 3 and-4 have since been improved with reference to the situation and use of said track, then the plaintiff can not recover in this ease and the finding and judgment must be for -defendant. ’ ’
The court found the issues for the defendant and rendered judgment accordingly, from which the plaintiff appeals.
Appellant’s theory of this case is that the permission given to the railroad company to enter on the plaintiff’s lot and lay its track was a mere license revocable at will, and that the law of the case is the same as that declared in Pitzman v. Boyce, 111 Mo. 387. In that case the land-owner had permitted a neighbor for his own convenience to build a sewer across and under the surface of her land, in the doing of which he had expended a considerable sum of money; he had continued to use the sewer for nineteen years when the land-owner, being then about to sever the sewer connections, plaintiff brought suit in equity to enjoin her. The plaintiff’s contention there was that he had acquired an easement by adverse use, or if not that then the land-owner was estopped to deny his right, since she had knowingly permitted him to incur the expense in the expectation, of a continuing use of the sewer. The court held that there could be no adverse user of a privilege begun and continued under permission, and that the mere fact that the plaintiff had of his own free will expended the money for the sewer in the expectation of making his own-use of it, did not create an estoppel. In that case there was no agreement, parol or otherwise, with the owner of the land under which the sewer was constructed, and no consideration to. the land-owner; it was a mere gratuitous license, which the court held to
To all this the plaintiff answers, easement lies only in grant, and the grant, under the statute of frauds, can be proven only by writing. That is correct, but when a contract which the law requires to be proven by writing has been clearly shown by oral testimony to have been made and to have been fully performed, the execution takes it out of the operation of the statute of frauds. The cases cited in the brief of counsel for respondent on this point fully support the proposition. We hold this to have been an agreement between the owners of lots 1, 2, 3 and 4 on the one part and the railroad company
As what we have already said disposes of the case, we deem it unnecessary to consider the other points discussed in the able briefs. The judgment is affirmed.