81 Va. 495 | Va. | 1886
delivered the opinion of the court.
A transcript of the record filed with their petition discloses that in the spring of the year 1881 the council of the town of Roanoke (which was then known by the name of Big Lick) agreed to donate to the Shenandoah Valley Railroad Company an acre of land within the limits of said town, provided said company would construct its line of road to that point, the expectation then being that the land to be so donated would be used by said company for depot purposes. The road was constructed to said town, but before its completion it was ascertained that it would be more advantageous to the company to take the land in a strip alongside of the road-bed of the Norfolk and Western Railroad Company, with which it connected at that point, so as to obtain space for that company
On the 16th September, 1882, Mr. Flickwir, an assistant engineer on the Norfolk and Western Railroad Company, and also a member of the town council, addressed the council, on behalf of the said company, and asked that the company be given more positive right to the land given them on Railroad Avenue for track purposes; and urged that it be done at once. Whereupon, it being suggested that the town had not its deed to the property from the Trout heirs, it was ordered that it be done (obtained) at once. And Mr. EL S. Trout (one of the heirs of John Trout, deceased,) informing the council that the deed had been drawn, and only awaited one or two signatures, a committee was appointed to draw the contract between the city and the railroad company, and to embody the same in a deed to be made to the aforesaid railroad company. A deed was, accordingly, a few days afterwards, obtained from the Trout heirs to the town, conveying the said strip of land, which John Trout in his lifetime had agreed to sell to the town, to be conveyed by it to the railroad company, in fulfillment of its original agreement to donate to it an acre of land
The Norfolk and Western Railroad Company, proceeding to lay its tracks upon the strip of land conveyed by this deed to the Shenandoah Valley Railroad Company under and pursuant to its agreement with the latter company, was inhibited from so doing by process of injunction granted on the-day of October, 1882, by the judge of the circuit court of Roanoke county, upon a bill filed by the plaintiffs in this suit against the Norfolk and Western Railroad Company as the only defendant, the said bill alleging that the plaintiffs, or their grantors, had respectively purchased lots from John Trout, who, before he sold the same, had them laid off as town lots, fronting upon Railroad Avenue, which had, also, been surveyed and laid off under his direction as a street of the width of fifty feet; and was not only so represented by said John Trout to said purchasers from him, but was, in fact, dedicated by him to and accepted by the town of Roanoke as a street, being given by him to the said town in order to make the said lots more salable. It was further alleged in said bill that the plaintiffs, or their grantors, would not have purchased the said lots at the
On 20th October, 1882, responsive to the prayer of this bill, the “injunction was granted to operate and be in force until the defendant, the Norfolk and Western Railroad Company, shall make compensation to the complainants for any damage or impairment of the value of their lots, occasioned by the making of said switch or siding on the street in the bill described; said compensation to be ascertained in the manner prescribed by law for the assessment of land damages against railroad companies.” To this injunction bill the defendant company demurred, assigning as ground of demurrer, that the damage alleged to be done to each of the plaintiffs was separate and distinct from the damage alleged to be done to the others, and that, therefore, the plaintiffs having, each of them, a distinct and separate and independent cause of action, should not have joined in one bill.
On the 14th October, 1883, this demurrer was overruled by the court, and the defendant required to answer the bill. The
It being agreed that the answer filed by the Norfolk and Western Railroad Company should be taken and considered by the court, as the answer of the Shenandoah Valley Railroad Company also, and the bills having been taken for confessed as to the other defendants, the court, on the 7th day of April, 1884, rendered a decree perpetuating the injunction unless and until the Norfolk and Western Railroad Company should make to the plaintiffs, respectively, compensation for any damage to or impairment of the value of their lots occasioned by the laying of the tracks, in the bill complained of; and inhibiting and restraining it from the use and occupation of said street hy its tracks until said damages should be assessed and paid.
We are of opinion that the circuit court erred in overruling the demurrer to the original bill.
There is, in this case, no such community of interest between the plaintiffs as would enable them to join in one bill. 'This suit is not brought to have the strip of land on which the tracks were laid, or about to be laid, established as a street; nor to have obstructions in an existing street removed; nor for any object in which the public is interested, or in which the plaintiffs have a joint or common interest—no one of them
The circuit court erred in refusing to dissolve the injunction at the October term, 1883.
The decrees complained of are erroneous and must he reversed and annulled, and the cause remanded to the circuit court of Roanoke county with directions to dissolve the injunction granted, and to sustain the demurrer, and to dismiss the bill of complaint, without prejudice to the plaintiffs in the court below to pursue their proper remedy.
Decrees reversed.