2 Ohio App. 113 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1913
This is a proceeding in quo warranto instituted under favor of Section 12340, General Code, in which it is provided that “nothing in this chapter contained shall authorize an action against a corporation for forfeiture of charter, unless it be commenced within five years after the act complained of was done or committed; nor shall an action be brought against a corporation for the exercise of a power or franchise under its charter, which it has used and exercised for a term of twenty years; nor shall an action be brought against an officer to oust him from his office unless within three years after the cause of such ouster, or the right to hold the office, arose.”
On the margin of page 18 of said commissioners’ record is written, with red ink, “Transferred to Canton-Akron Ry. Co. July 2, 1902. W. M: Reed, Auditor.”
Plaintiff avers that said resolution, under which defendant is operating its electric interurban railway, is silent as to duration and is indeterminate, and exists only so long as the parties thereto mutually agree; that the board of commissioners, being the same authority originally granting said resolution under which defendant is operating its electric interurban railway, on or about March 27, 1912, adopted by a unanimous vote of the members of said board a resolution which is set out .fully in the petition. Said resolution, among other things, provided that whereas an electric railroad is being operated on the public highway between Canton and Massillon by The Northern Ohio Traction & Light Company, under the right conferred by a former board of county commissioners by virtue of a resolution passed February 22, 1892, in favor of William A. Lynch and such railroad company a$
Immediately upon the adoption of said resolution said board notified said defendant company of its election to terminate said franchise unless certain conditions, in said resolution and notice contained, were complied with by said defendant by the 27th day of April, 1912. It is averred that said defendant company failed to comply with the conditions named in the notice and resolution by the 27th day of April, 1912, and that said election to terminate the right of the defendant to operate said interurban railway became operative on said 27th day of April, 1912. It is further averred that the defendant has wholly refused and still refuses and fails to comply with the conditions of said resolution and notice. It is further averred that on or about the-day of April, 1912, said board of commissioners reaffirmed its election to terminate said franchise and the right of defendant to operate its electric interurban railway between Massillon and Canton, by adopting, by a unanimous vote of the members of said board, a resolution which, among other things, provided that a proposition is submitted to said board on the 26th day of April, 1912, at 3:40 o’clock p.m., by Mr. Charles Currie, general manager of The Northern Ohio Traction & Light Company, that the public highway between the cities of Canton and Massillon be widened from the width of 66 feet to the width of 100 feet; and fur
The plaintiff therefore contends and asks that, by reason of the matters and things set forth in the petition, the defendant company be required and compelled to answer by what warrant it claims to have the use of and to enjoy the rights, privileges and franchises used and exercised by it in the operation of its interurban electric railroad between the cities of Canton and Massillon; that it be ousted from exercising the same and be compelled to remove its tracks and switches from said road between said cities.
To this petition, upon leave granted, the defendant filed a special and also a general demurrer, setting forth in the special demurrer:
“1. That this action was not brought within the time limited for the commencing of the same.
“2. That this action is barred by laws of Ohio, and was not commenced within the time prescribed and provided for therein, and is therefore barred by the statute of limitations placed upon such action.”
For its general demurrer the defendant sets forth five grounds, namely:
“1. That the petition does not state facts- sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the defendant.
'“2. That the petition does not state facts suf*122 ficient to entitle the plaintiff to the relief prayed for.
“3. That this court has not jurisdiction to hear and determine this action or to grant the relief prayed for therein.
‘‘4. That this action is barred by the statute of limitations.
“5. That the plaintiff has not legal capacity to try or to bring suit.”
This cause was submitted to this court on the demurrers of the defendant.
The plaintiff sets out at great length the various proceedings had by the commissioners of this county in regard to the occupancy of said road by said defendant company.
The action is a very important one, not only as .to the property rights involved but also as to the interests of the general public therein. The case has been ably argued, both by written briefs and in oral argument. In the short time that the court has had. to consider the questions submitted on the demurrers it can not be expected that the court will enter into extended reasons for the conclusions it has reached, but its conclusions will have to be in many respects dogmatically announced for want of time to give the reasons therefor. In stating the facts set forth in the petition we have epitomized an analysis of the petition in order to present the material questions raised by the demurrers in the c’ase.
It is contended by the plaintiff that the resolution adopted by the board of commissioners on February 22, 1,892, granted to William A. Lynch
ft is contended that this resolution, if it is to be considered as a contract, is only personal to William A. Lynch, and therefore could not be transferred or assigned by him to any other person or corporation, for the reason that it lacked terms in the grant‘that would authorize the transfer by him of said privileges granted to him by the resolution of February 22, 1892. In other words, the omission of the words "successors or assigns” made the contract or grant only personal to said William A. Lynch, and an assignment or transfer of the grant by him to any person or corporation would be void.
The covenant or grant given by the county commissioners to said William A. Lynch, and to such railroad company as he might cause to be incorporated to locate, etc., an electric railroad on said road or highway, was authorized by a statute in force at the time the grant was given, said statute being Section 3438, Revised Statutes, now Section 9101, General Code, and is a covenant or grant that runs with the land or subject-matter of the contract, and the word "assignee” or the word "assigns” is not necessary to make the covenant effective as to all persons to whom the property or rights pass.
In 1 Smith’s Leading Cases (9 ed.), 208, it is said: "It may be observed that the question of whether it is necessary to covenant for 'assigns’, as
In Masury v. Southworth et al., 9 Ohio St., 351, the suprerpe court, in passing upon the question as to the necessity of the use of the word “assigns” in connection with the covenant which runs with the land, said on page 351: “The important consideration is, whether the covenant is annexed to the estate and runs with the land. If this be so, the rights and liabilities of those who take the estate and possess the land during the term, flow from a privity of estate, and not from any assignment of right or contract. If the covenant can not, or does not, run with the land, no words of assignment can create a privity of estate; if a privity of estate be created, no words of assignment are necessary.”
The language of the grant given to William A.. Lynch in the resolution of Feb. 22, 1892, granted to him and'to such railroad company as he might cause to be incorporated the right to locate, construct, etc., an electric road on said public highway. We are of the opinion that it was not a mere personal grant to Mr. Lynch, to be confined to his rights under the grant, but that the grant in this case, under this resolution, was a grant securing to Mr. Lynch the right to transfer the same to a third person or to a corporation.
Property rights acquired under and by virtue of franchises thus granted are perpetual, unless otherwise limited in the grant; and there was no limit in this case, and this franchise is not void as a consequence thereof. Booth on Street Railways, Section 17, and authorities there cited.
It is further contended that the grant to Mr. Lynch was without a time limit and therefore a mere grant at will, and that the commissioners could terminate the same at any time they saw proper to do so.
In support of this contention on the part of the plaintiff, we are cited to East Ohio Gas Co. v. City of Akron, 81 Ohio St., 33, as sustaining this contention.
We are of the opinion that the case of East Ohio Gas Co. v. City of Akron, supra, does not apply in this case; that a corporation like the corporation in the 81st Ohio St., is of a different nature than a corporation for public, service, such as a railroad company or an electric railroad com
The commissioners in this case, having granted to William A. Lynch the right to occupy said public highway, fixing no time limit-for its occupancy and permitting improvements to be made with reference thereto, are without authority to revoke said right and the grant is indeterminate.
The only complaint made by the commissioners against the defendant company is that it charges an excessive rate of fare between Canton and Massillon for a round trip and for a single trip, and that no privilege of transfers is given. In other words, there is no complaint by the commissioners of any violation of any privilege or grant given to Mr. Lynch or a corporation to be organized by him,
As a relief for this complaint the legislature has provided, we believe, the exclusive remedy for such complaint, and that is to apply to the public service commission under favor of the act of the legislature found in 102 Ohio Laws, pages 553, 556 and 557, and if we are right in this conclusion the plaintiffs have no standing in this court and are not entitled to the relief prayed for in their petition.
But if we are wrong in this conclusion, there is another reason why the plaintiff is not entitled to the relief asked for in his petition, the forfeiture of the charter and grant under which said defendant is operating said railroad. Under the resolution of February 22, 1892, there is no provision or condition of forfeiture, and the resolution, being a contract between the parties and failing to provide an express condition of forfeiture, no condition of forfeiture by implication can be exercised by the board of commissioners. If the contract made with the commissioners and Mr. Lynch by resolution of February 22, 1892, is to be considered as a contract of lease, and it makes no provision for forfeiture for failure to comply with any express condition, the commissioners can not exercise the right of forfeiture by any implied covenant or condition. not expressed in the resolution or contract. As no conditions of forfeiture are expressed in the resolution or contract none can be
It is contended by the defendant that the plaintiff’s cause of action is barred by the statute of limitations, and our attention has been called to Section 12340 of the General Code in support of this contention.
Upon a careful reading of this section it will be noticed that nothing contained in the chapter in quo ivarranto shall authorize an action against a
It is contended by the defendant that the action is barred by said section on the ground that the twenty-year statute bars the action. The time in.which the defendant company has exercised the franchise has not been twenty years, unless the time that the defendant company has enjoyed said franchise can be tacked on to the time exercised by its predecessors in title.
We are of the opinion that this can not be done. That period must embrace the time that the defendant company has enjoyed said franchise independent of the time enjoyed by its predecessors in title.
“The general rule is that possession can not bé tacked to make out title by prescription where the deed under which the last occupant claims title
In other words, where the party occupying is not claiming under any color of title, but simply by occupancy, such party must be in possession during the required period of limitation. Therefore, it not appearing in the petition that the defendant company has been in possession twenty years without tacking on the possession of its predecessor in title, namely, Mr. Lynch and his successors, the defendant is not entitled to the contention that this action is barred by the twenty-year limitation provided for in Section 12340.
Therefore, the demurrer as to the statute of limitations is overruled; but we hold that the general demurrer is well taken and that the plaintiff has no cause of action and has not the legal capacity to bring this action. The general demurrer is sustained on the grounds that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action and that the plaintiff has not the capacity to bring the action.
In the event that the plaintiff does not desire to plead further by amendment, the petition of the plaimiff will be dismissed at the costs of the plaintiff.
Demurrer to petition sustained.