A petition was filed in the court helow hy the receivers of the Detroit & Lima Northern Railway Company against the Michigan Central Railroad Company and the Toledo, Canada Southern & Detroit Railway Company, seeking to enjoin the Michigan Central Railroad Company from extending its track along a certain right of way deeded to the Toledo, Canada Southern & Detroit Railway Company, and by it leased to the Michigan Central Railroad Company. The court below, upon the filing of the petition, granted a restraining order, but upon final hearing dissolved the same, and denied the prayer of the petition. To reverse this decree of the court below appeal has been taken to this court. The petition sets out that the receivers, in performance of their duties, are engaged in the construction of a spur track from the main line of the Detroit & Lima Northern Railway Company into the manufacturing plant of the Tecumseh Salt Company, in the township of Ecorse, Wayne county, Mich.; that the proposed spur track crosses a heretofore unused right of way of the Michigan Central Railroad Company. It is averred that said company has owned said right of way for a number of years, having acquired the same in connection with the construction of a spur track from their main line to the Tecumseh Salt Company’s plant, but before reaching the point of intersection with the proposed spur track the track of the Michigan Central Railroad Company turns into the grounds of the salt company, leaving a portion of said right of way unoccupied. The petition also avers that the receivers have obtained from the crossing board of the state the right to cross said right of way; that in the construction of said spur track it became necessary to throw up an embankment about two feet high; that since the construction of said embankment, without consulting said petitioners or the engineers in charge of said work, the Michigan Central Railroad Company has commenced the laying of a track along the unused right of way, which, if continued upon the grade and in the direction in which it is being constructed, will intercept the spur track of petitioners at a grade two feet lower than the spur being constructed by them. The unused right of way, it is alleged, does not extend any further than the western side of the right of way of petitioners, and it is averred that it cannot be used for any practical purpose, in the opinion of the petitioners, especially at the point where the same intersects the spur being constructed by the petitioners. A plat is attached to the petition, copy of which is herewith given:
Examination of the petition will show that the relief sought was based upon several grounds. We will examine the same in the order set forth. The petition admits that the right of way is owned by defendant railway companies, but avers that this right of way is unoccupied. It is a familiar principle of law that the mere failure to occupy a right of way, without other circumstances to show abandonment or failure of the purpose for which the way is granted, will not operate to devest the title of the owner thereof. It is’ next averred that the crossing board of the state has granted the right to the receivers to cross this right of way. An examination of the Michigan statutes shows that while such board has the authority to determine the place where, and tlie manner in which, a railroad crossing shall be constructed, it still requires the interested companies to agree upon the terms upon which the crossing shall be made. Failing an agreement, the crossing company may acquire the right to make the same by condemnation in the same manner as prescribed by the act for obtaining title to real estate or other property. Comp. Laws Mich. 1897, §§ 6232, 6261. It is not averred in this petition that there has been an agreement with the owner of this right of way or any proceedings had to appropriate the right of way by the crossing company. It is also averred that the right of way is about to be occupied by the Michigan Central Railroad Company in the laying of a track two' feet lower than the grade of the track as contemplated by the receivers, and that the said unused right of way cannot be used for any practical purpose in the opinion of the petitioners. In the latter averment it is sought to bring the case within the rule that, when an easement has become incapable of use for the purpose
It is true that the spur of the Michigan Central Railroad Company, to connect with the track of the salt company, deflects from this right of way at a point said to be about 600 feet from the proposed crossing by the spur about to be built by the receivers. But we discover nothing in the record to show that this right of way is incapable of use for a practical purpose contemplated in the grant, and there is no further averment in the petition to support, that allegation than those above quoted.
In the record it appears that the railroad companies hold their rights under a deed dated September 19, 1895, from one Raymond, trustee, to the Toledo, Canada Southern & Detroit Railway Company. The premises described in this deed are conveyed “for a right of way for the construction, maintenance, and operation of a railroad thereon, and for the conduct of business incidental thereto, and for no other purpose: provided, that in case the said grantee, its successors or assigns, shall at any time hereafter permanently abandon the same for such purpose, then this grant shall cease and determine, and said premises shall, without further conveyance, revert to the grantor herein, his heirs or assigns.” This deed conveys an easement or right of way for the use and purpose therein stated. As to the abandonment thereof, without reference now to the language in the instrument upon this subject above quoted, there is nothing in the record to show that the mere nonuser after the grant shows an intention to abandon the rights conveyed. “A mere nonuser of an easement of this character, acquired by deed, will not operate to defeat or impair the right.” Barlow v. Railroad Co., 29 Iowa, 276. Abandonment is a question of intent. From long nonuse it may be found as a matter of fact. Louisville Trust Co. v. City of Cincinnati, 47 U. S. App. 36, 69, 22 C. C. A. 334, 76 Fed. 296. To constitute abandonment of a right of way there must be a clear, unequivocal, and decisive act of the party showing a determination not to have the benefit intended. Dawson v. Daniel, 2 Flip. 305, Fed. Cas. No. 3,669. The proviso in this instrument is that “in case the said grantee, its successors or assigns, shall at any time hereafter permanently abandon the same for such purpose, then this grant shall cease.” There is no proof in this record of any permanent abandonment. Indeed, the
This deed conveyed to the railroad company valuable property rights in this strip. It is not necessary to determine the nature and extent of this property right, or what would be the rule of compensation should the Detroit & Lima Northern Railway Company, or its receivers, seek to appropriate a right to cross the same. If the defendants had valuable property rights which they had neither agreed to part with, nor had lost by appropriation proceedings duly had for that purpose, such rights are within the protection of the constitution of Michigan, which, like the constitutions of other American states, protects private property from being taken for the use or benefit of the public without just compensation. “It is immaterial in what way property was lawfully acquired, whether by labor in the ordinary avocations of life, by gift or descent, or by making profitable use of a franchise granted by the state; it is enough that it has become private property, and it is then protected by the law of the land.” Cooley, J., in City of Detroit v. Detroit & Howell Plank-Road Co., 43 Mich. 148, 5 N. W. 275.
When a railroad company acquires by purchase for a consideration lands for a right of way to be used in the exercise of its franchises, unquestionably it is under obligation to use such land for the uses and purposes of its organization, and to carry out such purposes. But it becomes the owner of such way, and, as such, entitled to its possession, and to the protection of the law, as against those who would interfere with the property rights granted to it. As we understand the Michigan cases, the property of one railway may be taken for the construction of another in all cases where the property of an individual might be, but only on making compensation therefor. Grand Rapids, N. & L. S. R. Co. v. Grand Rapids & I. R. Co., 35 Mich. 265; People v. Lake Shore & M. S. Ry. Co., 52 Mich. 277, 17 N. W. 841.
It is further averred that the deed contains a reservation which authorizes the grantor to convey to the receivers the right to construct a crossing over the right of way in question. The language of this reservation is as follows:
“And the grantor herein reserves the right to a crossing of said premises at a convenient point thereon for á private way or public highway or street, of a width not greater than necessary for such purpose, together with the right to enter upon said premises, and construct and maintain thereon a good and safe crossing which shall conform as nearly as practicable to the standard of crossings which shall at that time be constructed by the grantee upon its line and lines of railroad; and such crossing and repairs shall be made only after due notice to, and under the supervision of, and to the satisfaction of, the chief engineer of the Michigan Central Railroad Company.”
It is claimed that this reservation is broad enough to include, and under a proper construction should include, the right to construct a railway crossing over said strip. We think that this construction would defeat the manifest purpose of the reservation. It is for a highway or street, the width occupied to be enough for such purpose. This language certainly does not refer to a railroad crossing. On
The red line is indicated on the plat by a heavy dotted line.