
    ADVERSE POSSESSION OF A RAILWAY RIGHT-OF-WAY.
    Court of Appeals for Warren County.
    Schenck v. Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Ry. Co.
    Decided, May 28, 1919.
    
      Court Clothed with Function of a Jwry — •Where Both Parties Request a Directed Verdict — Prescriptive 'Right-of-Way — Color of Title not, Essential to — Adverse Possession of a Right-of-Way — Non-user Essential to Abandonment of — Use of Right-of-Way for Other than Main Trades.
    
    1. Where, at the conclusion of all the evidence in the case, each party requests the court to instruct a verdict in his favor, the parties thereby clothe the court with the functions of a jury. Where plaintiff does not request that the case go to a jury upon the facts, the verdict rendered under the instruction of the court will not be set aside unless clearly against the weight of the evidence.
    2. It is not necessary to the acquisition of a right-of-way by prescription that the occupancy be under color of title.
    3-, The possession of a right-of-way which was not permissive, but continuous, open, notorious and exclusive, was necessarily adverse.
    4. To constitute an abandonment of a right-of-way there must be nonuser together with an intention to abandon. The intention can be established by unequivocal and decisive acts clearly indicative thereof.
    5. Where a railroad moves its main trades from a right-of-way, but continues to use the right-of-way for railway purposes in storing cars and for access to certain stock pens, non-user is not established.
    
      Patrick Gaynor, for plaintiff in error.
    
      H. N. Quigley and Eltzroth <& Maple, contra.
   Siiohl, J.

Heard on error.

Plaintiff in error, Cornelia B. E. Scbenck, who was likewise plaintiff below, brought an action against the defendant for occupying a strip of land, us,ed by it for railroad purposes,' from March 29, 1913, to the date of the petition in June, 1913.

The defendant below .pleaded, first, the general issue; second, title in it by prescription; and third, want of jurisdiction.

The record shows that in 1866 one C. A. Brown, the then owner of the property in question, gave a mortgage to R. P. Evans, which mortgage remained unpaid until 1872. In 1871 Brown executed a quitclaim deed to a right of way 100 feet wide to the Cincinnati & Springfield Railroad, which contained the proviso: “Whenever the said railway company shall abandon the project of constructing said railway, then this release shall be null and void.” In 1872 Evans brought suit to foreclose the mortgage. The parties in interest having appeared, a sale of the property was had under orders of the court, and the property was sold unincumbered. The railroad therefore was without any right in the premises, but it and its successors continued to hold, occupy and use them until 1911, a period greatly in excess of the prescriptive statutory period. In 1911 the railroad relocated part of its line between Dayton and Cincinnati, and removed its tracks, ties, etc., from the land in question, which is within the limits of Franklin, Warren county. However, it left two sidetracks on the land, using them to store cars and to load stock in a pen there. The land was always used for railroad purposes. In 1913 part of the main line was destroyed in the flood and the defendant railroad company, the successor of the Cincinnati & Springfield Railroad, returned and relocated its main tracks on the premises in controversy, in substantiaEy the same place that they had been originally constructed.

At the close of all the evidence the defendant renewed a motion for an instructed verdict, which the court then granted.

The record shows:

“At this point, the plaintiff moves the court to instruct the jury that plaintiff! is entitled to a verdict, and the only thing that they must consider is the amount of damages to which plaintiff is entitled.”

They thereby submitted their case to the court.

Where, at the conclusion of all the evidence in the case, each party requests the court to instruct a verdict in his favor, the parties thereby clothe the court with the function of a jury. First National Bank v. Hayes & Sons, 64 Ohio St., 100 (59 N. E., 893). The plaintiff did not request to go to the jury upon the facts, and the verdict rendered by the jury under the instruction of the court will not be set aside by the reviewing court unless cfearly against the weight of the evidence. This is not inconsistent with the rule in Gibbs v. Girard, 88 Ohio St., 34, because the right of the plaintiff to a determination by the jury was waived by her when she joined in the request that the matter be decided by the court. Perkins v. Putnam Co. (Comrs.), 88 Ohio St., 495.

On the facts shown in record, after the sale of the property in question free from incumbrances, the railway was without right in the land. It is not necessary to the acquisition of a right of way by prescription that the occupancy be under color of title. Paine’s Lessee v. Skinner, 8 Ohio, 159; McNeely v. Langan, 22 Ohio St., 32, 37; Humphries v. Huffman, 33 Ohio St., 395, 403, and Smith v. Pittsburg, C. C. & St. L. Ry., 5 C. C. (N. S.), 194, 198.

The possession of the railroad was not permissive, but was continuous, open, notorious and exclusive. It was. necessarily adverse to the purchaser at the foreclosure sale. Pavey v. Vance, 56 Ohio St., 162; 2 Corpus Juris., 128, and James v. Indianapolis & St. L. Ry., 91 Ill., 554.

The conduct of the defendant does not establish an abandonment of the right of way. That would require non-user together with an intention to abandon. The intention could be established by unequivocal and decisive acts clearly indicative thereof. Cleveland & Pittsburgh Ry. v. Ward, 23 C. C. (N. S.), 465; 33 Cyc., 221; People v. Southern Pacific Co., 172 Cal., 692, 700 (18 Pac., 177); Stannard v. Aurora, E. & C. Ry., 220 Ill., 469 (77 N. E., 254); Kansas City & S. E. Ry. v. Kansas City & S. W. Ry., 129 Mo., 62 (31 S. W., 451); Roby v. New York Central Ry., 142 N. Y., 176 (36 N. E., 1053); Townsend v. Michigan Central Ry., 101 Fed., 757, and 1 Corpus Juris., 8, 9.

Moreover, the record falls short of establishing a ease of non-user. The defendant was using the right of way for railway purposes in storing cars and for access to the stock pen, even though the main track had been moved. (Cleveland & Pittsburgh Ry. v. Ward, supra.) The plaintiff had never made an entry on the land after 1911. It remained separated from hers by a fence that stood continuously for over thirty-three years.

The judgment will be affirmed.

Cushing, J., concurs.

Hamilton, J., not participating.  