Court Opinion

ID: 4214207
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-10-24 17:14:52.036524+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:53:31.810227
License: Public Domain

[Cite as Bosky Group, L.L.C. v. Columbus & Ohio River RR. Co., 2017-Ohio-8292.]

                                      COURT OF APPEALS
                                  MUSKINGUM COUNTY, OHIO
                                  FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

BOSKY GROUP, LLC,              :                             JUDGES:
                               :                             Hon. William B. Hoffman, P.J.
     Plaintiff - Appellee      :                             Hon. Craig R. Baldwin, J.
                               :                             Hon. Earle E. Wise, J.
-vs-                           :
                               :
COLUMBUS & OHIO RIVER RAILROAD :                             Case No. CT2017-0027
COMPANY, et al.,               :
                               :
     Defendants - Appellants   :                             OPINION

CHARACTER OF PROCEEDING:                                     Appeal from the Muskingum County
                                                             Court of Common Pleas, Case No.
                                                             2013-0161

JUDGMENT:                                                    Affirmed

DATE OF JUDGMENT:                                            October 19, 2017

APPEARANCES:

For Plaintiff-Appellee                                       For Defendant-Appellant

ROBERT J. MANN                                               PHILIP F. DOWNEY
MARY SPAHIA-CARDUCCI                                         JONATHAN P. CORWIN
Mann & Carducci Co., LPA                                     DANIEL E. SHUEY
1335 Dublin Rd., Suite 212-A                                 Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease LLP
Columbus, Ohio 43215                                         P.O. Box 1008, 52 East Gay Street
                                                             Columbus, Ohio 43216-1008
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                               2

Baldwin, J.

       {¶1}   Defendant-appellant The Columbus & Ohio River Railroad Company

appeals from the March 29, 2017 Judgment Entry of the Muskingum County Court of

Common Pleas granting the Motion for Summary Judgment filed by plaintiff-appellee

Bosky Group, LLC and denying the Motion for Summary Judgment filed by defendant-

appellant.

                           STATEMENT OF THE FACTS AND CASE

       {¶2}   Appellee Bosky has been the owner since 2006 of approximately 43.7 acres

of real property (Parcel No. 66-20-09-10-000) located in Muskingum County, Ohio. This

property shall, hereafter, be referred to as the “subject property” and is located near the

Village of New Concord, Ohio. The northern boundary of the subject property has frontage

along US 40/22. Appellee also owns a 92.37 parcel contiguous to the subject property

and two other small parcels. While Rix Mills Road is to the east of the parcels, Homestead

Drive is to the west. Appellant The Columbus & Ohio River Rail Road Company (“CUOH”)

operates a railway line that runs along the north end of the subject property and is to the

south of and parallel to US 40/22.

       {¶3}   Appellee is the successor in title and traces his title in the subject property

back to grantor Samuel Cummins. As evidenced by an instrument signed in 1852 and

recorded on February 16, 1899, Cummins granted the Central Ohio Railroad Company,

appellant’s predecessor, a right to locate a railroad across the northern boundary of the

subject property. The instrument provides, in relevant part, as follows:

              In consideration of one hundred eighty dollars to me paid by the

       Central Ohio Rail Road Company, I Samuel Cummins of Union Township
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                               3

       Muskingum County Ohio do hereby grant and release to said Company the

       right to enter upon any lands I own which lie on the line of said Company’s

       road… and to hold and use a strip of said land…for the purposes of a rail

       road…not exceeding one hundred feet in width…The said Company to

       construct two good crossings over said rail road track one between my

       house and barn near to the point where my road now passes from the

       National road to my barn, the other at some point towards the east boundary

       line of my land convenient for the purpose….”

       {¶4}   Cummins’ property was later subdivided. To the west of the subject property

is a parcel owned by David L. Green that was originally part of the Cummins property that

currently has a railroad crossing. There is not a crossing on the eastern 43.7 acres, which

has been owned by appellee since 2006, and appellee contends such land is legally

landlocked. There is no road connecting to the subject property. Appellee wants to

develop the subject property for commercial, residential and other purposes.

       {¶5}   After appellant declined to construct a crossing that will enable appellee to

develop its property, appellee filed a complaint against appellant for declaratory judgment,

specific performance, breach of contract and estoppel on April 8, 2016. Appellant filed a

Motion for Summary Judgment on November 30, 2016 and appellee filed a Motion for

Summary Judgment on December 14, 2016. Appellant, on February 3, 2017, filed a

motion seeking to strike evidence submitted by appellee in support of its Motion for

Summary Judgment on the basis that the evidence was untimely and otherwise improper.

       {¶6}   Pursuant to a Decision filed on March 14, 2017, the trial court granted

appellee’s Motion for Summary Judgment while denying that filed by appellant. The trial
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                                     4

court directed counsel for appellee to prepare the final entry. A final Judgment Entry was

filed on March 29, 2017.

      {¶7}   Appellant now appeals from the trial court’s March 29 2017 Judgment Entry,

raising the following assignments of error on appeal:

      {¶8}   I., II. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY GRANTING BOSKY’S MOTION FOR

SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND DENYING CUOH’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY

JUDGMENT.

      {¶9}   III. THE TRIAL COURT’S JUDGMENT ENTRY IMPROPERLY EXCEEDS

THE RIGHTS GRANTED BY THE CUMMINS INSTRUMENT AND/OR THE RELIEF

REQUESTED BY BOSKY.

      {¶10} IV. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY NOT GRANTING CUOH’S MOTION

TO STRIKE.

                                                I, II

      {¶11} Appellant, in its first two assignments of error, argues that the trial court

erred in granting appellee’s Motion for Summary Judgment while denying that filed by

appellant.

      {¶12} Civil Rule 56(C) states, in pertinent part, as follows:

             Summary judgment shall be rendered forthwith if the pleadings,

      depositions, answers to interrogatories, written admissions, affidavits,

      transcripts of evidence, and written stipulations of fact, if any, timely filed in

      the action, show that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the

      moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. No evidence or

      stipulation may be considered except as stated in this rule.
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                                 5

       {¶13} A trial court should not enter a summary judgment if it appears a material

fact is genuinely disputed, nor if, construing the allegations most favorably towards the

non-moving party, reasonable minds could draw different conclusions from the

undisputed facts. Hounshell v. Am. States Ins. Co., 67 Ohio St.2d 427, 424 N.E.2d 311

(1981). When reviewing a trial court's decision to grant summary judgment, an appellate

court applies the same standard used by the trial court. Smiddy v. The Wedding Party,

Inc., 30 Ohio St.3d 35, 36, 506 N.E.2d 212 (1987). This means we review the matter de

novo. Doe v. Shaffer, 90 Ohio St.3d 388, 2000–Ohio–186, 738 N.E.2d 1243.

       {¶14} The party moving for summary judgment bears the initial burden of

informing the trial court of the basis of the motion and identifying the portions of the record

which demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of fact on a material element of the

non-moving party's claim. Dresher v. Burt, 75 Ohio St.3d 280, 1996–Ohio–107, 662

N.E.2d 264. Once the moving party meets its initial burden, the burden shifts to the

nonmoving party to set forth specific facts demonstrating a genuine issue of material fact

does exist. Id. The non-moving party may not rest upon the allegations and denials in the

pleadings, but instead must submit some evidentiary materials showing a genuine dispute

over material facts. Henkle v. Henkle, 75 Ohio App.3d 732, 600 N.E.2d 791 (12th

Dist.1991).

       {¶15} At issue in the case sub judice is whether or not the promise, contained in

the Cummins instrument, to construct two crossings is binding on appellant. Appellant

contends that it is not because Samuel Cummins and the Central Ohio Rail Road

Company, who were parties to the original agreement, did not intend for the crossing

obligation contained in the Cummins instrument to “run with the land.” Appellant notes
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                             6

that the Cummins instrument did not use words of inheritance and did not expressly

provide that the right to use the crossing would be for the benefit of the Cummins, their

heirs, and assigns.

      {¶16} Thus, we must determine whether or not the easement to cross the railroad

that was contained in the Cummins instrument runs with the land. An easement is a

property interest in the land of another that allows the owner of the easement “a limited

use of the land in which the interest exists.” Colburn v. Maynard, 111 Ohio App.3d 246,

253, 675 N.E.2d 1333 (4th Dist. 1996). Easements may be appurtenant or in gross.

Warren v. Brenner, 89 Ohio App. 188, 192, 101 N.E.2d 157 (9th Dist. 1950). An easement

appurtenant requires a dominant tenement to which the benefit of the easement attaches

and a servient tenement upon which the obligation or burden rests. Id. Easements

appurtenant “run with the land.” An easement in gross, on the other hand, is a right held

by an individual, exists independent of any ownership of land, and is not transferrable to

subsequent owners. DeShon v. Parker, 49 Ohio App.2d 366, 367, 361 N.E.2d 457 (9th

Dist. 1974). An easement may be created by any one of four methods: by grant,

implication, prescription, or estoppel. Kamenar RR. Salvage, Inc. v. Ohio Edison Co. , 79

Ohio App.3d 685, 689, 607 N.E.2d 1108 (3rd Dist. 1992). An easement may be created

or may arise expressly by grant, or by exception or reservation in a deed. See National

Exchange Bank v. Cunningham, 46 Ohio St. 575, 22 N.E. 924 (1889).

      {¶17} While Ohio law no longer requires the use of words of inheritance to create

or convey interests in land, this Court must apply Ohio law as it existed in 1852, the time

the instrument was created. See Merrill Lynch Mortgage Lending, Inc. v. Wheeling & Lake

Erie Ry. Co., 9th Dist. Summit No. 24943, 2010-Ohio-1827 at paragraph 13. As noted by
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                                 7

appellant, at such time, Ohio law made a distinction between a reservation and an

exception. Id. The court in the Merrill Lynch case stated as follows at paragraphs 17-19:

             A “reservation” created a new right that did not exist at the time the

      grantor owned the property, while an “exception” involved the grantor

      merely retaining part of what he already owned. See Gill v. Fletcher (1906),

      74 Ohio St. 295, 303-304, 78 N.E. 433. If the language of the deed was

      deemed to constitute an “exception,” words of inheritance were not

      necessary for the grantor to retain a property right that he could convey to

      future owners, for the grantor merely retained a portion of his former estate.

      Id.; Hall v. Hall (1910), 106 Me. 389, 76 A. 705, 706. On the other hand,

      because a “reservation” was considered to create a new property interest,

      which was essentially transferred back to the grantor from the property he

      conveyed, a reservation required words of inheritance to create an interest

      that would be alienable by the grantor. Id.; Embleton v. McMechen (1924),

      110 Ohio St. 18, 25, 143 N.E. 177.

             A grantor could retain an easement either by reserving it or by

      excepting it from the grant of land. Determining whether the grantor had

      excepted the easement or reserved it, however, was not necessarily

      resolved by resorting to the language of the deed or dictionary definitions of

      the terms “reservation” or “exception.” As one court observed, “the

      distinction between an ‘exception’ and a ‘reservation’ is frequently quite

      obscure and uncertain, and has not always been observed.” Chappell v.

      New York, N.H. & H.R. Co. (1892), 62 Conn. 195, 24 A. 997, 999. “Whether
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                               8

      a given clause creates a reservation or an exception is not so much a

      question of words as of intention to be gathered from all the circumstances

      of the case[.]” Hall v. Hall, supra.

             In Gill v. Fletcher, 74 Ohio St. 295, 78 N.E. 433, at syllabus, the Ohio

      Supreme Court similarly emphasized that there is no magic deed language

      that will determine whether the interest retained by the grantor is an

      exception or a reservation. Instead, it is the intent of the parties that is

      dispositive. “Whether the language used in a deed creates a reservation or

      exception from the grant depends upon the intention of the parties as

      evinced by a construction of the whole instrument in the light of the

      circumstances of each case.” Id. If the language and surrounding

      circumstances demonstrate that the grantor intended to retain more than

      “an immediate privilege which should expire with his own life” but instead

      intended to except “an absolute and inheritable” right, then the clause will

      be deemed to be an exception, which required no words of inheritance to

      preserve a perpetual interest. See id. at 304, 78 N.E. 433.

      {¶18} The court, in the Merrill Lynch case, noted that the Ohio Supreme Court, in

Junction R.R. Co. v. Ruggles, 7 Ohio St. 1, 1857 WL 1 (1857), recognized that technical

deed language was not dispositive of the nature of an easement, and explicitly recognized

the perpetual nature of the attachment of railroad tracks to property. The issue in Ruggles

was whether or not, in the absence of word of inheritance, an easement for a railroad ran

with the land. The Ohio Supreme Court noted that the railroad was annexed to real estate

and that the railroad was “expected to be of perpetual duration.” Id at. 8. As noted by the
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                                9

court in Merrill Lynch at paragraph 21, “[d]espite the lack of any words of inheritance in

the language creating the railroad's easement, the court made a presumption, absent any

language to the contrary, that the parties creating the easement for the railroad to run its

tracks across the landowner's property must have intended that the easement would be

of a perpetual nature. Id.”

       {¶19} The court, in Merrill Lynch applied the above law in considering whether or

not an 1890 deed that was recorded in 1893 created an express easement appurtenant

that ran with subsequent transfers of the land. The deed in such case, which was

between the Longs and a railroad, provided as follows:

              Said Railroad Co. agrees to furnish and maintain one good grade

       crossing, properly planked. Said crossing to be located where the grantor

       may designate.

              Said Railroad Co. agrees to fence strip of land and without using

       barbed wire.

       {¶20} After the railroad gave notice that it intended to close the crossing, the

owner of the landlocked property, who was a successor in title to the Longs, argued that

it had the legal right to continue using the crossing over the railroad's tracks. The railroad

contended, in part, that any easement created by the deed was personal to the Longs

and did not run with conveyances of the land and that the easement had been

extinguished over the years due to the increased burden on the crossing. After the trial

court granted summary judgment in the landowner’s favor, the railroad appealed.

       {¶21} The Court, in Merrill Lynch held that “[a]s it was clearly the intention of the

parties that the easement created in the 1890 deed would be perpetual in nature, it was
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                                  10

unnecessary that its exception from the Longs' conveyance to the Railroad be supported

by any words of inheritance.” Id at paragraph 29. The court noted that “[w]ithout a

crossing, the northern portion of the Longs' property would be inaccessible and would be

rendered useless. Moreover, as observed by the Supreme Court in Ruggles, once the

tracks were affixed to the property and the railroad line was in operation, it was essentially

part of the real estate and the intention was that it would continue to operate indefinitely.

The parties certainly intended that the Railroad would continue to exist, as would a need

to cross it, beyond the lifetime of the Longs.“ Id at paragraph 29.

       {¶22} Applying the above case law to the case sub judice, we find that the trial

court did not err in finding that the right to a crossing runs perpetually with the land in this

case. Nothing in the Cummins instrument stated that the crossing was limited in who

could access it or in duration. There was evidence before the trial court that a railroad

crossing exists on the property owned by David Green and has been in use for over 100

years. Moreover, without a crossing, the subject property is legally landlocked and

incapable of being developed. The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, which inspected

the subject property on March 25, 2008, concluded in a report as follows:

              [t]he 40 acre parcel has no right of way or easement onto it. I found

       no easy way to gain access to the property without installing a new highway

       rail grade crossing off of US 22. The only way to gain access off of Rix Mills

       Road is to obtain an easement from the current property owners who

       operate a warehousing facility. Access off of Homestead Road would not

       be feasible due to the low clearance of the railroad bridge and the fact that
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                             11

      it would hinder emergency personal (sic) from gaining access due to an

      emergency.”

      {¶23} The report recommended that appellee obtain a public highway rail

grade crossing by pursuing legal means. The Muskingum County Engineer, in an

August 31, 2009 letter to appellee, stated that the Homestead Drive access was

“extremely limited due to a railroad underpass that will not allow more than one car

through at one time and has low clearance…..All other points of the property are

landlocked.” Moreover, Christopher Frank, appellant’s representative, testified

during his deposition that he had a role in deciding whether a crossing should be

granted or denied and that he had recommended to appellant that it provide a

crossing.

      {¶24} Appellant, in its brief, maintains that there was admissible evidence

demonstrating that a second crossing was constructed on the Cummins property and

that, therefore, all crossing obligations under the Cummins instrument were met.

Appellant specifically points to an October 9, 1930 Valuation Map as showing that there

was a second crossing over that portion of the railroad track that crosses what is now the

subject property. However, at his deposition, Christopher Frank testified that he did not

know who created the maps and that he was unsure if one of the roads indicated on the

map ever existed. In contrast, appellee presented 1941 and 1950 aerial photographs,

right of way plans and a February 12, 2016 soil testing report stating that there was no

”existing evidence of a former grade crossing along the north boundary” of appellee’s

property. All show that there was no crossing on the subject property. Moreover, Frank,

during his deposition, admitted that a 1987 Valuation Map does not show a crossing on
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                           12

the subject property and, in fact, does not show a crossing on the Green property even

though it is undisputed that such a crossing exists and has existed for decades. The

Valuation Maps are, therefore, unreliable and lacking in evidentiary value.

      {¶25} Appellant next argues that any right to a crossing over the subject property

that may have existed under the Cummins instrument has been abandoned. Appellant

emphasizes that the relevant crossing was not used for a period of more than 164 years.

However, mere non-use of an easement, for a period however long, will not amount to

abandonment. Wyatt v. Ohio Dept. of Transportation, 87 Ohio App.3d 1, 5, 621 N.E.2d

822 (11th Dist. 1993). “[T]here must be a relinquishment of possession with an intent to

terminate the easement.” Id. (Citations omitted). Intent to abandon must be shown by

“unequivocal and decisive acts” which are inconsistent with continued use and enjoyment.

Snyder v. Monroe Township Trustees, et al., 110 Ohio App.3d 443,458, 674 N.E.2d 741

(2nd Dist. 1996).

      {¶26} Appellant asserts that appellee’s predecessors used the subject property

for agricultural purposes by accessing the property from Rix Mills Road and/or

Homestead Drive and that this is evidence that the right to a crossing was abandoned.

However, we concur with appellee that this is “hardly evidence of a clearly manifested

intention to abandon the right to a crossing onto US 40/22.”      Moreover, the need to

access US 40/22 by means of such a crossing did not arise until appellee, who intended

to develop the property for commercial and other purposes, purchased the same. See

Lone Star Steakhouse & Saloon of Ohio, Inc. v. Ryska, 11th Dist. Lake No. 2003–L–192,

2005–Ohio–3398, ¶ 58. We find that the right to a crossing was not abandoned.
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                             13

      {¶27} Appellant further maintains that any right to a crossing over the subject

property that may have existed under the Cummins instrument has been lost by adverse

possession. According to appellant, the railroad has adversely possessed the railroad

crossing right by not permitting a crossing over its tracks for 164 years when it allegedly

had an obligation to do so.

      {¶28} Adverse possession focuses on the acts of the one claiming prescriptive

ownership and requires proof of exclusive possession and open, notorious, continuous,

and adverse use for a period of 21 years. Grace v. Koch, 81 Ohio St.3d 577, 692 N.E.2d

1009, syllabus (1998). To prevail on a claim for adverse possession, a claimant must

establish these factors by clear and convincing evidence. Grace v. Koch at 580, 692

N.E.2d 1009. A party who fails to prove any of the elements fails to acquire title through

adverse possession. Grace v. Koch at 579, 692 N.E.2d 1009. “If a claimant's use of the

disputed property is either by permission or accommodation for the owner, then it is not

‘adverse,’ for purposes of establishing adverse possession.” Coleman v. Penndel Co.

(1997), 123 Ohio App.3d 125, 703 N.E.2d 821, paragraph three of the syllabus. In the

case sub judice, appellant’s use of the rail line over the subject property was permitted

by and in accordance with express grant contained in the Cummins instrument and was

not adverse. Adverse possession, therefore, is not applicable.

      {¶29} Based on the foregoing, we find that the trial court did not err in granting

appellee’s Motion for Summary Judgment while denying that filed by appellant.

      {¶30} Appellant’s first and second assignments of error are, therefore, overruled.
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                               14

                                                 III

       {¶31} Appellant, in its third assignment of error, argues that the trial court, in its

March 29, 2017 Judgment Entry, improperly ordered appellant to perform obligations

beyond mere construction of a crossing and that the court’s Judgment Entry improperly

exceeded the rights granted by the Cummins instrument and/or the relief requested by

appellee.

       {¶32} The trial court, in its March 29, 2017 Judgment Entry, stated, in relevant

part, as follows:

              Defendant is obligated, and shall construct, at its own cost, an at

       grade railroad crossing in alignment with the curb cut granted to Plaintiff by

       the Ohio Department of Transportation (“ODOT”). The crossing shall be at

       least 36 feet in width, and otherwise built to standards applicable for high-

       density traffic, including semi-truck traffic, and as otherwise necessary to

       handle traffic projections as set forth in the Traffic Impact Study submitted

       in this case. This includes that Defendant shall, at its own cost, provide all

       crossing safety and warning devices and features for such crossing as

       appropriate in accordance with the topographical profile, speed and number

       of daily train traffic, and volume of vehicular traffic anticipated pursuant to

       the Traffic Impact Study submitted in this case, and to further include any

       traffic signal pre-emption at US 40/22 as appropriate and/or as required or

       recommended by ODOT or any other agency or authority with jurisdiction.

       The crossing construction shall begin no later than 30 days after start of

       construction of the access road to which the crossing will connect.
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                              15

       Defendant shall further permit, without interference or charge, any water,

       sewer, utilities or other improvements required to go under or above the

       crossing. If the roadway to which the crossing connects is designated as a

       public road, Defendant shall, at its own costs, provide and modify any safety

       and warning devices and equipment as may be required by any agency or

       authority having jurisdiction over such matters. Defendant shall maintain,

       at its own costs, the crossing (whether private or public), and safety and

       warning devices, and equipment.

       {¶33} Appellant argues that the Cummins instrument did not address water,

sewer, utilities or other improvements and traffic signals and that appellee did not request

such relief in his complaint. Appellant also argues that there was no language in the

Cummins instrument requiring it to “maintain” the crossing and requiring it to “modify”

safety and warning equipment as circumstances change over time.

       {¶34} However, as noted by the court in the Merrill Lynch case, “changes in the

use of an easement are permitted to the extent that they result from the normal growth

and development of the dominant land, and are, therefore, a proper and reasonable use

of the easement.” Id at paragraph 36, citing Erie RR. Co. v. S.H. Kleinman Realty Co., 92

Ohio St. 96, 110 N.E. 527 (1915); Mark Ten Mining & Consulting, Inc. v. Rawson (Nov.

25, 1992), 7th Dist. No. 91-C-77, at 2.

       {¶35} While appellant, in this matter, contends that there was no such evidence

in this case, we find that there was evidence presented to the trial court that, over time,

the area in which the subject property is located has changed for agricultural to

commercial and industrial. David Radecke, appellee’s Managing Member, in a
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                                 16

supplemental affidavit that was attached to its reply to appellant’s memorandum in

opposition to appellee’s Motion for Summary Judgment, stated, in relevant part, as

follows:

              4. The curb cut and access grant from ODOT permitting three 12’

       lanes, (ingress, egress, and a turn lane) for the Subject Property is

       necessary for the development of the Subject Property and is consistent

       with growth and development trends which have occurred over the past 150

       years, including in and around the Subject Property.            The property

       contiguous and to the immediate east of the Subject Property is zoned

       Industrial in the Village of New Concord and contains a 700,000+ sq. ft. NFI

       Distribution Center, which has semi-trucks going in and out of the property

       on a regular basis. The Subject Property is also zoned Industrial in the

       Village of New Concord. The Traffic Impact Study of Harry Matter/Civil

       Design Associates, Inc., further sets forth the high volume of peak hour

       traffic that currently drives past the locations of the ODOT access grant/curb

       cut for the Subject Property, and for which the railroad crossing is sought,

       and such traffic volume demonstrates a single lane farm crossing is not

       adequate for development and growth trends over the past 150 years as

       currently exists. I further testified in deposition as to the projected and

       anticipated potential uses for the Subject Property, as cited to the Court in

       Plaintiff’s filings and which therefore will not be set forth here again, but a

       single lane farm crossing would be inadequate for such development, and

       would be inconsistent and contrary to the growth and development trends
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                                 17

       as indicated by the actual use and development on the adjoining property

       and the Subject Property’s zoning, as well as the projected and anticipated

       potential uses for the Subject Property, including those identified in

       Resolutions and communications from the Village of New Concord, which

       are also in the record before the Court.

       {¶36} The Village Administrator for the Village of New Concord, in a February 17,

2017 letter/affidavit, stated that appellee’s property was zoned industrial and that the

warehouse property directly to the east was also zoned industrial. There was evidence

presented to the trial court in the form of a Traffic Impact Study that, during peak traffic

times, over 500 vehicles per hour drove past the location of an ODOT access grant/curb

cut for subject property. Moreover, the Village of New Concord, in a Resolution passed

on February 14, 2011, indicated that a grade crossing was necessary to put the subject

property into ”productive use, with the intent of creating economic activity and bring jobs

to the Village of New Concord and Muskingum County.” We find, based on the foregoing,

that the trial court did not err in finding that appellee was entitled to a crossing sufficient

to satisfy modern growth and demand.

       {¶37} With respect to bringing utilities to the subject property, the general rule is

that the servient tenant may “use (his) land for any purpose that does not interfere with

the easement.” Gibbons v. Ebding, 70 Ohio St. 298, 71 N.E. 720, 721 (1904). Thus,

appellee, as owner of the subject property, has the right to bring utilities over or under the

railroad provided that doing so does not interfere with appellant’s easement rights and

use in the railroad. When, during his deposition, Christopher Frank was asked whether
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                                18

there would be any operational impacts to the railroad if there was a high-volume or low-

volume crossing, he indicated that there was not.

       {¶38} Based on the foregoing, appellant’s third assignment of error is overruled.

                                                 IV

       {¶39} Appellant, in its fourth assignment of error, contends that the trial court erred

by not granting its Motion to Strike.

       {¶40} On December 14, 2016, appellee filed a Motion for Summary Judgment

supported by the affidavit of Kyle Baldwin, a geologist and owner of Roxsol, LLC. On

February 3, 2017, appellee filed a memorandum in opposition to appellant’s Motion for

Summary Judgment. On the same date, appellee filed the supplemental affidavit of Harry

D. Matter, an employee and President of Civil Design Associates, Inc. Appellant, on

February 3, 2017, filed a Motion to Strike such evidence on the basis that it was untimely.

Appellant argued that appellee was untimely producing new opinions from both experts.

With respect to Matter, appellant argued that, as part of discovery, appellee submitted a

December 29, 2015 letter from Matter in which Matter opined that a crossing had existed

on the subject property and that, after the close of discovery, appellee submitted an

affidavit from Matter stating otherwise. With respect to Baldwin, appellant contended that

his February 12, 2016 letter report disclosing the results of soil tests performed on the

subject property were outside of the railroad right-of-way and that, after discovery was

closed, appellee, on November 11, 2016, submitted a new letter report from Baldwin

providing soil test results that were purportedly performed in the relevant area.
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                              19

       {¶41} While the trial court never expressly ruled on the Motion to Strike, we must

presume that the motion was implicitly overruled.” Swinehart v. Swinehart, 5th Dist.

Ashland No. 06–COA–020, 2007–Ohio–6174, ¶ 26.

       {¶42} A trial court's decision to grant or deny a motion to strike an affidavit is

reviewed using an abuse of discretion standard. Early v. The Toledo Blade, 130 Ohio

App.3d 302, 318, 720 N.E.2d 107 (6th Dist.1998). An abuse of discretion connotes that

the lower court's attitude in reaching its judgment was unreasonable, arbitrary or

unconscionable. Blakemore v. Blakemore, 5 Ohio St.3d 217, 219, 450 N.E.2d 1140

(1983).

       {¶43} The discovery cut-off in the case sub judice was October 31, 2016.

Appellee’s counsel, in an affidavit attached to appellees’ response to the Motion to Strike,

stated that, on April 26, 2016, he had submitted by mail to appellant’s counsel documents

including a December 29, 2015 letter and attachments from Matter and his Traffic Impact

Study and Baldwin’s February 12, 2016 letter and soil test results. He further stated that,

on May 4, 2016, he had emailed to appellant’s counsel appellee’s answers to appellant’s

interrogatories. Appellee, in the answers, stated that Kyle Baldwin, a geologist, and Harry

Matter, an engineer, were both expert witnesses. Appellee’s counsel, in his affidavit, also

stated that, on November 11, 2016, he had received Baldwin’s November 10, 2016 report

and attachments and forwarded the same to appellant’s counsel the same day.

       {¶44} Thus, as noted by appellee, appellant was aware of the names of the above

witnesses and the subject matter upon which they would testify before the discovery cut-

off date. “[W]hen a complaining party knows the identity of the other party's expert, the

subject of his expertise and the general nature of his testimony, a party cannot complain
Muskingum County, Case No. CT2017-0027                                             20

that they are ambushed.’ ” (Citations omitted.) Revilo Tyluka, LLC v. Simon Roofing &

Sheet Metal Corp., 193 Ohio App.3d 535, 952 N.E.2d 1181, 2011–Ohio–1922, ¶ 48 (8th

Dist.). Moreover, appellant did not request a scheduling order requiring the production of

expert reports and opinions or depose either expert.

      {¶45} Moreover, with respect to Baldwin, appellant, in its May 5, 2016 responses

to appellee’s interrogatories, did not disclose exactly where it maintained a crossing

supposedly once existed on the subject property.       It was not until after appellant’s

representative was deposed on September 19, 2016 and appellee received a copy of the

deposition transcript on October 13, 2016 that appellee discovered that Baldwin had

performed his testing using incorrect coordinates for the alleged crossing. Appellee then

had Baldwin conduct new soil testing using the proper location and update his findings.

As is stated above, Baldwin’s November 10, 2016 report was forwarded to appellant’s

counsel the next day.

      {¶46} Based on the foregoing, we find that the trial court did not abuse its

discretion in denying the Motion to Strike. The trial court’s decision was not arbitrary,

unconscionable or unreasonable.

      {¶47} Appellant’s fourth assignment of error is, therefore, overruled.
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       {¶48} Accordingly, the judgment of the Muskingum County Court of Common

Pleas is affirmed.

By: Baldwin, J.

Hoffman, P.J. and

Earle Wise, J. concur.