Aldermen of Fitchburg v. Boston & Maine Railroad

89 N.E. 438, 203 Mass. 304, 1909 Mass. LEXIS 934
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 89 N.E. 438 (Aldermen of Fitchburg v. Boston & Maine Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aldermen of Fitchburg v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 89 N.E. 438, 203 Mass. 304, 1909 Mass. LEXIS 934 (Mass. 1909).

Opinion

Knowlton, C. J.

This is a petition for the appointment of a special commission under the St. 1906, c. 463, Part I, §§ 25, 26, to determine which party shall do the work of making an alteration in the crossing of the railroad of the respondent railroad corporations by a public highway and the approaches thereto, and in the bridge at the said crossing, and to apportion the cost thereof. The Fitchburg and Leominster Street Railway Company and certain towns alleged to be specially benefited by the alteration are joined with the railroad companies as respondents. The petitioners aver that the street railway company has tracks on River Street, which is the public highway on which the change was ordered. They also aver that a petition praying for an alteration of the crossing was filed with the county commissioners, and that, after due notice and a hearing, a decree was entered granting the petition, and setting forth the manner in which the changes should be made. To the petition now before us a plea in abatement and also a demurrer was filed by the street railway company, setting up a misjoinder of this company because it is not authorized to lay and use tracks upon any bridge in the highway. The averment of the petitioners is that the public way runs under the railroad. After the filing of this plea and the demurrer, a decree was entered appointing a commission in accordance with the prayer of the petition. Still later a hearing was had upon the plea in abatement and the demurrer, and the plea was overruled and the demurrer was sustained. The questions of law arising at this hearing were reported to this court, to be determined here before further proceedings are taken in the ease.

There seems to have been an irregularity in appointing a commission before the hearing upon the plea in abatement and the demurrer, but, in the view that we take of the case, this is now immaterial. No question of pleading or of procedure is raised by either party, except the question of law reported by the judge, [307]*307namely, the question whether the street railway company is a proper party to this proceeding. This depends upon whether it is liable under the statute to pay any part of the expense of the alteration and the cost of the proceedings.

The portions of the statute to be construed are as follows:

“ Section 23. If a public way and a railroad cross each other, and the board of aldermen of the city or the selectmen of the town in which the crossing is situated, or the directors of the railroad corporation, or the directors of a street railway company having tracks on the said way are of opinion that it is necessary for the security or convenience of the public that an alteration which does not involve the abolition of a crossing at grade should be made in the crossing, the approaches thereto, the location of the railroad or way, or in a bridge at the crossing, they shall apply to the county commissioners, or, if the crossing is situated in the city of Boston, to the board of railroad commissioners, who shall, after public notice, hear all parties interested, and, if they decide that such alteration is necessary, shall prescribe the manner and limits within which it shall be made, and shall forthwith certify their decision to the parties and to said board. In case any street railway company is authorized to lay and use tracks upon the said way, the said company shall bear such part of the expense of building, repairing or improving a bridge forming a part of said way, or of altering or improving the approaches thereto, as shall be deemed to be just by the commission provided for in sections twenty-five and twenty-six.”
“Section 25. A special commission of three disinterested persons, who shall be appointed as provided in the following section, shall determine which party shall carry such decision into effect and which party shall pay the charges and expenses of making such alteration and the future charges for keeping such crossing and the approaches thereto in repair, as well as the costs of the application to the county commissioners, or the board of railroad commissioners, and of the hearing before said special commission; and it may apportion all such charges, expenses and costs between the railroad corporation, the street railway company having tracks on said way, and the counties, cities or towns in which said crossing is situated and other cities and towns which may be specially benefited. If a street railway [308]*308company is authorized to lay and use tracks upon any bridge in a highway which is built or repaired or altered as above provided for, or the approaches to which are altered or improved.as above provided for, the said commission shall determine what part of the charges and expenses of making such changes or improvements, or of keeping such approaches in good condition, shall be paid by the said street railway company.”

By the first of these sections three parties are given the right to apply for an alteration in a crossing, namely, the authorities of the city or town, “ the directors of the railroad corporation, or the directors of a street railway company having tracks on the said way.” Each of these is treated as a party interested, for whose benefit the proceeding is provided. Under § 25, the commission is to determine which party shall carry such decision into effect, and this must mean which of these three parties. It seems quite plain, under the statute, that in a way on which a street railway company has tracks, a change might be ordered of such a kind that the street railway company properly might be required by the special commission to carry it into effect. As a part of the same sentence, the commission is empowered to determine which party shall pay the charges and expenses of making the alteration and the future charges of keeping the crossing and the approaches thereto in repair, as well as the costs of the proceedings. ■ This too must mean which of the three parties. It includes a power to put a part of the cost upon a street railway company. The language plainly covers a case wheré there is no bridge because the crossing is at grade, or a case in which the bridge does not form a part of the way because the way passes under the railroad, as well as a case where the tracks of the street railway are upon a bridge passing over the railroad. If we stopped here the meaning would seem plain. But we go on to a more explicit statement, that the commission “ may apportion all such charges, expenses and costs between the railroad corporation, the street railway company having tracks on said way, and the counties, cities or towns in which said crossing is situated and other cities and towns which may be specially benefited.” This makes the street railway company liable in terms for its proper share of all the expenses, and brings in counties, cities and towns that are specially benefited. The contention of [309]*309the petitioners must be sustained unless these plain provisions of the statute are set aside.

The difficulty arises from the language at the end of each of these two sections. • This relates only to the expense of building, altering or repairing a bridge which forms a part of the highway. As to expenses incurred upon such a bridge, a street railway company which is authorized to lay and use tracks upon the way or upon the bridge, although its tracks are not laid, may be made to contribute. It may be that the street railway company is waiting for a change in the bridge, to make a place for its tracks. Such a street railway company would not he included in the provision for payment by street railway companies having tracks on the way.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 N.E. 438, 203 Mass. 304, 1909 Mass. LEXIS 934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aldermen-of-fitchburg-v-boston-maine-railroad-mass-1909.