Attorney-General Ex Rel. Boston & Maine Railroad v. Derry & Pelham Electric Railway Co.

53 A. 443, 71 N.H. 513, 1902 N.H. LEXIS 74
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedOctober 25, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 53 A. 443 (Attorney-General Ex Rel. Boston & Maine Railroad v. Derry & Pelham Electric Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Attorney-General Ex Rel. Boston & Maine Railroad v. Derry & Pelham Electric Railway Co., 53 A. 443, 71 N.H. 513, 1902 N.H. LEXIS 74 (N.H. 1902).

Opinion

Walker, J.

The defendant was incorporated by a special act of the legislature in 1899, and was thereby empowered “ to construct, maintain, and use a railroad witb convenient single or double track, witb necessary and convenient sidings, turnouts, switches, and side tracks, from a point at or near the Boston & Maine Railroad station in the town of Derry and known as ‘ Derry,’ over and upon such highways, bridges, and public and private lands as may be necessary for the public accommodation, in the towns of Derry, Londonderry, and Windham in tbe county *514 of Rockingham, and of Pelham in the county of Hillsborough, to some convenient point or points in the state line between New Hampshire and Massachusetts.” Laws 1899, c. 153, s. 1. This power was ratified and continued by chapter 171, Laws of 1901. Upon the defendant’s petition to the selectmen of Derry, a street railroad has been laid out from the point first mentioned in the charter, westerly to the easterly line of Londonderry. The petition for laying out the road in Londonderry describes two lines — one commencing at the southerly line of that town in the Mammoth road and extending northerly along that road to the north line of the town, the other commencing at the end of the road in Derry on the easterly line of Londonderry, and extending southwesterly along a highway leading to Londonderry village, to the Mammoth road in that village. The railroad has also been laid out from the southerly terminus in Londonderry, southerly through the town of Windham and into Pelham until it reaches the Pludson, Pelham & Salem Electric Railway. It thus appears that, besides a direct route from Derry southwesterly through Londonderry and Windham into Pelham, the defendant seeks an additional route or line extending from Londonderry village in the southerly part of the town to its northerly line, which is the southerly line of Manchester. In other words, it claims the right to construct and operate a branch line from the main or principal line. By this plan two lines extend from Londonderry village — one northeasterly to Derry, the other northerly by the Mammoth road to Manchester. The plaintiff claims that the defendant has acquired no authority to occupy that part of the Mammoth road and maintain thereon a street railway.

Whatever power the defendant has to build and operate a street railway in Londonderry is- derived from the legislature, and is defined and limited by the special act above referred to. From the language of the act, it is apparent that the legislature determined that the public good, convenience, or accommodation required the building and operation of a street railway from Derry through the towns mentioned to the Massachusetts line. It did not delegate to another tribunal the power to decide the question of the public necessity for such a means of transportation between the points indicated in the act.' The granting of the right to the defendant to enter upon and appropriate public and private property in a designated locality for railroad purposes was a determination that the public good required the exercise of such extraordinary powers. The legislature did not constitute the selectmen of Londonderry a tribunal to decide whether the public good required the construction of a street railway within the territory of the town, as a part of a line between termini located outside the town. *515 limits. In the case of a railway corporation formed under the general law (Laws 1895, c. 27), the question of the need of a railway over the general route proposed is determined by the court upon petition. This question is properly termed a “ fundamental” one in Petition of Nashua Street Railway, 69 N. H. 275, 276, while the laying out of the way is said to be subsidiary. The controlling consideration in the proper determination of both is the public good. When, however, the legislature grants a special charter for a railway over a route described in general terms, and empowers some other tribunal to make the route specific and definite, it does not consolidate the two questions and authorize the latter tribunal to decide both. Concord v. Horse Railroad, 65 N. H. 30, 37. It decided conclusively that the public good required a street railway extending through the four towns mentioned when it granted the defendant’s charter, and neither the selectmen of the towns nor the defendant can overrule or extend that authoritative and fundamental finding of the public need by laying out the railway over lands not fairly included within the general route prescribed by the charter. Petition of Keene Electric Railway, 68 N. H. 434. If the legislature has authorized the defendant in general language to construct a railway over one route, the selectmen cannot lay it out over another route, though they may think or be able to prove that the public accommodation would be best subserved by the latter route. If the legislature has made a mistake, it cannot be corrected by the selectmen. If upon a reasonable construction of the charter the legislative purpose was to grant a railway franchise to the defendant from Derry to the Massachusetts line by a reasonably direct and convenient route between those points, —if that was the general purpose of the legislature,'— the selectmen cannot change it on the ground that the public accommodation requires an indirect and circuitous route. Stamford, v. Railroad, 56 Conn. 381; Brigham, v. Railroad, 1 Allen 316, 318. Much less would- the selectmen of Londonderry have the power to locate that part of the railway extending through their town outside the general route prescribed in the charter, because such a location would be more convenient and useful to the citizens of that town. If the selectmen of each of the several towns through which the road passes had that power, or could define the meaning and scope of “ the public accommodation,” as used in the charter, by a reference merely to the local convenience of its inhabitants, the line as a whole might be extremely inconvenient and unreasonable as a means of public travel from one terminus to the other, or it might be laid out in one town and not in others, according to the different findings of the several boards of selectmen. The general purpose of the legislature must first be *516 ascertained and applied to the application for a definite location, before the question arises whether the public accommodation or convenience requires a particular location ; and that question is to be determined by a consideration of the general utility of the road or the legislative purpose in authorizing its construction, rather than by the demands of local convenience in the particular town. The location of a road under a charter authorizing its construction in a single town, as public convenience may require, would be governed largely by local interests, which might have little application in the case of a rural road merely extending through the town and constituting therein a part of a line running through several towns.

The defendant was authorized to construct a street railway from Derry Depot to the Massachusetts line, over such highways and lands as “ may be necessary for the public accommodation,” in the towns of Derry, Londonderry, Windham, and Pelham. It is very evident that the legislature intended to authorize the construction of a rural railway between the termini mentioned.

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Bluebook (online)
53 A. 443, 71 N.H. 513, 1902 N.H. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-general-ex-rel-boston-maine-railroad-v-derry-pelham-electric-nh-1902.