Blake v. Concord & Montreal Railroad

64 A. 202, 73 N.H. 597, 1906 N.H. LEXIS 40
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 8, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 64 A. 202 (Blake v. Concord & Montreal Railroad) 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
Blake v. Concord & Montreal Railroad, 64 A. 202, 73 N.H. 597, 1906 N.H. LEXIS 40 (N.H. 1906).

Opinion

Parsons, C. J.

The superior court made a conditional order, granting the writ if the commissioners erred as matter of law in making an order discontinuing “ that part of Ferry street between the easterly line of the right of way of the Concord & Montreal Railroad and the westerly line of the right of way of the Concord & Claremont Railroad.” Ferry street is an ancient highway, and the portion discontinued is about 320 feet in length and is now ■crossed at grade by the right of way and tracks of the Concord & Claremont, the Northern, and the Concord & Montreal railroads. There is no exception to the order of the superior court, nor is there exception to any matter of evidence or procedure, so that the only question presented by the case is as to the power of the board of railroad commissioners. Considering only the order objected to, the case discloses an attempt to avoid or improve a grade crossing by the simple expedient of abolishing so much of the highway as is crossed by the railroad right of way. If authority has been conferred upon the tribunal in question to avoid or improve an existing grade crossing of a railroad and a highway by discontinuing the highway at the point of crossing, because the public good requires such discontinuance on account of the dangerous character of the crossing, or because the public are otherwise sufficiently accommodated, the power to make the order *598 would be clear upon tbe facts. The crossing upon the evidence might be found to be one of special danger, and it could also be found that the public travel now served by the Ferry-street crossing is sufficiently provided for by the existing route, by way of Stiekney avenue and Bridge street. The general highway discontinuing power has been heretofore by statute vested-in the town, or in the courts, or in both combined, according to the location or manner of creation of the particular highway whose discontinuance is proposed.' P. S., e. 72, ss. 1, 2. Such being the general rule, to sustain the power of the commissioners to discontinue portions of highways forming railroad grade' crossings, authority therefor must be found in some special- provision. The only source of- such jurisdiction applicable to the case that is suggested is section 14, chapter 159, Public Statutes, which empowers-the board of railroad commissioners, upon notice and hearing, to-authorize the proprietors of a railroad to change the location of a highway for the purpose of avoiding or improving a crossing of the highway by the railroad.

It has recently been held that the railroad commissioners are-not in express terms empowered to discontinue or authorize the discontinuance of a highway, but that the necessary effect of changing the location of a highway under this - section is the discontinuance of so much of a highway as occupies the old location and the substitution therefor of the portion which occupies the new location. Leighton v. Railroad, 72 N. H. 224, 226. It was-also held in the same case that the railroad commissioners have no authority to lay a new highway which is no part of a change made in the location of an existing highway for the purpose of avoiding a crossing. The same reasoning requires the conclusion that the commissioners have no authority to discontinue any part of a highway, except as such discontinuance results from a change in location. A petition to the commissioners, therefore, to-discontinue a particular portion of a highway, or to lay a highway between certain termini, would not call for an exercise of the-power conferred upon them; and an order from them discontinuing a certain portion of an existing highway, or laying a new highway, without more, would not be an exercise of the limited, power as to highway creation or discontinuance vested in them. A petition to the commissioners to discontinue a particular portion of Ferry street and an order granting the same cannot be sustained by showing that the crossing is dangerous and not needed by the public. The power conferred upon the commissioners is merely to change the location of existing ways. As a result of the due exercise of the power conferred upon them, the part whose location is changed ceases to be a highway,- — is discon *599 tinued, — not because it lias been determined by competent authority that tbe public good does not require the highway, but because the particular location of that portion of the highway has been removed to some other spot; and the place where such highway is relocated becomes a highway, not because the commissioners have authority to decide that such a highway is required, but because of the relocation of a highway the necessity for whose existence has been otherwise determined. The question of the necessity for the existence of the highway in some location is not submitted to the commissioners. The determination of that question by the authorized tribunal still stands unaffected by the action of the commissioners, whose power is limited to the location upon the ground of a highway which, so far as their action is concerned, it is conclusively presumed the public good demands. The power conferred upon them is analogous to that given municipal officers under the street railway statute (Laws 1895, c. 27, s. 5) to locate such railways upon public highways, while the necessity for the railway itself over a specified route is determined by another tribunal. Sections 13 and 14, chapter 159, Public Statutes, so far as they relate to the avoidance or improvement of existing grade crossings, originated in chapter 98, Laws 1885. Thereby a method is provided (Laws 1885, e. 98, s. 7; P. S., c. 159, s. 13) whereby a railroad corporation might obtain authority to alter the grade of a highway for the purpose of having the road pass over or under the same, or (Laws 1885, e. 98, s. 8; P. S., e. 159, 8. 14) to alter the course of a highway “for the purpose of facilitating the crossing of the same by its road, or of permitting its road to pass at the side thereof without crossing ”; but neither in the original act nor in the revision is power given the commissioners to authorize the avoidance of the crossing by abolishing the highway.

The statutes relating to the occupation and obstruction of existing highways by railroads are historically reviewed in Leighton v. Railroad, supra. From the examination there made, it is clear that it has never been intended that existing highways should be discontinued for railroad purposes, except by the substitution of some other equivalent highway. It seems probable that had it been intended to entrust to the railroad commissioners the decision of the general question of the public need of a particular highway crossing a railroad, apt language would have been used to confer the power. In the absence of such language, we are constrained to follow the recent decision in Leighton v. Railroad and to reaffirm the conclusion there reached as to the want of power in the railroad commissioners to lay or discontinue a highway, except as either may result from a change of location in an *600 existing way.

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49 So. 118 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 A. 202, 73 N.H. 597, 1906 N.H. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-v-concord-montreal-railroad-nh-1906.