Bolger v. Boston & Maine Railroad

134 A. 524, 82 N.H. 372, 1926 N.H. LEXIS 36
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 24, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 134 A. 524 (Bolger v. Boston & Maine 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
Bolger v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 134 A. 524, 82 N.H. 372, 1926 N.H. LEXIS 36 (N.H. 1926).

Opinion

Allen, J.

The commission’s finding that the crossing is more dangerous than the southerly one is sustained. If this ground of appeal has not been abandoned, it is enough to say that an examination of the evidence confirms the finding.

The findings that there was no contention that the crossing had been used under a claim of right and that the decedent by bringing the petition admitted the crossing had never been legally established, *374 áre set aside and reversed. The evidence shows the contrary. While the findings are -prima facie evidence of their correctness, thus placing on the plaintiff the burden here of proof to the contrary (Grafton &c. Co. v. State, 77 N. H. 490, 503, 504), the burden has been sustained, in addition to the ordinary burden resting on a proponent.

Private crossings may be legally established either by agreement, express or implied, of the parties, or by order of the commission under the statute. When the agreement for a crossing is doubtful or in dispute, an effort to have it established in a way and by a record that will clear the doubt or settle the dispute does not amount to a concession of the non-existence of the agreement. The evidence for the plaintiff clearly showed the claim of an established crossing, with the purpose, not of abandoning it, but of relying on it as a substantial and important element for action by the commission in his favor. If in seeking to enforce the right to a crossing claimed to be established by an agreement, the plaintiff’s remedy is by original application to the courts instead of to the commission, a question later to be given consideration, his action here in first seeking the commission’s aid is clearly a misconception of his proper procedure rather than an acknowledgment of having no crossing already established. Nor is there any rule of estoppel as matter of law by which a proceeding erroneously brought for the enforcement of one’s rights forecloses á proper proceeding for the purpose.

Whether there was a highway by prescription over the original northerly way has not been found. That the public made some use of it for a long period appears. On the other hand it does not appear to have been maintained by the public, and when the public’s use of it was cut off by a fence, it does not appear that there were any legal proceedings for its discontinuance as a highway. The plaintiff, however, does not. rely upon a public character of the way, but upon the landowner’s own private interest in it, in helping to support his claim to the present one near it. The landowner’s own discontinuance of it when or before the present one was substituted is enough to estop him and his grantees from any present claim for a crossing therefor. But the plaintiff’s claim is that the railroad’s conduct in moving the crossing to accommodate the present way, and since maintaining it, proves an establishment of the present crossing as a matter of right admitted by the railroad, or in other words a crossing established by agreement. The issue of the public character of the former way is therefore not involved.

The chief question presented by the appeal is whether under the *375 law as applied to the facts appearing the commission was required to provide and establish a crossing for the plaintiff at the location sought as a matter of right or whether it had discretionary authority on the subject.

The claimed right to a crossing rests chiefly upon the existence of a past agreement establishing it. The commission’s erroneous findings that no such claim was made and that the petition was a waiver of any claim show that no finding was made whether the crossing as previously in use was established by agreement or existed under a revocable permission. As the statute (P. S., c. 159, s. 19, as amended by Laws 1911, c. 164, s. 3; reenacted by P. L., c. 249, s. 42) reads, the commission is to determine “the number, places, time and manner of construction” of crossings, if the landowner and railroad “are not agreed upon the place, number or kind” of crossings. In other words the commission is to act on the subject of providing a crossing if the railroad has not already furnished one satisfactory to the landowner. When it is in dispute whether a crossing has been established by agreement, the commission on a petition under the statute must first determine the preliminary issue of such an agreement. If it finds the crossing already established by agreement, its jurisdiction to establish the crossing by order is lacking. It is given no power of confirmation, and the enforcement of established rights is a judicial function which administrative tribunals may not exercise. No such authority is implied by the statute. On the contrary its conditional language shows that the legislative intention was otherwise. The right to have a crossing maintained, whether arising from the parties’ agreement or resulting from the commission’s order for it, may only be enforced through the courts, to which jurisdiction has been assigned. “If the proprietors of a railroad or any other party wrongfully obstruct a pass already provided in accordance with an agreement or an order of the railroad commissioners, the cause of action falls within the general jurisdiction conferred upon the court by section 4, chapter 204, Public Statutes.” Farwell v. Railroad, 72 N. H. 335, 336.

But the finding, if made, of an existing crossing established by agreement does not end the jurisdiction of the commission if the proceeding before it invokes its regulatory authority. While it may not reestablish the crossing by confirmatory order, and while it may not undertake remedial action for wrong done, it may make orders affecting existing crossings, however established, as to their continued maintenance, location and arrangement.

*376 The establishment of the right does not permanently fix the character and extent of the right, unless and except as the statute may prescribe. “The question of the location of the farm crossing is to be determined by the application of the doctrine of reasonable use. . . . The convenience of all parties is to be considered in determining this question. ... A farm crossing once established is not so located that it can never be changed. The necessity for changes has been recognized and provided for by legislation. P. S., c. 159, ss. 14, 19.” Costello v. Railway, 70 N. H. 403, 405. “The legal duty of constructing farm crossings imposed by the statute of 1850 undoubtedly includes the duty of maintaining and keeping them in repair so long as needed.” Keefe v. Railroad, 63 N. H. 271, 273.

The statutory provision that the commission shall determine the “number, places, time and manner of construction” of crossings when the landowner and railroad are not agreed in respect thereto shows plainly the legislative policy of changes to meet changed conditions and requirements under the application of the principle of reasonable use. Reasonable abridgment is contemplated as much as reasonable extension. It is not to be presumed that a crossing established by agreement is to be maintained and continued on any other conditions not expressly made a part of the agreement than one established by public order.

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Related

Peppin v. Boston & Maine Railroad
169 A. 877 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1933)
Parker-Young Co. v. State
145 A. 786 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 A. 524, 82 N.H. 372, 1926 N.H. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bolger-v-boston-maine-railroad-nh-1926.