Boston & Lowell Railroad v. County Commissioners of Middlesex
This text of 85 N.E. 108 (Boston & Lowell Railroad v. County Commissioners of Middlesex) 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.
Opinion
At a point about three hundred feet southeasterly of Lowell Street in the city of Somerville, the Lexington and Arlington branch of the Boston and Lowell Railroad, now operated by the Boston and Maine Railroad, diverges from the main line, so that the two lines of track when they cross Lowell Street are about one hundred and fifty feet apart. The Lexington and Arlington branch was built under the St. 1870, c. 386, which provided that all crossings of highways should be at grade, unless a different mode of crossing should be ordered [586]*586by the railroad commissioners. In the proceedings before the county commissioners which are called in question, there wop a dispute between the parties as to whether Lowell Street was a public way, but the commissioners found that it was. No crossing was ever constructed at the point where this branch of the railroad passes over Lowell Street, but the railroad was constructed at a depth of several feet below the surface of the adjacent land.
This being the situation, and the place never having been used as a crossing for teams, the mayor and aldermen of Somerville presented a petition to the county commissioners, averring that the public way at that point was so crossed that the railroad obstructed the way, and that the corporation refused and neglected to keep in repair a bridge or other structure which was required and necessary at the crossing, and asked that they be ordered to make repairs.
It is very plain that this petition was brought under the It. L. c. Ill, § 132, which gives the county commissioners jurisdiction to order repairs to be made by the railroad corporation at a crossing in cases such as this was averred to be. Under this petition the county commissioners ordered the present petitioners to separate the grades of the street and the railroad, to construct a bridge over the railroad, and a street to pass over the railroad on the bridge.
" This section of the statutes did not authorize the making of an order of this kind, nor had the county commissioners jurisdiction, upon any form of petition or under any statute, to order a, separation of the grades of the railroad and the way at this point. If, notwithstanding the special provision as to crossings in the St. 1870, c. 386, these grades can now be separated under a general law, the proceedings will need to be in a different form and before another tribunal. R. L. c. Ill, § 149.
As the order in regard to this crossing was wholly unwarranted, a writ of certiorari must be issued in accordance with the prayer of the petitioners.
The petition in the other case relates to the order for the erection of a bridge and the construction of a street to cross over the main line of the railroad at its intersection with Lowell Street. The orders upon the two petitions were made at the same time, [587]*587and as a part of a single scheme which called for the erection of a steel bridge over each of the lines of the railroad, at a height to give sixteen feet in the clear between the tracks and the bridge above. The distance between the adjacent abutments of the two bridges, measuring on Lowell Street, was to be about one hundred and twenty-five feet. The street was to be constructed forty feet wide and the bridges were to be of the same width. The street was to be graded for a considerable distance on each side of the tracks, and the grades.of other streets near by, running at right angles to Lowell Street, were also to be raised to make convenient connections with that street.
The petition and order in this case were under the.R. L. c. Ill, § 134. This section authorizes the county commissioners to make an alteration in a crossing, the approaches thereto, the location of the railroad or way, or in a bridge at the crossing, if the change does not involve the abolition of a crossing at grade. When action is taken under this section the county commissioners must prescribe the manner of making the changes, and the limits within which they are to be made. If necessary, land may be taken for the purpose, and the damages are to be assessed as in other similar cases where land is taken for a public use. Under § 136 a special commission is to be appointed to determine which party shall carry the decision into effect, and which shall pay the charges and expenses of making the alteration and of keeping the crossing and the approaches thereto in repair, as well as the cost of the application to the county commissioners.
The petitioners object that the respondents failed to prescribe the manner of making the alterations, and the limits within which they should be made, with sufficient fullness to answer the requirements of the law.
In the first place, while the bridge and the street are to be constructed forty feet wide, there is nothing in the record of the proceedings to show how wide Lowell Street now is. A plan which is furnished us as a part of the papers of the case is said to be one annexed by the respondents to their answer, and we assume this to be the fact, although there is nothing to identify it sufficiently to make us certain of its relation to the case. This plan shows Lowell Street, with the lines of railroad, and numerous streets' that cross Lowell Street. It shows Lowell [588]*588Street to be forty feet wide in a part of its length, but between Vernon Street and Albion Street, which space includes the crossing of the railroad tracks and a considerable distance to the southward, it shows it to be only thirty-three feet wide. If this plan is correct, there must be a taking of considerable land to widen the street under the order of the commissioners. But the record makes no reference to the taking of any land, and does not show where the lines of the street to be constructed are, in reference to the lines of the existing street, or how much land is to be taken on one side, or how much on the other, if land is to be taken for the street. There is nothing in the record to show whether the space between the two bridges is to be constructed with sloping embankments of earth, or with retaining walls. The plan which is referred to in the order
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85 N.E. 108, 198 Mass. 584, 1908 Mass. LEXIS 991, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-lowell-railroad-v-county-commissioners-of-middlesex-mass-1908.