Boston & Maine Railroad v. County Commissioners

131 N.E. 283, 239 Mass. 127
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 2, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 131 N.E. 283 (Boston & Maine Railroad v. County Commissioners) 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
Boston & Maine Railroad v. County Commissioners, 131 N.E. 283, 239 Mass. 127 (Mass. 1921).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

This is a petition for a writ of certiorari against the county commissioners of the county of Middlesex. At the request of the parties a single justice of this court reserved the case for the determination of the full court upon the petition, answer, petitioner’s special demurrer and petitioner’s motion to strike out parts of the respondent’s answer together with the stipulation filed by the parties. We shall consider the questions raised by the petitioner in the order adopted in its brief.

The petitioner contends that “ Because the respondent has set forth that certain acts of the petitioner were contrary to the provisions of” St. 1906, c. 463, Part II, § 115, its special demurrer to the fourth paragraph of the respondent’s answer must be sustained, on the ground that the alleged objectionable statement is a conclusion of law and not a recital of a finding of material fact. It is of course elementary that common law pleadings must state issuable facts and not conclusions of law. The answer is not obnoxious to this criticism. Upon the petition of the selectmen of the town of Reading of April 13, 1915, to the county commissioners alleging “that said railroad crosses the highway so as to obstruct it, contrary to the law made and provided,” and asldng a decree prescribing what repairs shall be made by the railroad at the crossing, the county commissioners were required to determine the fact of the obstruction and whether such an obstruction as was found by the commissioners to exist in fact was an obstruction which in law and fact was an incident to the construction, maintenance and operation of the railroad and was an obstruction within the meaning of Rev. Sts. c. 39, §§ 66, 72, and St. 1906, c. 463, Part II, § 115. The statement was one of issuable fact as well as one of law to which a demurrer does not lie.

The petitioner further moved to strike out from the answer the same statement of mixed law and fact to which it had demurred. It also moved to strike out from the answer the statement that “No building or fences have been erected and continued for at least forty years within the limits of said highway.” It also moved to strike out of the tenth paragraph of the answer the following phrases and sentences: “ irrespective of the existence of the car tracks on said bridge; ” “when there is no electric car on it and [132]*132the other vehicles passing over it can use the entire roadway,, including that part upon which the car tracks exist;.” and also- “and not the tracks of the street railway.” It also moved to. strike out of the twelfth paragraph the first two sentences which are as follows: “That the railroad as originally laid out crosses Lowell Street so as to obstruct the highway and it has continued and does now obstruct said highway. The railroad company did not and has not built or kept up and maintained in good repair-such a bridge with suitable and convenient approaches thereto as was or is required to accommodate the travel upon the highway.” It further moved to strike out all of paragraph thirteen of the answer. As reasons for granting its motions the petitioner in each motion alleges that the statements objected to are “ contrary to the record and to the fact and findings of the commissioners- and are not supported by testimony introduced before the commissioners.”

The first motion is denied for the reason stated for overruling the special demurrer. The petitioner’s argument for the allowance of the remaining motion to strike out rests upon the contention that a succeeding board of the county commissioners with a personnel different from that of the board which heard the evidence cannot, in answer to a petition for a writ of certiorari, lawfully set up facts which are conclusive within the jurisdiction of the county- commissioners’ court outside of and beyond the facts certified in the record of the board that heard the testimony unless, a statement of additional facts is necessary to correct and amplify the record in order that the questions of law may be fairly raised and determined.

In the case at bar the petitioner asserts that .the statements, which it moves be stricken from the answer are outside the record and are not necessary to correct and amplify the record in order that the questions of law may be determined. In evidence it calls attention to the certificate of the board attached to its answer which reads: “We, the undersigned, were not members of the Board of County Commissioners of Middlesex County at the time of the hearing before said Board on the above matter, and were not present at the hearing. Those statements in the above certificate which relate to matters of record of the Board of County Commissioners, we know of our own knowledge to be true. As-[133]*133to our other statements, before signing the above certificate, we acquired official knowledge of the acts of our predecessors, and we believe our statements to be true.” We are of opinion the eases of Fairbanks v. Mayor & Aldermen of Fitchburg, 132 Mass. 42, and Collins v. Mayor & Aldermen of Holyoke, 146 Mass. 298, are decisive against the argument of the petitioner. In Fairbanks v. Mayor & Aldermen of Fitchburg, in answer to a motion by the petitioner therein that '' everything should be struck from the answer except that which related to the record, as 'being irrelevant, immaterial, and inadmissible, and not responsive to the prayer of the petition, and not being matters within the jurisdiction of the respondents, and therefore not properly embraced in their answer.’ This for the reason that the matter set forth was only within the jurisdiction of their predecessors,” the court said " If the order of its predecessor is proceeded with, the board reaffirms and makes such order its own, and thus adopts the findings and rulings which appear to have been made and which in its view justifies such an order. It may therefore return them under the official oath of its members as a part of its official return. It is not limited, as the petitioners contend, merely to bringing in the official record which has come to it from its predecessor, to the -end that, while proper upon its face, such order may be quashed on the allegations they have seen fit to make. If those allegations relate in matter of fact or law to that which must have been dealt with in passing the order, the existing board must be held to have also examined and dealt with them before or while executing it. The official oath of the members composing the existing board should therefore be allowed to meet such allegations directly, or by the statement of such other facts as avoid their effect, if such must have been passed upon in passing the order.” The case of Collins v. Mayor & Aldermen of Holyoke, supra, is even more emphatic in the declaration that'' as members of the same board, they may in a variety of ways be expected to have opportunities of knowing what the board has done, and how it has done it. Without personal knowledge, they may have official knowledge, which is something better than mere hearsay.” For the reasons stated the motion that portions of the answer should be stricken out must be denied. See, in this connection, Marsch v. Southern New England Railroad, 230 Mass. 483, which held at page 491 that [134]*134such motions are “an irregular and anomalous way of raising for decision a pure question of substantive law, which under the common law and our practice act can be determined only on demurrer or by an objection to the admission of evidence when offered in proof of the alleged facts.”

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Bluebook (online)
131 N.E. 283, 239 Mass. 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-maine-railroad-v-county-commissioners-mass-1921.