Boston & Worcester Railroad v. Old Colony Railroad

66 Mass. 605
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1853
StatusPublished

This text of 66 Mass. 605 (Boston & Worcester Railroad v. Old Colony Railroad) 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 & Worcester Railroad v. Old Colony Railroad, 66 Mass. 605 (Mass. 1853).

Opinion

Shaw, C. J.

This was a petition for the assessment of damages caused by the respondents, in making a location of their railroad upon the wharf and land of the petitioners. It was commenced before the mayor and aldermen, as county commissioners, and by consent, a verdict was given for nominal damages, and an appeal taken to the court of common pleas. It was there tried, and a verdict returned in the alternative, and the case comes before us on exceptions by both parties. We shall first consider the exceptions of the petitioners

[606]*6061. The Old Colony Railroad Corporation were authorized to extend their road into Boston, by a special act, St. 1847, c. 85. The company filed their location in the city clerk’s office, on the 31st of Hay, 1847, and proceeded to build and complete their track from the end of the bridge crossing Fore Point channel to Kneeland street. They had previously been authorized, by an act passed in 1845, c. 126, to extend then: track by a bridge across Fore Point channel to the wharf of the petitioners, if done with their consent. Such consent was given, and the bridge was built before the last grant; and this act contained a provision that nothing contained in it should impair their right to continue and maintain said bridge.

The petitioners owned the wharf and land against which the westerly end of said bridge was built, and they claimed damages for the injury to their estate by the said bridge, by impeding the access to their wharf by vessels, and by occupying the space which would have served the purpose of a vessel’s berth, lying at their wharf. The judge decided that they could maintain no such claim, and rejected the evidence offered in support of it, to which the petitioners excepted. This court are of opinion that this decision was right. As we understand the facts, this bridge passes over the channel only, which is part of the public domain; being a navigable channel from which the tide does not ebb, the legislature had the right to authorize the bridge, and did authorize both the bridge and the continuance of it. If the petitioners sustained any loss by it, it was a damage arising from a partial impediment in the use of a public right, a damage sustained by them in common with all the rest of the community, and for which they could have no claim for damage. They had no right to occupy that part of the channel as a vessel’s berth, because it was upon a public navigable stream, and if occupied in fact more extensively by them than by others, it would be by sufferance, and not as of right.

2. The second matter of exception turned upon a claim made for damage to the petitioners, from the fact that they owned land on both sides of Lehigh street, and that Lehigh [607]*607street, though much travelled, had never been accepted by the city as a public highway. The soil of the street was in the South Cove Corporation, who had granted lands bounding on it, to various persons, with rights of way over it; and the petitioners themselves had acquired, by a grant from the South Cove Corporation, a right of way for six private tracks across it to various places. One of these points of intersection was in Lehigh street, and the petitioners claimed damage on the ground that the respondents, by their location, acquired a right to close up Lehigh street, and thereby entirely obstruct the petitioners in the use of then track. The judge thought otherwise, and instructed the jury that the respondents would have no right to fence their location, so far as the same lay in Lehigh street, and that damages should be awarded only for the inconvenience or disturbance suffered by the petitioners in thé use of their tracks at the crossings, but not for the exclusion of them from their right to cross Lehigh street with their tracks, and use them as their convenience might require. This direction, we think, was right as to the main point, and only too favorable for the petitioners. They had a right of using it in common with others; afterwards, the owner of the soil granted right of way to the respondents, or what is equivalent, such a right of using it was taken by law, which is in the nature of a statute purchase. It is very questionable whether the use of one, who has a common right, can be the ground of a claim for damage from another who has only a common right. Each is bound to use his common right as far as practicable, in such manner, as not unnecessarily to impede the like common use by another. It is only for an abuse of a common right, to the injury of another, that any legal remedy exists, and then it is to be sought by an action on the case for a disturbance. The petitioners were not the owners of the soil over which Lehigh street was laid; they had obtained of the owners certain rights of way, but that did not preclude others from acquiring rights of way over the same soil. The inconvenience occasioned by others thus having a common right, is not a distinct cause or source of damage to the petitioners, and is, therefore, distinguishable from the [608]*608case of Parker v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 3 Cush. 113, 114, and we think the jury should be so instructed.

3. The third exception on the part of the petitioners is thus stated: The petitioners prayed the court to instruct the jury, that by such location the respondents had a right to cut off and break up the track of the petitioners within their location, and thus totally to interrupt their use of the same, in passing to and from their said wharves, so far as the location lay within the land of the petitioners, viz: from Lehigh street to the cap-sills at the east end of their said wharves; and they claimed damages accordingly. The court, by consent of parties, requested the jury to consider this as a separate claim, and be ready to return, in case the petitioners should be entitled to recover damages on this ground, how much the petitioners were entitled to recover in addition to all the other damages they might be found to have sustained. The jury returned a verdict for the petitioners on all their other claims for $20,155.83, and on the ground above stated, for $22,500, making in all, $42,655.83. After this verdict, the respondents filed a disclaimer of any right to erect any such fence along the line of their track, within the petitioners’ territory, so as to obstruct them from a passage to, from, and over other parts of their territory. The petitioners moved for judgment on the larger verdict, which the court overruled, to which decision they excepted.

The court are of opinion that this decision of the court of common pleas was correct, and that the petitioners’ claim for damages on this ground was untenable. We are not aware of any such absolute right and power of railroad proprietors, under the authority given them by statute, to take land for the use of the railroad, without any exigency, to erect and place high fences along the margin of their track on both sides, and exclude the proprietors of the land to and from all communication between their land on one side and the other of their track. There are various provisions of law, some authorizing, some requiring them to fence against the rail- , road, when the safety of passengers, or the rights of coterminous proprietors require it. By the provisions of the revised [609]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 Mass. 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-worcester-railroad-v-old-colony-railroad-mass-1853.