Brownell v. Old Colony Railroad

41 N.E. 107, 164 Mass. 29, 1895 Mass. LEXIS 172
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 19, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 41 N.E. 107 (Brownell 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
Brownell v. Old Colony Railroad, 41 N.E. 107, 164 Mass. 29, 1895 Mass. LEXIS 172 (Mass. 1895).

Opinion

Allen, J.

By St. 1854, c. 124, the proprietors of the New Bedford and Fairhaven Ferry were authorized to transfer their charter to the Fairhaven Branch Railroad Company, by deed, which .should vest in the latter company all the rights and [31]*31powers conferred by said charter, with a provision that the latter company should be held to perform all the duties prescribed thereby, and that from and after the execution and delivery of the deed the name of the ferry company should be changed, and that the said corporation should afterwards exist and be known by the name of the Fairhaven Branch Railroad Company, and should not be required to hold separate meetings as a ferry company, but that all acts needful and proper to be done should be done at regular or special meetings of the railroad corporation, or by the directors thereof. The deed which was executed under the above statute was expressed to be upon the condition that the railroad company and their successors should at all times discharge the duties and become and remain subject to the liabilities prescribed and set forth in the charter of the ferry company, and also in St. 1854, c. 124. Various intermediate transfers were made, until in 1883, by virtue of St. 1882, c. 80, the Old Colony Railroad Company succeeded to all the franchises and property which had belonged to the Fairhaven Branch Railroad Company. The evidence in the case leaves no doubt, and it is conceded, that after the deed to the Fairhaven Branch Railroad Company the railroad of that company and the ferry became one line, and were operated as such for a number of years. It was the same in effect as if the railroad company by its original charter had been authorized to establish and operate the ferry as a part of its line. The ferry became practically an extension of the railroad, just as if the railroad had been extended over a bridge. The railroad line having been thus extended and operated until 1873, the ferry was in that year discontinued as unprofitable; and by St. 1894, c. 392, the Old Colony Railroad Company was expressly required to provide and operate a suitable ferry, in accordance with the provisions of the original ferry charter and of St. 1854, c. 124.

The first question which we have to determine is, whether this statute is within the legislative power; that is to say, whether a railroad company which owns a ferry as a part of its line, and which is operating the rest of its line, can discontinue the ferry and refuse to obey a legislative requirement to operate it. A railroad company has by no means an absolute power to determine what parts of its line it will operate. Its franchises are [32]*32granted for the public good, and in exercising them it is largely subject to the control and direction of the Legislature. Either by virtue of the police power, or of the reserved power to alter charters, many acts may be required which involve expense, and which a railroad corporation, or other corporation to which like rules would apply, would not if left to itself undertake. Numerous illustrations of this are found in the decisions of this court, as well as in those elsewhere. Roxbury v. Boston Providence Railroad, 6 Cush. 424. Commonwealth v. Hancock Free Bridge, 2 Gray, 58, 64. Fitchburg Railroad v. Grand Junction Railroad, 4 Allen, 198. Commonwealth v. Eastern Railroad, 103 Mass. 254. Commissioners on Inland Fisheries v. Holyoke Water Power Co. 104 Mass. 446. Worcester v. Norwich & Worcester Railroad, 109 Mass. 103. In re Northampton, 158 Mass. 299, 301. Union Pacific Railroad v. Hall, 91 U. S. 343. Railroad Commissioners v. Portland Oxford Central Railroad, 63 Maine, 269, 277. State v. Hartford New Haven Railroad, 29 Conn. 538. People v. Albany Vermont Railroad, 24 N. Y. 261. People v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 70 N. Y. 569. Montclair v. New York & Greenwood Lake Railway, 18 Stew. 436. People v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad, 120 Ill. 48. State v. Iowa Central Railway, 83 Iowa, 720. The present case is merely an instance of compelling a railway company to operate its entire line. The Legislature has seen fit to pass an imperative statute to this effect. In view of this statute, it is not open to the railroad company to determine that the ferry should be discontinued while all the rest of its various lines, are operated. The defendant appears to rely on Commonwealth v. Fitchburg Railroad, 12 Gray, 180, as sanctioning a contrary doctrine. But in that case there was no statute requiring that the railroad company should run the unprofitable trains. There is nothing in the decision which declares or implies that the Legislature might not have imposed this as an absolute duty. The same thing may be said of People v. Rome, Watertown, Ogdensburg Railroad, 103 N. Y. 95, and People v. New York, Lake Erie, & Western Railroad, 104 N. Y. 58.

The defendant contends that St. 1894, c. 392, did not impose a new obligation on the defendant, but only required the defendant to perform such as the ferry company would have been [33]*33under to maintain and operate the ferry if it had not transferred its charter in 1854; and an elaborate argument is made to show that the original ferry company was not bound to maintain the ferry for all time. But whatever may have been the obligation of the original ferry company, the Fairhaven Branch Railroad Company, when it made the ferry a part of its line, no longer had the power to discontinue the ferry provided the Legislature expressly required that it should be operated. And we are unable to give to the statute of 1894 the construction suggested by the defendant. This statute makes it the imperative duty of the defendant to operate the ferry, whether it is profitable or not.

The defendant contends that the statute requires it to provide and operate a “ suitable ” ferry, and that there is no proof before the court upon which it can be definitively decided what kind of a ferry is suitable. We think, however, that an order to provide a suitable ferry is sufficient in the first instance, and that, if complaint is made that a ferry-boat which may be provided is not suitable, a further application may be made to the court.

The defendant further contends that the requirement to operate a ferry forces it into a new business, and that, if the Legislature can require it to operate a ferry for a mile, it could also require it to maintain a line of steamboats to Nantucket. The only answer which needs to be given to this argument is, that the ferry by legislative authority was adopted by the railroad company as a part of the line of the railroad, and that its subsequent maintenance is no more outside of the business of the railroad company than the maintenance of any other part of the railroad line.

The defendant further contends that the only liability of the defendant for failure to operate the ferry is a liability to forfeit the ferry charter. This argument cannot prevail since the blending of the ferry franchise with that of the railroad company.

The defendant also contends that it has never acquired the franchise to maintain the ferry.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.E. 107, 164 Mass. 29, 1895 Mass. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brownell-v-old-colony-railroad-mass-1895.