Chapin v. Maine Central Railroad

53 A. 1105, 97 Me. 151, 1902 Me. LEXIS 27
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 23, 1902
StatusPublished

This text of 53 A. 1105 (Chapin v. Maine Central Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chapin v. Maine Central Railroad, 53 A. 1105, 97 Me. 151, 1902 Me. LEXIS 27 (Me. 1902).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

The question presented for the determination of the court in this case arises from a written application made by the mayor, as one of the municipal officers of Bangor, to one of the justices of this court, asking that the defendant railroad company be compelled to make and maintain a safe and convenient grade crossing at the foot of Exchange Street in the City of Bangor. The petition is based on the provisions of § 31 of c. 51 of the Revised Statutes, and comes to the law court on a report of the evidence.

Section one of chap. 459, of the Private and Special Acts of 1868, is as follows:

“The City of Bangor is hereby authorized and empowered to lay out, establish, make and maintain a street or public way from the present southerly terminus of Exchange Street in said city to low water mark in Penobscot River not exceeding sixty-eight feet in width; provided, said street shall not be laid out over and across the track of the European and North American Railway Company without the consent of said company.”

Section second of the act provides that the damages sustained by any person by reason of the laying out of this street shall be estimated and the benefits apportioned and assessed in conformity with the city charter and chap. 18 of the Revised Statutes.

The written application in this case represents that in accordance with an order of the city council of Bangor passed May 4, 1868, the board of street engineers of the city, on the fifth day of October, 1868, laid out an extension of Exchange Street from its eastei’ly terminus, sixty feet southerly from Washington Street, across the location of the European and North American Railway Company, 68 feet in width for a distance of 228 feet and 4 inches, and 50 feet in width for a further distance of 193 feet and 11 inches, to low water mark. It is further represented that on the tenth day of October, of the same year, the street engineers made a report to the city council of their proceedings in laying out this extension, and [156]*156that on the 19th day of October, their report was duly accepted by the council and the street thereby established.

It is also alleged that this extension of Exchange Street crossed at grade the railroad then operated by the European and North American Railway, and now controlled and operated by the defendant company, and that the defendant is now bound by law to maintain a safe and convenient crossing for public travel over its tracks at Exchange Street.

Although it is thus explicity represented in this petition that the southerly terminus of Exchange Street prior to October, 1868, was sixty feet southerly from Washington Street, and that the alleged extension of Exchange Street across the railroad track was laid out in October, 1868, the petitioner introduced in evidence a copy of a plan said to have been made by Charles Bulfinch in 1801, for the owners of the land on which a dedicated street then known as Poplar Street, but. afterwards changed to Exchange Street, was represented as extending to Penobscot River at low water mark; and lie now contends in argument that the street in question is shown by undisputed evidence in the case to have been accepted by the town soon after its dedication and used as a landing place or slip as early as 1847. Thereupon he further contends that the legislative act of 1868, authorizing the extension above described, did not abridge any right which the public had acquired in this street by “use and dedication” and that the defendant company would have been bound to maintain a safe and convenient crossing at the point in question if the extension had not been formally laid out by virtue of the act of 1868. But the case is “reported to the law court for determination upon so much of the evidence as is legally admissible.” The petition before the court definitely states the time when the way alleged to have been obstructed by the defendant company was laid out and established. It contains no intimation of the existence of any other way at the point in question except that laid out in 1868, and no allusion whatever to any rights claimed to have been acquired by dedication or prescription or any other means, except the action of the city council in laying out the extension in 1868, therein described by metes and bounds. It is on account of the failure of the defendant company to [157]*157make a safe and convenient crossing over the way thus alleged to have been established in 1868, that this petition was presented to a justice of this court. It gave the defendant company no information that evidence would be offered-to prove the existence of any other street, or the establishment of this street at other time or in any other manner, than that specifically described. It is unnecessary to inquire whether or not the evidence upon which the plaintiff now relies is undisputed. • The petition gave no notice that an issue would be raised respecting the existence of a way by dedication or prescription, and the evidence concerning a question not presented by the petition is irrelevant and inadmissible. Whether a general averment in such a petition of the legal existence of a public way would be sufficient to give the court jurisdiction, it is unnecessary to determine. In this case the language of the petition effectually gave notice to the defendant that the petitioner had elected to rest his case on the existence of the street alleged to have been established in 1868 as therein described, and under familiar rules of pleading and procedure in both law and equity, the evidence should be confined to the issue thus presented.

But assuming that a dedication of the street in question to low water mark in 1801, is shown by the plan and other evidence introduced by the petitioner, that fact alone is insufficient to prove the existence of a legal “highway or town way” over which a crossing must be maintained under § 31, of chap. 51. A way by dedication is not constituted by the act of dedication alone; it must also be proved that there was an acceptance of the way by the public or by the town in behalf of the public. State v. Wilson, 42 Maine, 9; Bangor House v. Brown, 33 Maine, 309. And a careful examination of the report in this case fails to disclose sufficient evidence to warrant the conclusion that the way in question was ever accepted by the public or by the town in behalf of the public. For obvious reasons the act of the city in laying out the extension under the act of 1868, cannot be deemed the acceptance of a way previously dedicated. In the first place, the way alleged to have existed by dedication is not identical with that represented in the petition to have been laid out in 1868. The former was only fifty feet in width, while the latter for a distance of 228 feet, comprising that portion traversed by the rail[158]*158road was sixty-eight feet wide. Again, it is settled law in this State that in case of the acceptance of a dedicated way only nominal damages are allowable to abutting owners; but when the extension in this case was laid out by the city council in 1868, the substantial sum of $200 was awarded and paid to the owners of the land abutting on the way on the northerly line of the railroad. The provision of the legislative act requiring the estimation of damages, the proceedings of the city council in conformity with the act and the.

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39 N.E. 1024 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 A. 1105, 97 Me. 151, 1902 Me. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapin-v-maine-central-railroad-me-1902.